90 S.W.2d 1114 | Tex. App. | 1936
This suit was instituted by Frank Greenwood, joined by his wife, Lucy May Greenwood, against the Transcontinental Insurance Company of New York, to recover on a fire insurance policy the sum of $500 for the total destruction of their dwelling house and $500 for the destruction of their household furniture contained therein. The parties will be designated as in the trial court. The defendant alleged that the fire which destroyed said property did not occur under circumstances which fixed liability on it, and that the policy sued on provided that the insured should be the unconditional and sole owners of the property in order to recover thereon and that they were not such owners.
The cause was submitted on special issues, in response to which the jury found, in substance:
(1) That plaintiffs, Frank Greenwood and wife, at the time the fire occurred were unconditional and sole owners of all the property insured by the policy sued on.
(2) That the actual cash market value of the household goods described in plaintiffs' petition at the time of the fire was $990.25.
The court rendered judgment on such findings in favor of plaintiffs against defendant for the sum of $1,000, with interest and costs.
Defendant complains of the manner in which the court submitted the issue of unconditional and sole ownership by plaintiffs of the insured property. The testimony showed that plaintiffs had bought and paid for the real property about six weeks before the fire; that they had moved onto the same and had made improvements thereon, all before the issuance of the policy. The grantor, at or about the time of such purchase by plaintiffs, went to his attorney and asked him to prepare a deed conveying the property, but said attorney was too busy to do so at that time. Shortly after the policy sued on was issued the grantor, without any additional consideration, executed and delivered to plaintiff Mrs. Greenwood a deed to the property. Said deed did not contain any provision making the same the separate property of the grantee. From the time of the original agreement, the grantor at all times recognized the title of plaintiffs to said property. The provision in the standard form of fire insurance policies avoiding the same if the insured is not the unconditional and sole owner of the property applies to the ownership at the time the policy is issued. Insurance Co. of North America v. O'Bannon,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded.