Williams & Miller Gin Co. v. Baker Cotton Oil Co.

1925 OK 67, 235 P. 185, 108 Okla. 127, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 27, 1925
Docket13762
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1925 OK 67 (Williams & Miller Gin Co. v. Baker Cotton Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams & Miller Gin Co. v. Baker Cotton Oil Co., 1925 OK 67, 235 P. 185, 108 Okla. 127, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 112 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

BRANSON, V. C. J.

The Williams & Miller Gin Company, a corporation, as plaintiff, sued the Baker Cotton Oil Company, a corporation, as defendant. Plaintiff’s cause of action was predicated upon the destruction by fire of its gin planlfc, certain cotton, cotton seed and supplies, by fire alleged to have been negligently caused by the defendant. The defendant pleaded the general issue, contributory negligence, that plaintiff had been paid by an insurance company the full amount of the value of the property destroyed, and by way of supplement to its answer, further pleaded a state of facts in substance an assignment of the recovery to it, the defendant, by the insurance company, of the amount paid the plaintiff, anid prayed, in event of plaintiff’s recovery, that the amount of recovery be offset to the amount paid by tbe insurance company to plaintiff.

We deem it important to point out that to this supplement to the amended answer, or to the amended answer as so supplemented, there is no pleading filed by the plaintiff. On trial to a jury of the issues joined, the plaintiff recovered “for damages for loss of gin plant, in the sum of $12,000. * * * for loss of profits, in the sum c.f $1,000.”

The court found that 'the plaintiff had been paid $10,426.55 by the Equitable Mutual Eire Insurance Company of Dallas, Tex., on its gin plant, and approximately $4,000 in addition thereto on supplies, cotton, etc., and that by reason of the facts pleaded in the said supplement to the answer, the recovery should be reduced in tbe sum of $10,426.55, and that plaintiff have judgment only for the difference between said amount and the verdict of the jury, to 'wit, $2,573.45, anid from the judgment so entered, the plaintiff appeals, and the defendant files a cross-petition in .error.

An opinion om the issues raised could not be considered iby a reader other than prolix,, if we follo'w, the various leads suggested by counsel on tbe minor matters referred to in the briefs. We will treat the decisive questions only, and in doing so will refer to the-plaintiff in error as the plaintiff, as it appeared in that position in the trial court,, and to the cross-petitionter in error as the-defendant, since it occupied the position of defendant in 'the trial court.

Clarity suggests that we discuss the assignments of error of the plaintiff first. Such assignments, while six in number, all go to the one proposition!, which may be set out in the language of the fifth assignment,, to wit: Error, in that the court allowed the offset of insurance money paid by the insurance company to the .plaintiff. Repeating, it must be noted .that the trial court did not allow an offset against the reeovery of the plaintiff to the full amount paid by the insurance company, but only the amount paid by the insurance company on its policy covering the gin plant. The contention of the plaintiff in brief on the alleged error is to tbe effect that in an action for loss of property by fire, such as here, plaintiff’s recovery cannot -be reduced because tbe property was insured by plaintiff and the insurance policy was paid. 17 C. J. 930; K. C., M. & O. Ry. v. Shutt, 24 Okla. 96, 104 Pac. 51, and numerous other cases; Ruling Case Law, vol. 11, page 960; Perrott v. Shearer, 17 Mich. 48.

This rule was, however, recognized and followed by the trial court. But plaintiff says that the final action was an evasion of it. The plaintiff further contends that While i‘t recognizes that the insurance company would have been entitled to subrogation to rights of plaintiff pro tanto, if not on equitable grounds, by virtue of the terms of the insurance policy itself, but for -tbe fact the insurance company bad waived its right of subrogation, and that the supplement to defendant’s answer, which pleaded an assignment in effect of the insurance company’s rights in the recovery, if any, to the amount paid, was permitting the defendant to do by indirection wbat it could not do directly.

The law of this state prescribes a statutory form of fire insurance policy. It is found in section 6767, Comp. Stat. 1921. The clause on the question of subrogation is as follows, to wit:

“If this company shall claim that the fire was caused by the act or neglect of any person or corporation, private -or municipal, this company shall, on payment of the loss, be subrogated to the extent of *129 such payment to all right oí recovery by the insured for the loss resulting therefrom, amq such right shall he assigned to this company by the insured on receiving such payment.”

The insurance company was therefore entitled to subrogation to plaintiff’s cause of action, or the fruits thereof, by reason of the said provision of the policy contract. It is not contended that the insurance company failed to claim the fire was caused by the negligent act of another, and by reason oifi such failure the insurer had no right of subrogation (if perchance such a contention, if -true, could avail plaintiff anything), but plaintiff proceeds on the assumption that the insurer had such a right, but “specifically waived the same.” Indeed, the record as a whole shows the insurer had such information as justified its- belief that the defendant in this action caused the fire, for that the method of settlement by advancing its liability to the insured pending the litigation was an act which sufficiently claimed the fire was caused by another to subroga te the insurer, under said quoted clause of ithe policy, if such construction be given said clause as to make it necessary that such claim be made before or at the time of payment, in order that the insurer’s right of subrogation may be claimed by it..

We do not feel that the facts in this case require that, we either concur or refuse to acquiesce in the reasoning of the New Jersey court, in the case of Eire Association of Philadelphia v. Robert V. Schei-lenger. 84 N. J. Eq. 4G4. We deem it not amiss, however, to say in passing, that the clause in the insurance policy before the court in that case is identical with the clause quoted supra. We are reluctant, however, to believe that in incorporating this clause as part of fire insurance policies, the Legislature intended to give the insurer a right more limited than it would have had, but for such a clause. Such a policy in its nature is an indemnity, and if .no such clause were in the policy form, the insurer would have the right of subrogation. If this clause should he given the construction as in the New Jersey ease, supra, it would at least have a tendency to prevent the insurer’s making settlement with the insured until an opportunity for full investigation as to whether the fire was caused by another in such a manner as, to subject the other to civil liability; for if settlement were made without information as to the fire being caused by another in such way as to subject the other to civil liability therefor, but it was afterwards ascertained that the fire was so caused, then because the insurance company had made settlement on its policy liability to the insured, without making such claim, it would thereby be precluded from asserting its right of sub-rogation, if ithe clause in question should be given such interpretation. However, we are nlot undertaking to pass on this matter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 67, 235 P. 185, 108 Okla. 127, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-miller-gin-co-v-baker-cotton-oil-co-okla-1925.