Universal Auto. v. Morris Fin.

16 S.W.2d 360, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 453
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 1929
DocketNo. 561.
StatusPublished

This text of 16 S.W.2d 360 (Universal Auto. v. Morris Fin.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Universal Auto. v. Morris Fin., 16 S.W.2d 360, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 453 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

This suit was instituted by Morris Finance Corporation against C. W. Murphy, as maker, and J. H. Rushing, M. N. Kleiman, and L. Kleiman, as indorsers, on ten certain promissory notes for the sum of $80 each, and 15 per cent. attorneys' fees, as provided in the notes. The notes were secured by a chattel mortgage on a Packard automobile, which had burned after the execution of the mortgage, and the mortgagee in its petition expressly waived a foreclosure of its mortgage lien because the salvage was practically worthless. The maker and indorsers answered by general denial and various special pleas. One of these pleas by the indorsers was, in substance, that the mortgagee held a policy of insurance with the appellant insurance company protecting it and the maker and indorsers on the notes from loss by fire, that the automobile was destroyed by fire, and that the mortgagee had failed and refused to take any action whatsoever to recover on the policy, by reason of which it voluntarily surrendered securities given for the protection of the indorsers, and thereby relieved such indorsers from liability. *Page 361

The answer of the maker and indorsers on the note impleaded the appellant insurance company, the allegations as to said insurance company being that a certain policy of insurance was executed by it through its agent, L. Y. Morris, to C. W. Murphy and L. Y. Morris Loan Company, as their interests might appear, for the sum of $800; that within a few days after the execution of said policy, the car, alleged to be of the value of $1,200 was destroyed by fire; that within thirty days thereafter Murphy had made proof of loss and demanded payment of the insurance company. Prayer was for judgment in favor of the maker and indorsers against the insurance company for the amount of the policy, and in the alternative that, if they were not permitted to recover on the policy, the finance corporation, plaintiff in the suit, have judgment against the insurance company for the use and benefit of the maker and indorsers. An alternative pleading of the same facts was made by way of crossaction against the finance corporation. Various and sundry demurrers and pleas of misjoinder were interposed by the insurance company, but the brief does not present these questions for decision.

The trial resulted in judgment in favor of the finance corporation against the maker and indorsers on the notes for the principal, interest, and attorneys' fees, and judgment for Murphy, the maker of the note, against the insurance company for $800, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent. from March 1, 1927, decreeing that the judgment in favor of Murphy should inure to the use and benefit of the indorsers. To accomplish this end, it was decreed that the judgment against said insurance company, when collected, should be paid into the registry of the court and credited on the judgment in favor of the finance corporation, and that execution on the judgment in favor of the finance corporation against the maker and indorsers on the notes should issue for the balance, after crediting the judgment with the amount collected from the insurance company.

The only issue submitted to the jury called upon it to determine the value of the automobile. This value was found to be $1,000. The insurance company alone has appealed.

It appears to us that the judgment in favor of the finance corporation against the maker and indorsers on the notes was erroneous, and that the indorsers pleaded and proved facts releasing them from liability, but no appeal was prosecuted from such judgment by the maker or indorsers. We are therefore limited to a determination of the assignments by the insurance company, in which it challenges the judgment rendered for Murphy against it on the policy of insurance.

The facts are, briefly stated, that L. Y. Morris was engaged in the insurance business as agent of the appellant company. He was also a partner in the business of L. Y. Morris Loan Company. This loan company engaged in the business of financing automobile sales. Subsequent to the loss in this case, the loan company was incorporated under the name of Morris Finance Corporation, the plaintiff in this suit, but that fact is immaterial in the disposition of this appeal.

As agent for the insurance company, Morris issued an insurance policy, called a blanket or master policy, to Morris Loan Company. The scheme of insurance appears to have had for its object the protection of the loan company from loss on automobiles financed by it. The policy provided for an insurance certificate to be issued on each automobile financed by the loan company. Murphy purchased a secondhand Packard car from Kleiman, one of the indorsers on the note. The amount of the purchase price remaining unpaid was about $700. This was financed by the loan company for $800, which was represented by the eight notes above mentioned, signed by Murphy and indorsed by the indorsers, the notes being payable to the loan company. As a part of the transaction, there was issued a certificate of insurance, which was never delivered to Murphy, but was retained by the loan company and attached to the notes. This certificate purported to insure "C. W. Murphy, Desdemona, Texas, and/ or L. Y. Morris Loan Company as their respective interests may appear." Upon this policy and certificate, the judgment appealed from was rendered by the trial court in favor of Murphy against the appellant.

The first proposition presents that the certificate, by its terms, provides severable contracts of insurance in favor of the mortgagor and mortgagee, and, since the mortgage against the car was for an amount equal to or greater than the amount of the policy, Murphy had no interest in the policy, and the only party having a right of action thereon was the finance corporation.

We agree with the contention that the policy provided severable insurance. Murphy's interest accrued only upon the reduction of the loan company's interest to an amount less than the face of the policy. We construe this certificate to mean that the loan company was the assured so long as its indebtedness against Murphy equaled or exceeded the amount of the policy and the mortgage was still owned by it, and that Murphy's interest attached only in the event the mortgage was released or reduced below the amount of the policy. We think the case of Stromblad v. Hanover Fire Ins. Co., 121 Misc.Rep. 322, 201 N.Y.S. 67, and the authorities there cited correctly construe these provisions of the certificate. But this holding does not mean that Murphy was a stranger to it and had no interest therein. The evidence discloses that he paid practically $100 for this protection. It was the plain duty of the *Page 362 loan company to take such steps as were necessary for the collection of this policy. But since that company, for reasons evidently satisfactory to it, has seen fit to refuse to enforce its policy, but has come into court and voluntarily waived and surrendered its mortgage and abandoned its right to sue on the policy, clearly that right thereby vested in Murphy. When the insurance company surrendered its mortgage and took personal judgment against the maker and indorsers of the note, it thereafter had no interest whatever in the insurance policy, so far as same covered the car in question, and Murphy had the right to sue thereon. It would be manifestly wrong to permit the insurance company to escape liability on a policy issued by it on the ground merely that the Morris Loan Company, one member of which was the insurance company's agent, chose to release the company, waive its mortgage and take judgment against the maker and indorsers on the notes. We therefore overrule proposition No. 1, and hold that Murphy had the right to maintain this suit.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 360, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/universal-auto-v-morris-fin-texapp-1929.