Weinberg v. Globe Indemnity Company

355 S.W.2d 341, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 813
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1962
Docket23400
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 355 S.W.2d 341 (Weinberg v. Globe Indemnity Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weinberg v. Globe Indemnity Company, 355 S.W.2d 341, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 813 (Mo. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

CROSS, Judge.

The defendant insurance company appeals from a jury verdict and judgment awarding plaintiff policy holders the sum of $2396.20 on their claim for indemnity of a loss caused by burglary of their business premises and the theft of a sum of money.

The petition contains two counts. In count one plaintiffs sue to recover for their loss under a robbery and theft policy issued by defendant. In the second count plaintiffs sue to recover the amount of an agreed settlement of the loss made by defendant’s adjuster. In answer, defendant admits issuance of the policy and denies all other allegations of the petition. No policy exclusions or exceptions are pleaded in defense. The cause was submitted to the jury on the second count only. The resulting verdict and judgment are in plaintiffs’ favor for the claimed amount of $1492.00, interest in the sum of $255.00, attorneys fees in the amount of $500.00, and a penalty of $149.20 for defendant’s vexatious refusal to pay plaintiffs’ claim — a total sum of $2396.20.

Defendant first assigns that plaintiffs failed to make a submissible case for the jury and that the trial court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for defendant at the close of all the evidence. Defendant’s principal argument is that the evidence did not support the finding that its adjuster made a settlement of the loss or that there was an accord and satisfaction entered into by the parties. The assignment requires our review of the evidence.

Defendant issued the policy on October 7, 1954, in the face amount of $3500.00, for a term of five years, in consideration of a premium paid by plaintiffs. It is written on a form entitled “Paymaster, Messenger and Interior Robbery Policy”, but is limited to a single insuring agreement, which reads as follows:

*344 “III Interior Robbery
“To Indemnify the Insured for all loss of or damage (hereinafter called loss) to Money, Securities and other property, while in the Premises, and for damage to the Premises if the Insured is the owner thereof or is liable for such damage, provided such loss is occasioned by:
“(a) Robbery or Attempt Thereat from a custodian while within the Premises;
“(b) The stealing of such property from within the premises by means of compelling a Custodian or Messenger by violence or threat of violence while outside the Premises to admit a person thereinto or to furnish him with means of ingress into the Premises, provided such loss shall occur before the Premises are next opened for business;
“(c) the stealing of such property from within a show window in the Premises while regularly open for business, by a person who has broken the glass thereof from outside the Premises, or by an accomplice of such person”.

Plaintiffs operate the Hotel Kansas Citian in downtown Kansas City. The auditing and fiscal operations of the hotel, including the counting of money, are carried on in a small “auditor’s” office on the mezzanine floor — a “glassed in” enclosure about the size of a jury box, “glassed in all the way down”, and visible from the lobby. The back wall of the office is the outside wall of the building. It contains two exterior windows. Three employees ordinarily work in the enclosure during business hours: Mr. Alford, the hotel manager; Miss Thornberry, the auditor; and Mrs. Everett, assistant to the auditor.

On August 12, 1959, shortly after noon, the employees locked the door of the glass office and went to lunch. Upon their return around one o’clock they discovered that an exterior glass window had been broken. They found a large rock and shattered glass on the floor, and observed that the broken window had been raised. The hotel’s cash box on the desk was open and the currency it contained had been removed. There was some blood on the desk near the cash box.

Plaintiffs immediately called the police and reported a burglary and notified defendant’s agency office of the theft. Defendant’s adjuster, Earl Jones, arrived at the hotel shortly after one o’clock while the police were conducting their investigation. He saw shattered glass on the floor and the broken window which was “down”. He talked to “the women that were there in the room”. Miss Thornberry told him a burglary had occurred between 12:15 and 1 o’clock. He took some notes, “left a set of proof of loss with the assured”, and took his departure. As he left the hotel he met-Mr. Frank G. Langsford, defendant’s regular adjuster for that particular district. Jones informed Langsford of the burglary and that the police were still “investigating”. Langsford went immediately to the hoteL and up to the auditor’s office. He saw the broken window and glass fragments on the floor. He talked to Mr. Alford, the manager, and gave him blank proofs of loss. Mr. Langsford then conferred with Miss Thorn-berry and Mrs. Everett, assisted them in calculating the loss, observed them counting the money that was not taken — “the heavy, the coins”, and “figured” the amount of loss was $1482.00.

Adjuster Langsford testified that “a day or two later” he returned to the hotel to confer regarding the amount of the loss— “to reaffirm our first calculation”. He asked for and received various money receipts, a page from the hotel’s cash journal, and requested a statement in the form of a letter from Miss Thornberry showing her calculation of the loss. He ran adding machine tapes on various money items and finally “arrived at the loss which corresponded with their claimed loss” — again, in the sum of $1482.00. Langsford testified, “We came to a verbal agreement on the amount of *345 loss” and that “We all said it ivas a burglary loss”.

Plaintiff Weinberg testified that defendant’s adjuster came to the hotel on August 14 (two days after the loss) and prepared the proof of loss which plaintiffs submitted; that the adjuster said “We are ready for the proof of loss to pay you. I’ll draft it up. I can do it right in your office here at the hotel”; that the adjuster dictated the contents of the proof of loss fixing the amount of loss by theft at $1482.00 and property damage in the sum of $10.00, describing the latter as “a broken window” and stating that “a thief broke glass to open window and gain entry to auditor’s office where he took all currency from cash box”. Weinberg executed the proof of loss before a notary on August 14th and delivered it to Langsford.

In the course of his investigation, Langs-ford obtained a copy of the police report. On August 19th he received the letter he had requested of Miss Thornberry explaining her computation of the loss. He returned to the hotel once more “to complete my investigation and verification of the loss”.

Sixteen days after the hotel burglary and after discussing the claim with “our branch claims manager” Langsford issued a draft dated August 26, 1957, payable to plaintiffs in the amount of $1492.00, and reciting that it was “In full settlement of all claims for liability under Policy GBP 259613 for loss which occurred on or about August 12, 1957”. Each of the thirteen payees endorsed the draft below the following statement printed on the back of the draft:

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Bluebook (online)
355 S.W.2d 341, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinberg-v-globe-indemnity-company-moctapp-1962.