Serio v. Badger Mutual Insurance Company
Decision Date | 04 June 1959 |
Docket Number | No. 17358.,17358. |
Citation | 266 F.2d 418 |
Parties | Sam SERIO, d/b/a Magnolia Canning Company, Appellant, v. BADGER MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY and Northwestern Mutual Fire Association, Appellees. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit |
P. Z. Jones, Ross R. Barnett, Jackson, Miss., O. W. Phillips, Magnolia, Miss., M. B. Montgomery, Jackson, Miss., Barnett, Jones & Montgomery, Jackson, Miss., of counsel, for appellant.
Thomas H. Watkins, Elizabeth Grayson, Jackson, Miss., Watkins & Eager, Jackson, Miss., of counsel, for appellee.
Before HUTCHESON, Chief Judge, and RIVES and JONES, Circuit Judges.
Among other business ventures the appellant, Sam Serio, had operated a canning factory at Magnolia, Mississippi, since 1939, under the name of Magnolia Canning Co. The operation was seasonal, beans being canned in the spring and sweet potatoes in the fall. On June 11, 1939, Badger Mutual Insurance Company, one of the appellees, issued to the appellant a policy of fire insurance on the canned vegetables, materials and supplies in the canning plant in the amount of $35,000. On July 18, 1955, Northwestern Mutual Fire Association, the other appellee, issued a policy against the same risks in the amount of $25,000. The Badger policy incorporated a reporting form requiring the insured to make monthly reports. The Badger policy and the Northwestern policy each contained an Iron Safe Clause which provided, among other things,1 that inventories would be taken at annual or more frequent intervals and a set of books would be kept showing the business transacted. The clause required that the inventory and books be kept in a locked fire-proof safe at night and at all times when the building was not open for business, or that the inventories and books be kept in some place which would not expose the records to a fire which might destroy the building in which the insured goods were kept.
The canning factory of Serio was destroyed by fire on the night of September 24, 1955. As permitted by the policies, the insurance companies examined the insured, Sam Serio, and his bookkeeper, Miss Fannie Lederer, under oath. From these examinations it appeared that the safe contained but one inventory, rather than the two that should have been produced, and contained no books. It was said by Miss Lederer that she had inadvertently left other inventories and the books out of the safe before the fire. It was assumed that they had been destroyed in the fire.
The insurance companies filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment that the Iron Safe Clause in the policies had been violated and that they owed nothing to Serio on account of his fire loss. Serio counterclaimed for the full amount of each policy. At the conclusion of the evidence both Serio and the insurance companies moved for a directed verdict. At the argument on these motions the trial judge said, among other things, The court directed a verdict for the insurance companies. On September 13, 1957, a judgment for the insurance companies was entered. The foregoing excerpts from the court's oral opinion indicate that the judgment was entered upon the sole ground that Serio had not complied with the Iron Safe Clause. Motions for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and, in the alternative, for a new trial, were filed. These were overruled and in a letter opinion the district court again stated its conclusion that the Iron Safe Clause had been breached with the result of invalidating the policies. A notice of appeal from the judgment was filed March 11, 1958. In specifying error Serio asserts that there was a substantial compliance with the Iron Safe Clause, that the contents of the building and the value thereof could be established by other evidence.
On April 2, 1958, after the notice of appeal had been filed but before the transcript of the record in this appeal had been prepared, Serio filed a motion in the district court under Rule 60(b) (1, 2).2 In the motion and affidavits filed with it were recitals that a few days before the fire while working on the books Miss Lederer, Serio's bookkeeper, received a message calling her to the bedside of her sister who was seriously ill in Wisconsin. In her excitement she left the books on the top of a cabinet. During her absence Serio told Glen Varnado, an illiterate employee, to move some old unused record books from the office to a storage room which was back of the boiler room of the canning factory. Varnado moved the unused books and also, without the knowledge of Serio, moved the books, records, inventory and cancelled checks of the canning factory. Not knowing the books and records had been moved out of the building, Serio and Miss Lederer assumed they had been destroyed in the fire. On March 14th, three days after the notice of appeal, Serio went to the store room looking for a usable ledger among the unused lot...
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