Delaware Underwriters v. Brock
Delaware Underwriters v. Brock
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit to recover insurance on a certain house, alleged to have been destroyed by fire, instituted by appellee against Delaware Underwriters and West-chester Fire Insurance Company; a trial of the same by jury résulting in a verdict and judgment for $2,500 in favor of appellee. The policy was for $2,500.
Appellants pleaded a general denial, and specially pleaded that appellee should not recover, because he had not complied with a clause in the policy 'as to submitting any cause of disagreement as to amount of the loss to two competent and disinterested appraisers, who should appraise the loss and in case of their disagreement name an umpire to settle it. It was alleged that a disagreement had arisen as to the amount of the loss between appellants and appellee, and each of them selected an appraiser, which the other declared was not competent and disinterested, and the arbitration never took place. The jury found that neither the appraiser selected by appellee nor the one selected by appellants was competent and disinterested, but also found that appellee did not refuse to submit the difference between the parties to the appraiser chosen by appellants, and that appellants refused to submit the differences to the appraiser selected by appellee,
The evidence in the case shows that, while the appraisers chosen by the parties were not competent and disinterested, the appellee of *378 fered to set aside Ms choice and choose another appraiser, if appellants would choose another and different appraiser, and that offer was refused by appellants.
The third and fourth assignments of error claim that it was neither pleaded nor proved that the appraiser selected by appellants was not competent and disinterested. In the supplemental petition appellee pleaded this fact, and there was evidence to sustain such allegation. The testimony showed that he was used by appellants in a number of cases as an appraiser and was paid by them the sum of $10 a day. Brocjk was permitted to state, without objection, that the appraiser had been represented to him as not fair. The letter introduced, without objection, also tended to show that Phelps was not disinterested, but seemed to be regularly in the employ of appellants.
The fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth assignments of error are overruled. The house was shown to be a total loss.
The judgment is affirmed.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- DELAWARE UNDERWRITERS Et Al. v. BROOK
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published