78 W. Va. 586 | W. Va. | 1916
George C. Houseman, a lunatic, suing by next friend, W. H. Houseman, recovered a judgment in an action upon a fire insurance policy, and defendant seeks reversal, assigning numerous errors. Most of them present tbe same questions raised in the case of Houseman v. Home Insurance Co., decided at the present term and not yet reported. The goods that were lost by fire had been insured by both companies, and the specifications of defense, as well as the material
Defendant pleaded the general issue, filed three pleas in abatement and five written specifications of its defenses. Plaintiff replied specially to the first of the pleas in abatement, replied generally to the other two, and replied both generally and specially to the five specifications, and issues were thereon joined. A trial by jury was had, on a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence, resulting in a conditional verdict for him for $1,030. The court took time to consider of the demurrer to the evidence, and, at a subsequent term of court, found the law to be for plaintiff, and rendered judgment accordingly.
The first point is the one raised by defendant’s pleas in abatement. They deny the right of plaintiff, he being an insane person and a non-resident, to bring the suit by next friend, insisting that only a legally appointed committee for him can do so, and challenge the fitness of W. H. Houseman to act as next friend, changing that he is not a responsible person and is interested in the result of the suit. It was settled in the suit above referred to that a lunatic had the right to sue by next friend when no committee had been appointed. But there the question was not raised by plea or motion to dismiss, while in this case it was raised by pleas. We hardly think that makes any difference. The pleas do not aver that a committee had ever been appointed for the insane plaintiff. They present but two questions: First, can a lunatic, who has no committee, sue by next friend? a question of law for the court, which could have been raised by demurrer, and need not be specially pleaded; and second, is W. H. Houseman a suitable person to act as next friend? a question of fact, but one for the court to decide, and which it did decide, in effect, although not expressly, by permitting W. TI. Houseman to continue the prosecution of the suit. The sanction of the court was thus impliedly given; a formal
The breaches of warranties in the policy, specified and relied on as defenses, are (1) that no proof of loss was furnished; (2) that plaintiff was not the unconditional owner of the property insured; and (3) failure to separate .the damaged from the undamaged goods, after the fire, and to protect them from further injury. Plaintiff replied both generally and specially and issues were thereon joined.
The fire occurred at Anawalt on November 25, 1913, and immediately thereafter W. IT. Houseman, who was in charge of the store, wrote the Flat Top Insurance Agency, at Blue-field, which represented defendant, notifying it of the fire. Within a few days thereafter J. F. Hurt, the adjuster for the insurers, came to Anawalt to adjust the loss. W. H. Houseman swears that he and Hurt went to the bank and got permission of the cashier to use a back room in the bank building, and together they went over, in detail, all of plaintiff’s inventories, daily reports and bank accounts, and footed them up on an adding machine; that Hurt and he then made out the proof of loss together, the latter filling in the blanks and putting down the figures; that the proof was made out on a regular blank form; that Hurt or W. P. Fisher, who was with him, then swore him to it; and that it was all satisfactory to Hurt, except two or three bills ivhich had been destroyed in the fire and had not been posted, but the correct amount of which, “to the dollar,” he gave from memory. He says Hurt made no objection to the proof thus made out, and that he has not seen the paper since it was delivered to him. The loss was not total, about $2,300 worth of goods was saved from the fire. Plaintiff swears that the stock of goods was worth on July 1, 1913, $5,643.62, as shown by an inventory then taken; that after that time, and before the
The defenses chiefly relied on is that plaintiff was not the. sole owner of the goods. After Hurt went to Anawalt to adjust the loss, there was some correspondence between him amj. W. H. Houseman, concerning goods purchased since the last inventory. Houseman says Hurt desired him to obtain copies of the bills and furnish them to him. Houseman says he got them and made a trip to Bluefield to see Hurt, but did not get to transact any business, as Hurt said he had to leave town on other business, and he mailed the papers to him later. .Some of Hurt’s letters are addressed to George C. Houseman and some to W. H. Houseman, but all of them were received and answered by the latter, either in his own name or in the name of his father, George C. Houseman, by himself as agent. In a letter to George C. Houseman of December 30, 1913, Hurt writes: ‘ ‘ The main trouble regarding your loss, is the ownership of the property.” Under same date he wrote plaintiff as follows: “In taking up this loss under a nonwaiver agreement, it developed that you had no interest in any of this property, but that your son W. H. Houseman, was the sole and unconditional owner of this property. I submitted these facts to the above interested Insurance Companies, and they have requested me to advise you that if jnu feel that you have any claim against them, that you are referred to the conditions of your policy contracts, and they hereby give you notice of their intent to insist, and do hereby insist, upon a full compliance with all the conditions of their policy contracts. I return herewith, the inventory of the merchandise which you saved from your store, as well as the list of your house-hold furniture which you furnished me.” And again, on the 15th of January, 1914, he wrote George C. Houseman, in reply to a letter of • the 10th, in which he requested George C. Houseman to
The case was tried upon a demurrer to the evidence. W. H. Houseman swears he was managing the store for George C. Houseman, his father; that it. was his father’s property, and the business was carried on in his father’s name; that his father had furnished $1,500 with ’ which to begin the business, under an oral contract with the witness that he eorfld purchase the property, at any time he became able to do so, by paying his father the $1,500 with interest. If .true, this testimony proves that plaintiff was the unconditional owner. The contract to sell to his son was not a condition affecting plaintiff’s title. Houseman v. Home Insurance Co., supra, and authorities cited in opinion at page 8. In addition to the authorities there cited, see also the following: Cooley’s Briefs on Ins. Law, 1383; Brunswick etc. Co. v. Northern Assurance Co., 142 Mich. 29; and Burson v. Fire Association, 136 Pa. St. 267. These cases hold that a warranty of sole and unconditional ownership of goods is not broken by a conditional sale contract, reserving title in vendor until the conditions are complied with. There are some apparent inconsistencies in the testimony of W. H. Houseman, but the foregoing is a fair interpretation of it. That arrangement gave W. H. Houseman the profits, which appear to have been considerable, only in the event he complied with the contract, which he seems not to have done. Notwithstanding the great conflict in the testimony, the jury would have had a right to accept "W. H. Houseman’s testimony as true, and, on the demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence we must give to it such weight and effect as a jury would have been justified in giving it.
Counsel for defendant urge in their brief that, plaintiff failed to comply with the ‘ ‘ Iron Safe Clause, ’ ’ which required the insured to keep a set of books showing a complete record of the business transacted, and to preserve them in an iron safe, or in some place not exposed to a fire that would destroy the building containing the insured goods, and which provided that a failure to produce such set of books for inspection by the insurer shall avoid the policy and bar recovery thereon. The purpose of this promissory warranty is to preserve a record of the last inventory,' and of the purchases and sales thereafter made, as the best evidence in ascertaining the amount of loss. When it is attached to the policy, as is usually the ease, it becomes an essential part of it, and the courts uniformly hold it to be a reasonable provision and must be substantially complied with. But plaintiff contends it has not been specified as a defense. In its fifth
The books need not be such as would be kept by an expert accountant in a large business. Prudential Fire Ins. Co. v. Alley, 104 Va. 356; and Burnett v. Insurance Co., 68 Mo. App. 343.
The Judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.