44 Ga. App. 700 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1932
Mrs. A. E. McCann brought suit against the Dixie Lake and Bealty Company for the value of certain jewelry which her husband checked with an agent of the defendant while she and her husband went in a swimming pool operated by the defendant, and which property was never returned to her by the defendant. The evidence showed that A. E. McCann had received $1675 from an insurance company which partially compensated for the loss, and also showed that there was $95 worth of jewelry so lost which
We will deal only with the controlling issue, which involves the construction of the receipt given by A. E. McCann to the insurance company for $1675, paid by the company for so much of the lost property as was insured. The defendant company takes the position that the receipt constitutes a complete and unconditional assignment to the insurance company of the plaintiff’s cause of action against the defendant company. The plaintiff takes the position that, in order to serve her best interest, she agreed to and did accept the payment of $1675 as a loan, and agreed to enter suit against the defendant company to recover said lost property, and to repay said loan to the extent of any recovery she might make, and pledged such recovery as security for the repayment. ' Under our view of the case it is not necessary to decide whether the receipt signed by her husband was binding on the plaintiff, but we will assume, for the purposes of this opinion, that it was. Nor is it necessary to pass on the exceptions pendente lite.
The receipt given the insurance company by McCann was as follows : “Received from the Commercial Union Assurance Company, who issued All Risks Policy No. AR-6585, the sum of sixteen hundred seventy five dollars . . as a loan, and repayable only to the extent of any net recovery we may make from the owners of the Dixie Lake swimming pool, concession of Campbell County, Georgia, on account of the loss of several pieces of jewelry, and as security for such repayment we hereby pledge to the said Commercial Union Assurance Company the said recovery, and agree to enter and prosecute suit against the said owners of the Dixie Lake swimming pool concession of Campbell County, Georgia, or others in my name, but at the sole expense and under the exclusive direction and control of the said Commercial Union Assurance Company.” Of course, McCann wished to collect from the insarance company and the insurance company wished to recover as much
The court charged the jury as follows: “If you find in this case there was an assignment of any of plaintiffs rights to another party, and that other party has paid to plaintiff for loss of any articles alleged which 'is sued for in plaintiff’s petition, you would not consider any damage against the defendant for these articles if the evidence shows that they were paid for; but I charge you that if you find for the plaintiff, the plaintiff would, be entitled to recover the value of any articles that were lost as alleged that were not paid for by the party taking the assignment from the plaintiff.” This charge was error because there was no evidence of an assign
In Didschuneit v. Enochs Lumber and Manufacturing Co., 42 Ga. App. 527 (156 S. E. 720), the first headnote is as follows: “The documentary evidence relied on by the defendants to show that the plaintiff had transferred and assigned the account sued on, and was thus not entitled to maintain the action, disclosed no intention on the part of the plaintiff to sell or assign the indebtedness, and none on the part of the alleged assignee to purchase the same;
There being no evidence to show an intention on the part of the plaintiff to assign or transfer her right of action, and none to show an intention on the part of the insurance company to become an assignee or transferee of the right of action, the plaintiff was entitled to recover the value of such property as she proved to be lost through the negligence and nonperformance of duty of the defendant, and the court erred in limiting her recovery to the amount of property not insured, and erred in overruling her motion for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.