Source: https://openjurist.org/255/f2d/658
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 06:52:49+00:00

Document:
FARM AIR SERIVICE, Inc., Appellee.
April 30, 1958, Rehearing Denied June 11, 1958.
Quentin Bates, Houston, Tex., Fulbright, Crooker, Freeman, Bates & Jaworski, Houston, Tex., for appellants.
Clyde E. Barnes, Robert E. Barnes, Beaumont, Tex., Barnes & Barnes, Beaumont, Tex., for appellee.
The companies defended on the ground that the aircraft was not covered by the policies since aircraft were specifically excluded from coverage.2 Appellee took the position that it was the intent of the parties, gleaned from the entire contracts and under the undisputed evidence and admissions, that the destroyed airplane was covered by the policies; or, in any event, the provisions of the policies were contradictory, ambiguous or inharmonious, and that the court below properly admitted oral evidence of the negotiations between the parties to aid the jury in determining their intent. It was admitted in the pleadings that the policies were issued March 30, 1955 and premiums paid for one year, that the plane was destroyed May 24, 1955, and proof of loss and claims seasonably made, and that prior to June 1st, appellants had investigated the loss and denied the claims.
The trial court admitted oral evidence describing the circumstances surrounding the parties at the time the policies were issued and of their negotiations preceding their issue, and submitted the case to the jury which returned a verdict for the appellee upon which the judgment was entered, from which appellants prosecute this appeal.
A court called upon to determine the meaning of written contracts such as those here involved looks primarily to the language of the contracts after first placing itself as nearly as possible in the position of the parties to them at the time of their execution. 12 Am.Jur., Contracts, Par. 247-249; Sinclair Refining Co. v. McElree, Tex.Civ.App.1932, 52 S.W.2d 679, 681; Shook v. Parton, Tex.Civ.App.1948, 211 S.W.2d 368, 371. The situation of the parties was developed by the evidence without objection and virtually without dispute.
Insured was in the business of conducting dusting and spraying operations for farmers, and it owned between six and nine small airplanes which were kept in its hangar or tied down close by when not in use. The hangar was steel construction with metal sides and concrete floor, and it customarily held about seven planes. It had been insured against fire with other insurers for a considerable period.
Insured decided to explore the possibility of carrying insurance on its planes to cover crashes and fires resulting therefrom, and it asked appellants' agents in Beaumont, Texas to come out and disuss Beaumont, Texas to come out and discuss were promptly advised that the premiums for such insurance were prohibitively high, and they thereupon solicited the insured to purchase insurance on the contents of the hangar including the surrounding area. The issuance of the two policies followed these discussions.
A construction of these policies in the light of these unchallenged facts would lead to the conclusion that the parties intended that aircraft should be included in the phrase 'all contents' of the hangar. Any other conclusion would be strained and illogical. Insured had initiated the negotiations solely with the view of protecting themselves against loss of their planes. Appellants take the position that the contends insured included only tools, machinery and airplane parts. The undisputed proof showed that these items had a total value of about $2,000.00, about one-fifth of the total amount of the insurance applied for and issued. Appellant argue also that it is manifest that the parties did not insure the planes because they had a total valuation of more than four times the amount of insurance carried on the contents. Appellee counters this argument by showing that danger of a general conflagration of contents of the hangar while it was closed and unattended was infinitesimal in view of the metal construction, and that experience had shown that such losses were customarily confined to one or two aircraft which were caught in fires started from welding operations in close proximity to combustible fluids.
Appellants' general argument is weakened moreover by certain writings placed in evidence with their consent. The first was a letter from the state agent of one of appellants to its Beaumont representatives dated May 9, 1955 expressing doubt as to whether the policy recently issued did not, by its terms, cover aircraft.3 3] This letter was written two weeks before the fire, but the insurance agent at Beaumont did not transmit any endorsement to appellee until about a week after the fire, at which time the loss had been reported and investigated and payment refused. Each of the endorsements then sent to assured was headed 'General Change Endorsement,' and, after providing that airplanes in or adjacent to the building should not be covered under the policy, it concluded with the typewritten words, it concluded terms and conditions remain unchanged.' These writings lend weight to the contention that the state agent for one of appellants realized that the policy terms were so ambiguous that he sought to have a 'change' made before any loss should occur. The unexplained delay of about three weeks on the part of the local agent who wrote the policies in sending the endorsements to assured give credit to the argument that the agent was reluctant to put himself behind such an endorsement because he knew that it did not faithfully record the facts.
Under the general rule that insurance policies are construed against the insurer;4 that typewritten portions of the policy are given preference over printed portions and control in event of conflict between the two,5 and the rule that 'the letter of the contract is to be controlled by its spirit and purpose. The terms employed are servants, and not masters, of an intent * * *' 12 Am.Jur., Contracts, 236, p. 760; there is considerable weight to the argument that appellee was entitled to recover under the evidence which was introduced without objection.
The argument before us, however, has been pitched around the question whether the court below properly admitted evidence of the negotiations between the parties to aid the jury in determining their intent as expressed in the written contracts. Appellants based their motion for a directed verdict, made when all of the evidence was in, and their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on their contention that the court below committed error in admitting the evidence because, as they contend, the contracts show on their face that it was not intended that aircraft should be included in the coverage.
We do not agree with this position of appellants. The question was raised when insured's president was on the stand and was asked concerning the negotiations between him and the insurance agents following their inability to agree upon the issuance of policies covering crash fires.6 Following the objection quoted in the Footnote, insured's president proceeded to testify that he and the representatives of the insurance cimpanies, standing on the ground, agreed that the policies would be issued to cover the airplanes while in the hangar or while at rest within two hundred feet of it. Without further objection appellants, omitting to make a motion to exclude the evidence or for a directed verdict when appellee rested its case, proceeded to put on their two witnesses to contradict that offered by insured and to prove that the parties agreed that the coverage would include only the tools and machinery and airplane parts in and around the hangar.
The court did not advert to this testimony in its oral charge, and the record contains no request by either party for an instruction with regard to it and neither party excepted to the charge as given. From the above it seems that the court did not overrule appellants' objection to this testimony, but merely reserved its ruling while it was listening to the oral testimony. Both parties seem to have ignored this feature of the case thereafter, and it is doubtful if appellants have reserved any exception upon which a reversal could be predicated.
But appellee does not argue this point, being content to take the position that the oral testimony was admissible. We agree. Before we could hold with appellants that appellee was denied recovery as a matter of law we would have to be convinced that the insurance policies expressed an agreement which was clear, definite, explicit, harmonious in all its provisions, and free from ambiguity throughout. Major Appliance Company, Inc., v. Hupp Corporation, 5 Cir., 1958, 254 F.2d 503; Baker v. Nason, 5 Cir., 1956, 236 F.2d 483, 491; Petroleum Financial Corp. v. Cockburn, 5 Cir., 1957, 241 F.2d 312, 317 et seq.; Universal C.I.T. Credit Corp. v. Daniel, 1951, 150 Tex. 513, 243 S.W.2d 154, 157; and the Texas cases listed in Footnote 5, supra.
The writings before us do not, in our opinion, meet this test. Appellants' representatives wrote into the face of these policies that the companies insured appellee on all contents of the airplane hangar and the adjacent area.7 The most that can be argued by appellants is that the conditional exclusion of aircraft clashes with their own chosen words which they wrote into the face of the policy.
'All' was as comprehensive a term as could have been used, connoting such concepts as the whole quantity of, the entire number of, any and every, the total and entire contents. The premises contracted about were dedicated entirely to aircraft, their repair, handling, storage. If another portion of the contract excluded aircraft from the concept under while the parties werepalpably dealing, the least that can be said of such a portion is that it was inharmonious with and conflicting with the typewritten portion. The fact is that the 'contents' of the insured premises were not itemized and some extrinsic evidence was absolutely necessary to establish what the parties did intend by the use of this term.
I dissent. I think the holding of the court makes impossible a general exclusion provision in a fire insurance policy. Here, in plain unambiguous terms the policy stated-- in printing, to be sure, but that only testifies to the generality of its effect-- that unless 'specifically waived' aircraft shall not be covered. Clearly, therefore, every terms used to describe the covered property must be limited by that exclusion unless aircraft were specifically named. Here none was. I would reverse on the ground that the policy was plain and unambiguous on its face and the evidence required a judgment for the defendants.
Rehearing denied: TUTTLE, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
'Mr. Bates: May it please the Court, for the record, I would like to object to any oral testimony at this time that seeks to vary the terms of these insurance policies. It is our position that the terms are clear and unambiguous and that any conversation between the parties prior to the execution and issuance of the policies in question is not admissible.

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