West Rockingham Mutual Fire Ins. v. Sheets & Co.

26 Va. 854, 26 Gratt. 854
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 25, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 26 Va. 854 (West Rockingham Mutual Fire Ins. v. Sheets & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Rockingham Mutual Fire Ins. v. Sheets & Co., 26 Va. 854, 26 Gratt. 854 (Va. 1875).

Opinion

Moncure P.

This is a supersedeas to a judgment of the Circuit court of Rockingham county, rendered on [856]*856the 16th day of September 1874, affirming a judgment of the county court of said county, rendered on the 10th day of June 1873, in an action of assumpsit brought by Felix T. Sheets & Co. against The West Rockingham Mutual Fire. Insurance Company, founded on a policy of insurance whereby the said company insured a certain paper mill, machinery and buildings connected therewith, belonging to the said plaintiffs. The declaration contained but one count, which vras special, though in the general form authorized by the Code, chap. 36, sec. 44. There was a bill of particulars filed with the declaration, charging the defendant as Dr. to the plaintiff, “ 1872, July 17th. To loss by destruction of paper mill and machinery by fire, and of damage of house designated in policy of insurance as Mo. 3, $6,266.”

The defendant demurred to the declaration, and plead non-assumpsit; and the plaintiff joined in the demurrer, and replied generally to the plea. The demurrer being argued was overruled by the court. The defendant then offered to file several pleas, to which the plaintiffs objected; but the court overruled the objection, and permitted the pleas to be filed; to which the plaintiffs replied generally, and thereupon the issues were tried by a jury, which rendered a verdict for the plaintiffs, and assessed their damages at $4,930.44, with interest from the 7th of September 1872 until paid. The defendant moved the court to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial; which motion the court overruled; and judgment was accordingly rendered on the verdict.

Three bills of exception were tendered by the defendant and signed by the court, during the progress of the trial of the case, which will be noticed in detail hereafter. The defendant applied to the judge of the [857]*857«aid Circuit court for a supersedeas to the said judgment of the County court; which was accordingly •awarded. The Circuit court afterwards heard the case upon the said supersedeas, and affirmed the said judgment of the County court. The defendant then applied to a judge of this court for a supersedeas to the said judgment of the Circuit court; which was accordingly awarded: and that is the case which we now have to dispose of.

Sundry errors in the judgment of the Circuit court, affirming the judgment of the County court, are assigned in the petition to this court for a supersedeas; which errors we will notice in the order of their assignment.

“First—The County court erred in overruling the demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration. The act of assembly, approved February 8,1872, which simplifies declarations on policies of insurance, and on which the plaintiff relied, requires the plaintiff to file with his declaration the original policy of insurance or a sworn copy thereof; neither of which was done in this case. The declaration therefore was not sufficient under the statute. The declaration should, therefore, •have set forth every condition or promise of said policy, and an averment that the plaintiff had observed the same, seriatim. Code of 1873, chapter 36, sec. 44, page 372. The demurrer therefore should have been sustained.”

It does not appear from the record whether the policy was filed with the declaration or not. It ought regularly perhaps, to have been noticed in the declaration as having been filed therewith. It was in possession of the plaintiffs, and might, easily, have been filed therewith; and the plaintiffs could have had no motive for not filing it. They intended that it should [858]*858be considered as so filed; for they filed their declaration in the form authorized by law in case the plaintiff files with his declaration or complaint the original P0^0^’ or a sworn copy thereof. If it had not been actually filed, the defendant might have called for it,, an(j compe]je(j its production. It was not so called ^or) either because it was already filed, or because the-plaintiff well knew what it was, without calling-for its. production. It was in the form prescribed by the defendant, and in the same form with the other policies-entered into by the defendants. It was before the defendant when the special pleas were prepared, in which the terms of the policy, or some of them, are- set forth,, and it was the first evidence which was introduced by the plaintiffs on the trial of the issues by the jury. It is too late to object, for the first time, in the appellate court, that the policy was not filed with the declaration. If it was not so filed, and there was a,ny error in that respect, it did not prejudice, and was in effect waived by the defendant.

“2nd. The County court erred in permitting the-private letter of F. T. Sheets to John H. Rolston to go to the jury as proof of notice of the loss. The letter was not addressed to the company, nor to said Rolston in his official capacity as president; nor was it in the form required by the conditions annexed to the policy; and it was not signed by said firm of Felix T. Sheets & Co., and was not intended as a notice of loss. The-4th condition annexed to the policy required the notice to be given forthwith ‘to the company;’ and intended''that the notice should be addressed to the company, and signed by the insured.”

This is the subject of the first of the three bills of exception aforesaid.

The notice given by the letter here referred to was-[859]*859certainly given in due time. The loss occurred on the 7th of July 1872; the letter bears date two days thereafter, on the 9th of July, and was duly sent by mail, and received by the president of the company, to whom, personally, it was directed. It is very specific in detailing the facts in regard to the fire, and refers, unmistakably, to a loss under the policy of insurance in question. It was clearly intended to be a notice given in pursuance of the policy. After detailing the particulars in regard to the fire, the writer says: “ The old mill is burnt, and it will be necessary to have some commissioners appointed to assess the machinery on hand; though not worth much, yet it should have a value attached; and I am informed that that duty devolves upon you,” &e. “Wishing to comply strictly with the rules and regulations of the company, I shall not attempt to move or change anything until further advised by yourself or the authorities of the company.”

It is objected, that this letter was signed only by F. T. Sheets, one of the firm of F. T. Sheets & Co.; and was addressed only to John H. Rolston (personally), and not as president of the company. But it was intended by the writer, and perfectly understood by all persons concerned, to be a notice under the policy; and the company derived from it all the benefit which they could possibly have derived from such a notice written in the most perfect form. The company forthwith took action upon it as such a notice, and after proceeding, as invited by the letter, to assess the value of the machinery remaining on hand, and to consider the subject and consult counsel in regard to their liability, they base their defence to the claim on a ground entirely independent of the question of notice. Thereby any formal objection that might have been made to the notice, such as is the objection now made, was. [860]*860clearly waived; as is shown by the authorities referred ío in the argument of the counsel of the appellees. Flanders on Insurance 518-520; May on Insurance 567; and cases cited.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Va. 854, 26 Gratt. 854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-rockingham-mutual-fire-ins-v-sheets-co-va-1875.