Court Opinion

ID: 3923894
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:50:26.301703+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:54:29.527095
License: Public Domain

We find among the papers an amicus curiæ "suggestion of certain material fatal errors which are apparent upon tile record in" this cause, coupled with a motion to dismiss the writ of error because of such errors. The objections pointed out go to the sufficiency of the citation in error and the officer's return thereon. Two of the objections are untenable, while the others are waived by defendant in error, who signed an agreement, on file among the papers here, that plaintiff in error could file the transcript and record in this court, and file its briefs herein at any time before September 3, 1920, and further agreeing that defendant in error might file his briefs any time prior to two weeks before the submission of the cause. The execution of this agreement operated as an appearance in this court by defendant in error; and the motion to dismiss is accordingly overruled. Stephenson v. Chappell,12 Tex. Civ. App. 296, 33 S.W. 880, 36 S.W. 482.
Mahaffey, plaintiff below, and defendant in error here, alleged that on February 21, 1919, the indemnity company issued a fire and theft policy in the amount of $300 covering a certain Ford automobile; that thereafter, on October 11, 1919, he purchased the car from the then owner; that four days later, on October 15, 1919, the car was stolen and has not been recovered; that when he purchased the car the indemnity policy was in the possession of the Guaranty State Bank of Fort Worth, and that he instructed the bank to have the policy transferred to him, which the bank agreed to do "and led the plaintiff to believe that the * * * bank would have and cause said policy to be transferred to * * * plaintiff, and that plaintiff did believe that the * * * bank would and did have the said policy transferred to said plaintiff"; that if the bank failed to have the policy so transferred, and thereby relieved the indemnity company of liability on the policy, "then and in that event the plaintiff has been damaged by the negligence of the" bank in the sum of $300.
The bank appeared and answered, but the indemnity company made no appearance, whereupon Mahaffey dismissed the bank from the action, and took a default judgment against the indemnity company for the amount of the policy, and the company brings that judgment here by writ of error.
The petition of the plaintiff below discloses: That at the time the indemnity policy was issued the car did not belong to Mahaffey, but was the property of a third party, that the policy was not issued to Mahaffey, but to a third party; that after the policy *Page 862 
had been in force about eight months Mahaffey bought the car, which was stolen from him four days later; that at the time Mahaffey purchased the car the indemnity policy was in the possession of the Fort Worth bank, and that Mahaffey instructed the bank to have the policy transferred to him; but that plaintiff cannot allege that the policy was ever so transferred to him.
The petition, in our opinion, was subject to a general demurrer so far as the indemnity company was concerned, and accordingly will not support a judgment by default against that company. If the indemnity company was liable to Mahaffey, it could have been so only by reason of the insurance contract or policy. That contract was made originally with a third party, a stranger to this litigation. It was not made with Mahaffey. He was not a party, but was a stranger to it. It was never transferred or assigned to him, so far as the petition shows, and no contract or privity of contract between the company and himself was alleged, and accordingly no case was made by his petition.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.