225 Mass. 428 | Mass. | 1917
The plaintiff’s automobile was stolen after ■eight o’clock in the evening, was abandoned by the thief, and when found about midnight was in a damaged condition. The ■car had been used by the plaintiff in his business as a plumber during the two years he owned it, had not been painted for some time, and had been damaged in an accident shortly before the •.theft. The policy insured the plaintiff, among other things,
Under the rulings and instruction of the trial judge the jury apparently awarded the plaintiff the cost of having the machine restored to the condition in which it was at the time of the theft. His contention, based on his exceptions, is that he was entitled, by reason of an alleged agreement with the defendant’s adjuster, to recover the much larger sum expended by him in putting the machine in perfect repair, regardless of whether the repairs were made necessary by the theft alone.
One Church, a member of a firm of insurance adjusters, after looking over the car did not agree with the estimate of damage furnished by the plaintiff’s expert. He suggested that the plaintiff take or send his car to the Ford service station in Cambridge, and leave it to the persons there in charge to determine what damage was done, and to make the repairs. On the testimony of Church the agreement between them was that the insurance company should pay for putting the car in as good condition as it was in before it was stolen. Although the plaintiff, during his cross-examination, corroborated this, yet there was- some evidence for the jury that the adjuster agreed that the company would pay for putting the machine “into perfect repair.” The assistant superintendent of the Ford service station testified that the plaintiff ordered new parts, and “wanted the car put in as good condition as new; ” and, in substance, that the repairs actually made were due to the wear and tear and old age of the car, not to the damage sustained on account of the theft.
Under its contract the defendant insured the plaintiff against the loss or damage due to the theft of his automobile. In the
There was no error in the judge’s refusal to give the instructions requested, or in the portions of his charge excepted to.
Exceptions overruled.