22 Ind. App. 332 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1899
— Appellee brought this action against appellants, upon an insurance policy to recover damages occasioned by fire. A demurrer was overruled to an amended complaint. Appellant answered in three paragraphs. Without demurring to either of them, appellee replied to the third. A demurrer to the reply was overruled. Upon proper request, under direction of the court, the jury returned a special verdict, upon which appellant and appellee each moved for judgment. The court sustained appellee’s motion for judgment, and overruled appellants’ motions for judgment and for a new trial. Eor errors, appellants assign the action of the court, (1) in overruling the demurrer to the amended complaint; (2) in overruling demurrer to appellee’s reply; (3 & 4) in overruling appellants’ motion for judgment on the special verdict; (5) in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial.
The first objection urged to the complaint is that it avers that the property burned belonged to appellee, while the .complaint declared upon a policy to insure W. H. Dunn’s property. One provision of the policy (which is made a part of the complaint) reads as follows: “If the interest of the assured in the property at or after the date of the policy be any other than the entire unconditional and sole ownership of the property for the use and benefit of the assured, etc., it must be so represented to the company, and so expressed in the written part of this policy; otherwise the policy shall be void.” It is contended that the judgment was obtained upon the policy without being reformed, and therefore upon a void policy.
The complaint avers that appellee was, on the 22nd day of December, 1892, and ever since has been, the owner of the property burned; “that said defendant, at said date, in consideration of the sum of $6.30 paid to the defendant by the plaintiff as a premium, executed and delivered to plaintiff a policy of insurance, a copy of which is hereto attached, marked ‘Exhibit A,’ and made a past hereof. * * *
It thus appears that the property was owned by appellee at the time of the insurance and at the time of the fire; that she paid the premium; that the policy was delivered to her; that the agent of the company, by mistake, did not write her name in the policy, but instead inserted W. II. Dunn, contrary to the intention of the parties thereto, it being the intention of both parties to issue the policy in the name of appellee and for her sole benefit. W. II. Dunn, so far as the averments of the complaint showed, did not own the property, and did not pay the premium. The policy was not delivered to him. He was not a party to it. It does not appear that he had any knowledge of its existence, nor' that there was such a person as W. H. Dunn, except from the indorsement on the policy made to correct the alleged error. Exhibit B of the complaint, which is the indorsement on the policy, is as follows: “The property covered in this policy at the time of issue was in the name of Verrella J. Dunn, and by error issued to W. H. Dunn, her husband. This policy is hereby made payable to Verrella J. Dunn, May 13, ,1893. John O. Eiler, Agent.”
The third paragraph of answer, to which appellee replied, sets out substantially the conditions of the policy as to ownership and title, and avers that, after the policy was issued, appellee conveyed the property by deed of general warranty. Appellee’s reply to this paragraph admits that, after the issuing of the policy in suit, and before the time of the fire, she made and caused to be recorded in the recorder’s office of Delaware county, Indiana, a writing purporting on its face to be a deed of conveyance of the real estate described in the policy to Carrie B.' Vansickle, but that said deed was made- and caused to be recorded without any consideration'whatever, without the knowledge or consent of the grantee, or of any one on her behalf, and without any intent to transfer ownership or interest of appellee in said real estate, and for the' sole purpose of avoiding the institution against appellee of several threatened wrongful and unjust lawsuits; that the deed was never delivered to the grantee, or to any one on her behalf, and that she never claimed any interest in said real estate by virtue of said deed. The policy contains the following stipulation, pertinent to the questions presented by this demurrer: “Or if the property be sold or transferred, or any change take place in the title or possession,” etc., “without the consent of the company indorsed hereon,i * * . * this policy shall be void.” It needs the citation of no authorities to show that the delivery of a deed is necessary to pass title.
Appellant contends that the leaving of the deed at the recorder’s office is a sufficient .delivery; citing McNeely v. Rucher, 6 Blackf. 391; Mallett v. Page, 8 Ind. 394; Somers v. Pumphrey, 24 Ind. 231, 243; Glaze v. Insurance Co., 87 Mich. 349, 49 N. W. 595; Burkholder v. Casad, 47 Ind. 418, 422; Vaughan v. Godman, 94 Ind. 191; Stevens v. Castel, 63 Mich. 111, 29 N. W. 828; Mitchell v. Ryan, 3
Appellant objects to the reply that it does not aver that the grantee did not assent to the conveyance, and that the allegation that she never owned it is a mere conclusion of law, and not the statement of a fact. The reply avers that the deed was made without the knowledge or consent of the-grantee. Thus, it negatives her assent; for assent is an affirmative act implying knowledge. If it be conceded that, the averment that the grantee never owned the property is, a mere legal conclusion, it would .still be but the defectiveaverment of a material fact, and, under decisions of the Supreme and this Court (inasmuch as a special verdict was returned) the overruling of the demurrer was harmless.
The nest specification in the assignment of error discussed by counsel raises the question as to the sufficiency of the. facts found by the special verdict to warrant a judgment in favor of appellee, and the action of the trial court in overruling the motion for judgment on the special verdict. "We need only to refer to the rule that no presumptions are indulged in favor of one on whom the burden rests in a special verdict. All material facts necessary to a recovery must be found. A material fact alleged in the complaint is that the correction
Under the averments of the reply, it devolved upon the appellee to prove that the deed alleged to have been made to Carrie B. Vansickle had never been delivered. To the following interrogatory, “Does the evidence show that the deed was never delivered to any one for the grantee named therein, Carrie B. Vansickle?” the jury answered, “No.” In answer to another interrogatory, the jury answered that the deed in question had never been delivered to the grantee nor to any one for her. The verdict finds that the appellee and her husband made and acknowledged a deed for the lot on which the house insured was situated after the alleged correction of the policy, and before the fire, to her sister, Carrie B. Vansickle, and caused it to be recorded in the recorder’s office; that in said deed the grantee assumed the payment of a mortgage for $150. The jury find that soon after the destruction of the property by fire, appellee wrote two letters, one to the defendant company, the other to- the officers of the company, in each of which letters she stated that she had transferred the property to her sister to secure the payment of a small amount of money, that the transfer was temporary, and that she had gotten it back. These findings are irreconcilably in conflict, and result in no finding upon this material fact. Gates v. Scott, 123 Ind. 459, 462; Wabash R. Co. v. Savage, 110 Ind. 156, 161. It was essential to
Appellee insists that the question raised by the third and fourth assignments cannot be considered, because the bill of exceptions was not filed in time. The trial was concluded on the 3rd day of December, 1895, and motion for judgment on the verdict in favor of appellant was filed on the 5th day of December, 1895. Appellants’ motions were overruled, and exceptions taken at the time. The Supreme Court has held that a bill of exceptions is not necessary to present an exception to the ruling of the court on such motion. In Salander v. Lockwood, 66 Ind. 285, at page 289, the Supreme Court said: “General and special verdicts and answers to interrogatories are part of the record without bills of exceptions. * * * We think the motion in writing for judgment on the special findings, and the ruling of the court thereon, which must appear on the record, are all that is necessary, in connection with the verdicts already in the record, to present the decision of the court, and the reason of it, and that no bill of exceptions is necessary. As to this point, Shaw v. Merchants Nat. Bank, 60 Ind. 83, is overruled.” Redinbo v. Fretz, 99 Ind. 458. See, also, Frank v. Grimes, 105 Ind. 346.
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the trial court to sustain appellant’s motion for judgment on the special verdict.
Wiley, J., absent.