United States Fire Insurance v. McDaniel

8 Tenn. App. 51, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 22, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Tenn. App. 51 (United States Fire Insurance v. McDaniel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Fire Insurance v. McDaniel, 8 Tenn. App. 51, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 106 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The Unit.ed States Fire Insurance Company, (hereinafter called defendant), has .appealed from a judgment rendered against it in the sum of $325 in favor of the plaintiff, L. T. McDaniel upon an insurance policy in the sum of $300, issued the 31st day of May, 1926. The jury returned a verdict also for $25 as interest on the $300 policy.

The defendant, ■ in consideration of .a premium of $54, insured L. T. McDaniel against loss occasioned by rain, on the 31st day of May, 1926, between ten o’clock a. m. and four o’clock p. m., standard time. The policy stat.ed that the plaintiff’s anticipated gross income was $500 for that day and the material portion of said policy covering said one day’s insurance is as follows:

“If by reason of said one-tenth (1/10) of an inch or more of rainfall, at the specific location hereinafter provided for ascertaining the measure thereof, or any one day hereinafter provided for, during the period of time provided for such day hereinafter under schedule, the gross income of the insured from sale of merchandise, regardless of when received, for said day does not equal .or exceed the amount of the anticipated gross income provided for such day hereinafter under schedule, which amount for the purpose of this insurance is agreed to be th,e anticipated daily gross income, from sources named herein, of the event known as the sale of merchandise decoration day to be held at Pittsburg Landing (Shiloh Park), Tennessee, during such day, this company shall be liable for actual loss sustained, not exceeding the amount of the difference between the, gross income from sources named herein, regardless of when received, for said day and the amount of the anticipated gross income provided for such day, nor for more than the amount of insurance provided, hereinafter under schedule, for said day.”

The policy further provided that Capt. DeLong Rice, superintendent of Shiloh National Park, should keep the rainfall of that day and report to the company if there was any rainfall. Capt. *53 Rice reported that there was 14/100 of an inch of rainfall that day. The proof shows that it began to rain about ten o’clock a. m. and numerous showers fell until the middle of the afternoon on the day the insurance was in force.

The company refused to pay the insurance and the plaintiff instituted his suit on the policy. At the conclusion of all the evidence there was a motion for a directed verdict, in favor of the defendant, which was overruled. The plaintiff then moved for a directed verdict as to the $300, which was granted, but upon proper charge submitted it to the jury on the question of interest. After the verdict of the jury the defendant filed its motion for a new trial, which was overruled, perfected an appeal to this court and has assigned eight errors. These assignments of error will be grouped as follows:

The first, second, third and fifth assignments go to the question of the court not directing a verdict in favor of the defendant.

The fourth assignment complains of the court permitting plaintiff to testify that his gross profits on May 31, 1926, were $175; that this was purely speculative and therefore inadmissible.

The sixth assignment complains of the court directing a verdict for the plaintiff for $300 as there wias no competent evidence to support such a verdict.

The seventh error complains of the court admitting in evidence the purported carbon copy of a letter from the plaintiff to the defendant, and the eighth assignment complains of the court giving judgment for the plaintiff for the face of the policy and interest.

May 30th is designated by law as a national holiday and it is generally known as “Decoration Day” and on this day at all national cemeteries memorial exercises are held. Should the 30th of May fall on Sunday, then the following day, or Monday, May 31st, is celebrated as memorial day, or Decoration Day. May 30th in 1926 was on Sunday. The National Cemetery at Shiloh has been celebrating Memorial Day for many years, and at this place on Decoration Day large crowds of people from] various sections of Tennessee, Mississippi and Alabama, gather at this park. The plaintiff had been in the mercantile business at Pittsburg Landing on the Shiloh National Military Park near to and adjoining the National Cemetery. His store and mercantile business was the only one on the park. There was none in the National Cemetery. The plaintiff had been for a number of years increasing his stock of périshable goods for Memorial Day or the memorial celebrations. While he did a general mercantile business, his trade on Memorial Day consisted of selling ice cream, soft drinks, lemonade, fruits, sandwiches, etc., and his amount of sales depended largely on the condition of the weather. A rain on Decoration Day affects the *54 percentage in bis sales most materially, situated as was the plaintiff. It lessens the number of people and causes them to leave the grounds much earlier than they otherwise would, and because of the rain they do not purchase the character of goods usually sold on that day, such as fruits, cold drinks, sandwiches and ice cream.

The gross profits on goods sold on Memorial Day amounted to about thirty-three and one-third and one-third per cent. On Decoration Day in 1924 the plaintiff sold $1,212.48; on the same day in 1925 he sold $1,531.65; on May 31, 1926, he sold $746.93. The plaintiff testified that on account of the rain and the crowd dispersing he became overstocked and did not make a gross profit of thirty-three and a third per cent on the sales in 1926. Plaintiff testified that he made ;a gross profit of $175 from the sale of $746.93. It is the defendant’s contention that because the plaintiff sold more than $500 worth of goods on the day the insurance was in force it is not liable, and the construction of the policy on the question of anticipated gross income determines this loss. It is insisted by defendant that gross income means gross sales or gross receipts. On the other hand, the plaintiff insists that the first cost of the goods which were sold for $746.98 represents his principal and the income is the difference between the cost price and the sale price. That is, if he had sold $750 worth and had made a profit of thirty-three and a third per cent, he would have had a principal of $500 and his profit would have been $250; but he testified that !he did not make anything like thirty-three and a third per cent on the amount of goods sold, so he had much more than $500 in principal.

Webster’s Imperial Dictionary defines the word “income” to be:

“That gain which proceeds from labor, business or property of any kind; the produce of a farm; the rent of houses; the proceeds of professional business; the profits of commerce, or of occupation.”

This edition of the dictionary also refers, under the word “in-/ come” to “income taxes” as: “A tax laid upon a person’s profits, or income over and above a specified sum.” Also 4 Words and Phrases, 3601; Appeal of Braun, 105 Pa., 414, 415; Thirn v. Debreteuil, 83 N. Y. Supp., 849, 856, 86 -App. Div., 405.

That which is earned, remaining itself intact. The word “income” primarily means the profits arising from an invested fund from a business or profession. 4 Words & Phrases, p. 3505; State v. McCarty (Ind.), 1 Ind., 205, 219.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Tenn. App. 51, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fire-insurance-v-mcdaniel-tennctapp-1928.