211 S.W. 779 | Tex. | 1919
The defendant in error recovered a judgment in the District Court, which was affirmed on appeal, upon a policy of fire insurance on defendant in error's property, issued by plaintiffs in error.
It is contended by plaintiffs in error that neither the pleadings nor the evidence warranted the submission to the jury of the question as to whether the appraiser of their selection, to estimate the damage to the insured property, was disinterested.
By way of special defense to defendant in error's suit on the policy, plaintiffs in error averred that after the fire a disagreement arose as to the amount of the loss thereby sustained by the insured, and that plaintiffs in error demanded that the loss be ascertained by two competent and disinterested appraisers, one to be selected by plaintiffs in error and one to be selected by defendant in error, as provided in the policy, and that plaintiffs in error selected Henry T. Phelps and that defendant in error selected F.R. Young, who was not disinterested and to whom objection was made on that ground, and that thereupon defendant in error declined to permit the loss to be estimated by appraisers, unless F.R. Young acted, and that defendant in error thereby wrongfully refused to permit an appraisement as stipulated for in the policy, and hence was not entitled to maintain his suit.
For replication to this matter of special defense, defendant in error plead that, upon demand by plaintiffs in error, he had agreed to an appraisement *428 of his loss and had named F.R. Young as one appraiser and had objected to Henry T. Phelps, upon his selection by plaintiffs in error, for the reason that Phelps was reported to be an unfair appraiser, and because Phelps, in selecting the umpire, would not agree to anyone unless it were a party over whom he had some control, but that defendant in error had offered to select some other appraiser instead of Young if plaintiffs in error would select some other appraiser instead of Phelps, which offer was rejected by plaintiffs in error, and hence defendant in error had not wrongfully refused to go into an appraisement, but was compelled to sue to enforce his demand.
The policy in evidence provided that in the event of disagreement as to the amount of loss, the same should be ascertained by two competent and disinterested appraisers, the insured and the insurer each selecting one, and the two so chosen selecting a competent and disinterested umpire, and the appraisers should then estimate and appraise the loss, submitting any difference to the umpire, and that the award of any two should determine the amount of the loss.
There was evidence that F.R. Young, who was selected as an appraiser by defendant in error, had previously made an estimate of the loss for which he had been paid by defendant in error; that Henry T. Phelps, who was selected as an appraiser by plaintiffs in error, had been used as an appraiser by their agent at San Antonio more than any other, how often said agent could not tell, that said agent paid Phelps ten dollars a day, and that Phelps had made an estimate which was thought to be against the insurer and in that instance he was representing the insured.
It was an undisputed fact that defendant in error proposed to withdraw F.R. Young and to name another appraiser to whom plaintiffs in error had no objection, if plaintiffs in error would name another appraiser instead of Phelps, and plaintiffs in error declined to accept the proposition.
The jury found, on special issues, that F.R. Young was not a competent and disinterested appraiser, and that Henry T. Phelps was not a competent and disinterested appraiser.
It seems plain to us that the finding of the jury that Phelps was not a disinterested appraiser is amply supported by both the pleadings and the evidence.
The answer of plaintiffs in error recognized the rule that "if the insurer relies for a defense upon non-compliance with the arbitration and award clause in a policy, such clause must be specially pleaded to be available as a defense." 5 Joyce on Insurance, sec. 3264; Manchester Fire Ins. Co. v. Simmons, 12 Texas Civ. App. 607[
The conclusion that the jury were warranted, on the evidence recited, to find against the qualifications of both Young and Phelps results from a right conception of the duties to be performed by appraisers under policies such as the one involved in this suit. The Alabama Supreme Court clearly gave the right construction to the appraisal clause in these policies, when it said: "The purpose of the clause is to secure a fair and impartial tribunal to settle the difference submitted to them. In their selection it is not contemplated that they shall represent either party to the controversy or be a partisan in the cause of either, nor is an appraiser expected to sustain the views or to further the interest of the party who may have named him. And this is true, not only with respect to estimating the amount of the loss, but also with reference to the selection of an umpire. They are to act in a quasi judicial capacity and as a court selected by the parties free from all partiality and bias in favor of either party; so as to do equal justice between them. This tribunal having been selected to act instead of the *430
court and in place of the court, must, like a court, be impartial and non-partisan. For the term `disinterested' `does not mean simply lack of pecuniary interest, but requires the appraiser to be not biased or prejudiced.' And, if this provision of the policy was not carried out in this spirit and for this purpose, neither party is precluded from going to the courts, notwithstanding the agreement to submit their difference to the board of appraisers." Hall Bros. v. Western Assur. Co.,
The real question in this case, under the pleadings and evidence, was by whose fault was an arbitration defeated? The jury's answers, in the light of other facts not controverted, fix that fault on plaintiffs in error. And it can not be questioned that when a party has wrongfully occasioned a failure of arbitration, he has thereby released the other party from his obligation to enter into the arbitration. Braddy v. Ins. Co.,
The fire loss occurred on January 4, 1917, and complaint is made that the judgment allows interest to defendant in error from the date of such loss.
The contract between the parties, as embodied in the policy, required the insured, if fire occur, to "give immediate notice of any loss thereby in writing to this company," and within ninety days after the fire to render a signed and sworn statement, stating, among other matters, the knowledge and belief of the insured as to the time and origin of the fire, the interest of the insured and of all others in the property, all incumbrances thereon, and all other insurance. The policy then provides that "the loss shall not become payable until sixty days after the notice, ascertainment, estimate, and satisfactory proof of the loss herein required have been received by this company, including an award by appraisers when appraisal has been required."
The petition of defendant in error alleged that on January 5, 1917, he gave plaintiffs in error the notice of his loss, and that on March 2, 1917, more than sixty days before the filing of this suit, he submitted to plaintiffs in error proofs of his loss. There is nothing in the pleadings of defendant in error to show denial of liability under the policy by plaintiffs in error.
The Court of Civil Appeals sustained the allowance of interest from the date of the fire on the ground that the house was shown to be a total loss.
In the case of Queen Insurance Co. v. Jefferson Ice Co.,
The holding in the case last cited was not that the recovery for the loss of the house should bear interest from the date of the fire, and the recovery for the loss or damage to the personal property should begin to bear interest sixty days after proof of the loss or damage was furnished, but that no interest whatever should be allowed until sixty days had run after the proof of loss was furnished. Here we necessarily had the decision that the statute did not dispense with proof of loss, though the loss be total and not of personal property.
The Fort Worth Court of Civil Appeals, in Continental Ins. Co. v. Chase,
Notwithstanding the express refusal of the Supreme Court to approve the construction given by the Court of Civil Appeals to the statute, in Continental Insurance Co. v. Chase, and the conflict of such construction with the opinion of Judge Stayton in Queen Ins. Co. v. Jefferson Ice Co., supra, some of the Courts of Civil Appeals have adhered to such construction, though not entirely without question of its correctness. Ins. Co. v. Ruddell, 37 Texas. Civ. App., 30,
We regard Judge Stayton's opinion as decisive of the question before us, whether this loss be regarded as total or partial. Article 5714, R.S., *432
can not change the date of payment as expressly stitulated for in the policy contract with relation to the required statement under oath of the insured's knowledge and belief as to the time and origin of the fire and like matters, no matter whether it does or does not dispense with the immediate notice required by the policy. The statute obviously can not apply beyond the matter of notice of the claim for loss or damage to the insured property. The policy just as obviously does require something more than notice, and something essentially different from mere notice. That which is required has very positive value to the insurer, wholly apart from carrying to him notice of a claim for loss or damage. Watertown Fire Ins. Co. v. Grover,
As already noted, there was no denial of liability by plaintiffs in error. It is the settled law of Texas that such a denial does mature the demand for loss or damage under a fire policy. Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Jacobs,
We do not think that the loss in this case can be properly treated by us as a total loss; for the case was submitted and determined on issues which would have been immaterial had the loss been total.
Because of the error in the allowance of interest from the date of the loss, the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed, and the judgment of the District Court is reformed, so as to allow a recovery by plaintiff in the sum of $2500, with interest at the legal rate from May 2, 1917, being sixty days after the proofs of loss were furnished; and, as thus reformed, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Reformed and affirmed. *433