West Coast Lumber Co. v. State Investment & Insurance

33 P. 258, 98 Cal. 502, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 950
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1893
Docket15127
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 P. 258 (West Coast Lumber Co. v. State Investment & Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Coast Lumber Co. v. State Investment & Insurance, 33 P. 258, 98 Cal. 502, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 950 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Searls, C.

— Action upon a policy of insurance. Plaintiff had judgment, from which and from an order denying a motion for a new trial the defendant appeals.

On the eighteenth day of June, 1888, the State Investment' and Insurance Company, a corporation, the defendant herein, issued its policy of insurance against loss or damage by fire, to one E. B. Newkirk, to the amount of $1,200, upon a three-story frame store-building, situate in San Diego, California; “loss, if any, payable to West Coast Lumber Company, as their interest may appear.” The building insured was wholly destroyed by fire February 5, 1889.

The complaint contains two counts:—

1. A count in the usual form for non-payment by defendant of $1,200, on account of the loss by fire of the insured property.
2. For the non-payment of a bill of exchange drawn by direction of defendant upon itself in the adjustment by defendant of the loss, in the sum of $1,200.

The answer sets out a number of defenses to the action, among which may be enumerated:—

1. The plaintiff had no interest in the property except as a holder of a mechanic’s lien thereon, which had been paid, satisfied and discharged.
2. The fire occurred by reason of the neglect of the plaintiff and of E. B. Newkirk to use means practicable and necessary to preserve the insured property from damages.
[506]*5063. That the interest of Newkirk in the property was a leasehold interest, and that on or about July 12, 1888, Newkirk and the plaintiff, without the knowledge or consent of defendant, and contrary to the provisions of the policy, conveyed and delivered the property to one E. V. Roberts, whereby the policy became' void.
4. That after July 12, 1888, neither Newkirk nor plaintiff occupied or controlled the building, and that defendant had no knowledge that their insurable interest in the property, or occupancy, or control thereof, had ceased until on or about June 13, 1889, and that at the time of giving the supposed draft or bill of exchange defendant supposed they had an insurable interest therein.
5. That neither plaintiff nor Newkirk gave notice or proof of loss as required by the policy.

At the date of the policy of insurance E. B. Newkirk was the lessee of the insured property, under one E. V. Roberts, from whom he held a written lease. The plaintiff herein had furnished lumber to Newkirk for the construction of the building on the property; had on the twentieth day of March, 1888, filed its mechanic’s lien upon the property as security for the sum due and owing for such lumber, amounting to some;hing over $2,200; and had on the eleventh day of June, 1888, brought suit to recover and to foreclose the mechanic’s lien against the lessee and owner of the premises. The application for insurance was made by plaintiff, the premium paid .by it,, and the policy was delivered to it. Subsequent to the issue of the policy, and on the twenty-third day of October, 1888, plaintiff obtained judgment on its claim for $2,332.58, and it was decreed that plaintiff had a lien therefor on the house and lot of land in question. After the fire the lot of land was sold by the sheriff under the decree of foreclosure and purchased by the plaintiff. Its value was $1,000. On or about July 12,1888, the lessee, E. B. Newkirk, surrendered his leasehold interest in the insured building and lot of land upon which it was situated to his landlord, E. V. Roberts.

There was evidence tending to show and the court found that thereafter and prior to the loss defendant’s agent was informed by plaintiff that the leasehold interest had been surrendered by [507]*507Newkirk, and was assured by the agent of defendant that no change in the policy of insurance was necessary by reason thereof. The court finds, also, that within sixty days after the fire plaintiff, under the direction and instructions of the defendant, procured proof of the loss to be made and signed by New-kirk, as required by the policy of insurance, and delivered the same to defendant. These proofs were retained by defendant. An examination of the circumstances of the destruction of the property was made by it, and of plaintiff’s interest therein and right to receive the amount of the insurance under the policy, and thereafter, by direction of defendant, its agent in San Diego made and accepted and delivered to plaintiff its bill of exchange in writing for $1,200.

The court finds that there was no misapprehension on the part of defendant, respecting the insurable interest of the plaintiff or of Newkirk, at the time the bill of exchange was executed.

The foregoing statement is not intended as a synopsis of all the issues, or of all the facts found by the court, but is deemed sufficient to au understanding of the principal objections made by appellant to the findings of the court and the judgment based thereon. The contentions of appellant may be grouped under two heads: 1. Those relating to the forfeiture of the policy by the surrender of the leasehold interest of Newkirk to his landlord, and to his subsequent lack of an insurable interest in the property; and 2. Those founded upon the alleged false and fraudulent statements of Newkirk in the proof of loss furnished the defendant. The insured building stood upon leased ground, which fact was stated in the policy.

Among the causes of forfeiture mentioned in the policy are the following: If the above-mentioned premises “become vacant and unoccupied .... or if the property be sold or transferred, or any change takes place in title or possession, whether by legal process or judicial decree, or voluntary transfer or couveyance .... without the consent of the company indorsed hereon .... then and in every such case this policy shall be void.”

The finding of the court is, as before stated, that on or about July 12, 1888, Newkirk surrendered his leasehold to his landlord, E. V. Roberts, and that thereafter and prior to the fire, [508]*508defendant’s agent was informed of such fact by the agent of plaintiff, and he thereupon assured the agent of plaintiff that no change in the policy of insurance was necessary. This finding is supported by evidence.

'■ The witness Hickman, who had charge of plaintiff’s business, testified that he informed Mr. Pierce, the agent of defendant, two or three days after the change, that the property had passed from Newkirk to the owner of the real estate, and says: “I told him the policy should be changed to show the difference in ownership, and he claimed it was just as well to let it stand as it was, as our (plaintiff’s) interest in the building was not changed, and Newkirk might possibly reclaim his property”; and again, “he (Pierce) assured me that the policy was just as good then as it ever was, and covered our interest in the building just the same.”

The question involved under this head is not as to the binding effect of the clauses in the policy as to change of ownership or possession, or as to the original right of defendant to insist-upon their observance, and in default thereof to uphold a forfeiture of the policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 P. 258, 98 Cal. 502, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-coast-lumber-co-v-state-investment-insurance-cal-1893.