Young v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance

187 S.W. 856, 269 Mo. 1, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 856 (Young v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance, 187 S.W. 856, 269 Mo. 1, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 109 (Mo. 1916).

Opinion

GRAVES, P. J.

This is an action upon an insurance policy commenced in Audrain County. The plaintiff lives in St. Louis, and the property insured was in St. Louis. Upon a trial before a jury plaintiff had a verdict for $7953.69 as her damages, $1000 attorneys’ fees and $100 penalty, or a total of $9053.69. Prom the judgment upon such verdict the defendant has appealed.

Distinguished counsel for appellant have made a painstaking analysis of the pleadings in this ease, and we adopt their statement of the pleadings. They say:

“The action is in the ordinary form upon a policy of insurance, claiming the full value of the insurance, as of a total loss in the sum of at least $18,000, because of a fire that occurred May 25, 1911, at 4961 Park View Place, St. Louis. This suit is for $8000 and attorneys’ fees and damages. The cause was brought to the November term, 1911, of the Audrain County Circuit Court. [9]*9The answer denied the premises were totally destroyed, denied the loss was $18,000, and that there was a vexatious refusal to pay, and alleges the property was damaged not to exceed $5921.86. The answer further pleaded concurrent insurance for $8000 more (suits on the other three policies are pending at Mexico), and that defendant is only liable for one-half of $5921.86. The answer also alleged conditions in the policy respecting an appraisement in the event of disagreement as to the amount of the loss; that there was such an appraisement, and that the two appraisers appointed by the plaintiff and the defendant, to-wit, John A. Hurster and Chas. B. McCormack, together with the umpire, F. J. Remmers, selected by the appraisers, made an award of sound value $18,000 and loss and damage $5921.86, and defendant was only liable for one-half thereof, to-wit: $2960.93.
“The reply denied the validity of the concurrent insurance clause, admitted there was such insurance, but denied it was concurrent. Denied the loss was only $5921.86 and alleged it was total. The reply then proceeds to-admit the disagreement, and the appointment of the appraisers and selection of the umpire, and attacks the award, alleging: (a) that they did not appraise the loss, though they signed the award; (b) that they did not impartially or fairly perform their duties, that they were not competent or disinterested; (c) that plaintiff was induced to enter into appraisement by false and fraudulent representations by defendant that McCormack was fair, competent and disinterested and would replace the buildings as before the fire for the amount of the award;- (d) that McCormack suggested Remmers as umpire, and falsely and fraudulently represented to Hurster that Remmers was competent and disinterested, and would act in a fair and proper way, and that Hurster, relying thereon, agreed to Remmers as umpire, whereas both McCormack and Remmers were not competent or disinterested, but were, and for years had been, professional and frequent appraisers in fire losses for the insurance companies in St. Louis, and were biased, prejudiced and incompetent to act, all of that being [10]*10known to defendant and the other companies; (e) that the appraisers and umpire would not, though often requested by plaintiff and his counsel, allow them to appear and be heard in connection with their determination of the matters, or the sound value of the buildings, or the loss by fire, and denied them the right to produce any witness or evidence in regard to said matters, or any matter involved in the appraisal; (f) that McCormack and Remmers privately got from outside parties evidence as to the value of parts of the insured property, without the knowledge of plaintiff, or letting her know thereof, or letting her offer testimony on the subject of the value, and ■ sent parties to visit the building without parties knowing what the building had been before the fire or what had been destroyed, it being impossible for them to learn facts, and then got bids from the parties as to what they would replace parts of the building for as before the fire, when said parties did not and could not know what had been the condition before the fire or what would be the cost of replacing such parts as they were to bid on; (g) alleges such parties were incompetent and incapable of doing the work, or making accurate reports, or making bids, or learning the facts, and that they guessed at, and incorrectly reported to the appraisers and umpire, their bids, and that they were wholly inadequate, and below the fair cost to replace such parts as they bid upon as they were before the fire, and that Hurster demanded of the other two that plaintiff be allowed to appear before the three of them, and be heard upon the matters, but McCormack and Remmers refused to let plaintiff, or her counsel, be heard before the appraisers or the umpire; (h) that the estimates and bids of said parties included different, cheaper and inferior materials from what was in the building before the fire, and was not intended by the parties to replace the building in the condition as before the fire; (i) that neither the appraisers nor the umpire knew what information said bidders had obtained or what they had figured upon in their bids, or wbat facts or information they used in making their bids, but nevertheless the appraisers and [11]*11umpire used such false, incorrect, and inadequate bids in arriving at the award; (j) that the appraisers and umpire in arriving at the sound value, and the award, did not truly or correctly estimate or endeavor to estimate same, but carelessly, wrongfully, inaccurately and fraudulently guessed at same, and (k) neither McCormack nor Remmers ever meant to make a correct award, but intended to and knowingly placed the amount of loss at a sum which was in fact, and as they well knew, far below the true loss suffered by plaintiff, and that $5921.86 does not represent, as they well knew, the amount of loss; (1) that, before the award was signed and returned by the three men, Hurster objected and protested against it and informed the other two the loss was in excess of $5921.86 and at least $18,000, but they stated and promised Hurster they would replace the building in exactly the condition before the fire for $5921.86 if he would sign the award, and Hurster relying thereon, and supposing they would fulfill their promise as to so replacing, and supposing he was bound to join in the award, as they had the majority vote, signed his name to the award.
“The reply then alleges (m) that the damage was wide-spread and complete, and such as to make it impossible for the appraisers, or umpire, or anyone, to know what was the loss, without evidence of persons who knew the building as it was before the fire, so as to be informed as to same, and that the appraisers and umpire wrongfully and unlawfully refused to let plaintiff appear or produce any evidence on the subject, and any conclusion they arrived at was guess work, inaccurate, and far below the actual value before the fire; (n) that neither McCormack nor Remmers ever replaced, or offered to replace, the buildings in the condition they were in before the fire for the sum named in the award, and had refused, though so requested by plaintiff.
“This is a fair summary of all the allegations in the reply in a serial order, as we have endeavored to indicate the various specific charges by lettering them in this way, although they run along continuously in the reply.”

[12]*12Whilst numerous assignments of error are made, only eight of them are briefed and argued here. Others seem to have been abandoned.

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Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 856, 269 Mo. 1, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-pennsylvania-fire-insurance-mo-1916.