19 Ga. App. 800 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
The record of this case shows that the plaintiff insured a certain boat-house and its contents in the sum of $500, under a policy of fire insurance issued by the defendant company, and that the property insured was destroyed by fire on September 23, 1914. On a suit upon the policy a nonsuit was granted. The errors complained of are: (1) that the court erred in granting a nonsuit; (2) that after the court had orally announced that a nonsuit was granted, the court erred in not permitting the plaintiff to again testify, and in not allowing plaintiff’s son to testify, as to the absolute refusal to pay on the part of the insurance company. The sole reason for granting the nonsuit, as shown by the certificate of the trial judge, was the plaintiff’s failure to show such absolute-refusal to pay, after having failed to furnish the proofs of loss as required by the terms of the policy. The plaintiff admits, in his petition, that such proofs had not been made, and alleged therein that they had been waived by the insurance company by its absolute refusal to pay.
The only witness whose evidence related to these questions was the plaintiff himself. His testimony on this questioon, on direct examination, was as follows: “The adjuster did appear. I don’t remember the exact time, but within a week or so afterwards. The adjuster saw Jesse, my boy, about it, and then I went to see Mr. Mell, the adjuster of the Dixie Eire Insurance Company. I had furnished an itemized list of what I had in the boat-house, and they took that list and figured it out and offered me $425, or $424 and a few cents, for the boat-house and contents. I told him that I would not accept $425-; that my policy called for $500; that I had in the boat-house around $800, that is, in the boat-house and material that was in it, and I had paid my insurance premiums on $500, and I expected $500, and would not accept $425. He then
The bill-of exceptions shows that after the evidence of the plaintiff was in and he had announced closed, the defendant moved to
1. The stipulations in the policy sued on, which are attached to the petition, require the insured to furnish proof of loss within sixty days after the fire, and, among other things, it is specified that he “shall make a complete inventory of the same [property], stating the quantity and -cost of each article, and the amount
By the Civil Code, § 5942 (1910), it is provided that “if the plaintiff fails to make out a jjrima facie case, or if, admitting all the facts proved and all reasonable deductions from them, the plaintiff ought not to recover, a nonsuit will be granted.” This statement of the code can hardly be rendered more clear or certain in meaning by words other than those used by the terms of the statute itself; but there have been numerous elucidations of this provision of law, the purport of which might be fairly stated as limiting the right of the trial judge to grant a nonsuit if there is evidence .sufficient to authorize the jury to find for the plaintiff, even though the evidence might not so require. East & West Railroad Co. v. Sims, 80 Ga. 807 (6 S. E. 595); Phillips v. Brigham, 26 Ga. 617 (71 Am. D. 227); Barnett v. Terry, 42 Ga. 283 (3); Dyson v. Becham, 35 Ga. 132; Neff v. Broom, 70 Ga. 256; Burnam v. DeVaughn, 65 Ga. 310; Davis v. Kent, 97 Ga. 275 (23 S. E. 88); Standard Cotton Mills v. Cheatham, 125 Ga. 649 (54 S. E. 650).
Coming now to a consideration of the question as to whether, under the rules of law just stated, the judge Avas authorized to grant a nonsuit in the present case, because of failure of the plaintiff to make out a prima facie case as to an absolute refusal to pay by the insurer, Ave are convinced that the fair and necessary import of the eAddence actually submitted by the plaintiff was to the effect that the defendant, although disclaiming all liability under the policy sued on, nevertheless purported to waive its exemption, by offering and continuing to offer something over $424 in settlement of the $500 claim, and in doing so contended that the amount so deducted arose from depreciation in the property. It is true that there is one clause in the plaintiff’s testimony, as given in his direct examination, which, taken by itself and disconnected from his other statements, Avould seein to convey a different meaning. The plaintiff, in detailing his conversation Avith the adjuster, quotes him in one clause of the testimony as saying that “they wouldn’t pay anything;” but, construing this clause of the sentence, not as an isolated statement, but in-the light of its
2. Although error is assigned because the trial judge refused to permit the case to be reopened in order that additional evidence might be submitted by the plaintiff, showing an absolute refusal to pay, and while the plaintiff in his motion offered to prove that the company reported in terms, “We won’t pay anything,” we have based our opinion and the direction given to the case on what had been actually shown, rather than upon the theory that the refusal to reoj)en the case requires that a'new trial be had. But for the fact that we have considered the evidence actually introduced sufficient to require a determination by the jury of the question we have discussed, we would be disposed to concur in the judgment of the trial judge that the additional evidence offered after the'verbal announcement that a nonsuit would be granted was, under the circumstances of the case, insufficient to alter its status; or rather, we would hesitate to hold that his discretion therein had been abused. Until the court signs the order granting a nonsuit, the judge has control of the case; and it is not too late, as a matter of law, for a motion to be made to allow the case to be reopened for the introduction of further evidence. Ellenberg v. Southern Ry. Co., 5 Ga. App. 389, 391 (63 S. E. 240). The question governing the discretion of the judge in allowing a case to be reopened for the introduction of further testimony in order to avoid a nonsuit was exhaustively discussed by the.late Justice Lumpkin in the case of Penn v. Georgia Southern & Fla. Ry. Co., 129 Ga. 856 (60 S. E. 172), and the rule there enunciated by him, after rviewing numerous previous decisions of our courts upon the question, is as follows: “1. Generally where counsel for a plaintiff has announced the plaintiff’s evidence closed, but has omitted to introduce evidence by reason of accident, inadvertence, or even because of a mistake as to the necessity for doing so in order to make out a prima facie case, on motion the presiding judge will allow the case to be reopened and additional evidence introduced, in order to prevent a nonsuit. 2. This rule is not one of arbitrary right on the part of the plaintiff or
Whether the court erred in refusing to reopen the ease for the purpose of allowing Mr. Jesse Moore, the son of the plaintiff, to testify upon the question of such absolute refusal to pay is a closer point. But, as stated by the trial judge in his certificate, it appears to be a reasonable and necessary deduction from the evidence of the jfiaintiff and the letters of the defendant that, subsequently to any conversation between Jesse Moore and the adjuster of the company, the defendant offered and continued to offer the payment already indicated. In the case of Davis v. Chaplin, 110 Ga. 322 (2) (35 S. E. 312), it is held that “After a judge has properly announced that he will grant a nonsuit, a decision overruling a motion to reopen the case for the introduction of additional testimony will not be reversed, when it does not affirmatively appear that the granting of such motion and the introduction of the new testimony would, in connection with the evidence already in, have placed the plaintiff in a position entitling him to a recovery.” Since it was not made to appear by the plaintiff’s motion that the son’s evidence, as then offered, related to a refusal to pay subsequent to the defendant’s offer to pay, as already testified to by the plaintiff, we do not think that, under the view of the law held by the trial judge, the requirements of the rule just quoted in the Davis case were met. In the absence of such affirmative showing, and in view of the plaintiff’s previous testimony in reference to the negotiations of himself and his son with the defendant, it would seem an altogether reasonable inference that the son’s testimony would have necessarily been of the same character as that already given by the plaintiff himself. Thus, while we differ with the court below as to the legal effect of the testimony adduced, we would not hold that there was an abuse of discretion in refusing
■Judgment reversed.