Queen Insurance v. Betbeze
Queen Insurance v. Betbeze
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Betbeze was a holder of a fire insurance policy, on certain household furniture, in .the Queen Insurance Company for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars. While the insurance'was in force, the property covered was destroyed by fire. The insurance company refused to pay the amount of the policy, whereupon suit' was instituted to recover same. The declaration was in the usual form, making the policy an exhibit. No peculiar feature of the declaration is necessary to be stated in
Without further following the objections urged by appellant, we need only say that it concluded by the court allowing appellee to amend and file notice that he would offer evidence to show that appellant waived the terms of the policy relied on by having knowlege of, and issuing the policy sued on in full view of, the fact that appellee then had thirty-five hundred dollars concurrent insurance on the identical property. When the court allowed appellee to make this statement, appellant asked for a continuance, but the court refused same. The appellant of course, denies that it had notice of any concurrent insurance, or waived, in any way, any of the provisions of the policy in regard to concurrent insurance. On the trial appellee testified that the insurance of which appellant had notice consisted of two policies, one for three thousand dollars taken out with Hunter in a company which he represented, and one for five hundred dollars taken out with a Weems in a company which he represented. The trial resulted in a verdict for appellee for the full amount of his policy. Appellant made a motion for a new trial, claiming surprise and inability to meet the phase of the case made by the amended pleading, and on the hearing of the motion made substantially the following affidavit in support thereof: The affidavit states that appellant will contradict appellee by showing that at the time appellant issued its policy, although appellee testified that he then had a policy for three thousand dollars in a company represented by Hunter, in truth and» in fact appellee did not have any such policy, and of course could not have notified appellant of a policy that had no existence in fact. Appellant states in the affidavit that appellee at one time did have
On the whole record, we think the court should have set aside the verdict and granted a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Queen Insurance Company v. Louis Betbeze
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- New Trials. Grounds. Surprise. Code, 1906, § 744. Pleadings. Where to a, defense specially pleaded by notice under the general issue, as authorized by Code 1906, § 744, plaintiff was permitted to introduce evidence in avoidance, by filing a counter notice during the trial, defendant asking but being denied a continuance, and a verdict was rendered for plaintiff,-a new trial should be granted upon a showing that the defendant would produce evidence, not available on the first trial, materially contradicting and discrediting plaintiff’s testimony of which notice was first given on the trial.