American Insurance v. Paggett

128 N.E. 468, 73 Ind. App. 677, 1920 Ind. App. LEXIS 177
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 1920
DocketNo. 10,365
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 N.E. 468 (American Insurance v. Paggett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Insurance v. Paggett, 128 N.E. 468, 73 Ind. App. 677, 1920 Ind. App. LEXIS 177 (Ind. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

McMahan, C. J.

Action by appellee on a fire insurance policy. From a judgment in favor of appellee, appellant prosecutes this appeal, and for error assigns [679]*679the action of the court in overruling its motion for a new trial.

The first contention of appellant is that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence. The policy sued on provides that any fraud, or attempt at fraud, or false swearing on the part of the insured, either in his proofs of loss or otherwise, shall cause a forfeiture of all claims under said policy.

The property covered by the policy and destroyed by the fire was household goods; the only article of any particular value being a piano, which cost $325 about three months before the fire. In appellee’s verified proof of loss he itemized the property destroyed and fixed the value of each item, the aggregate value being therein given at $786.78. Later, in accordance with the terms of the policy, he was examined under oath concerning the property destroyed and its value. He also testified as a witness on the trial.

1. Appellant contends that the appellee in his proof of loss and in his examination before trial and at the trial attempted to perpetrate a fraud upon it and was guilty of false swearing, in that he wilfully and falsely stated under oath the value and cost of certain property destroyed. The particular items about which it is claimed that appellee so stated being six dining room chairs, which appellee stated were worth $9.50, and that he paid that amount for .them; two rocking chairs, one of which he says cost $8.65 and the other $6.15; one 9 x 12 rug, for which he said he paid $16.75; and one dresser for which he said he paid $29.65. This dresser was purchased from Harris Brothers, and the other items mentioned were purchased from the Hartman Furniture Company. Both of these companies were mail order houses doing business at Chicago, Illinois. Appellee testified positively both before and at the trial that these articles were of the value so stated, and that he so fixed [680]*680the values for the reason that each of them cost him the amount stated, and at the time of the fire they were worth what he paid for them; that he knew what he paid for each item and could not be mistaken as to the cost. Appellant produced and introduced in evidence appellee’s written order which he sent to Hartman Furniture Company, in which he ordered four dining room chairs, each costing ninety-three cents; two rocking chairs costing $3.95 each, and one Washburn rug 9x12 costing $5.15, aggregating $16.77. The records of the Hartman Furniture Company, showing the receipt and shipment and cost of these items, and the bill of lading issued by the railroad showing therein receipt and shipment, were introduced in evidence. Appellee’s written order to Harris Brothers for the dresser was introduced in evidence, showing the cost to be $10.70. A letter from appellee to Harris Brothers, written to them a month after the order was written, was introduced in evidence and refers to the dresser and states that the price of the same was $10.70. The records of Harris Brothers showing shipment of the dresser, the price $10.70, and the bill of lading issued by the railroad for the same were also introduced in evidence. This written evidence made at the time the articles mentioned were purchasd before any controversy arose as to their value, and at a time when there was no inducement to falsify, we are constrained to say, conclusively shows that, instead of appellee purchasing six dining room chairs costing $9.50, he purchased four at a cost of $3.72; two rocking chairs bearing the same factory and catalogue number each costing $3.95 instead of $8.65 and $6.15; one 9x12 rug, costing $5.15 instead of $15.75; and one dresser costing $10.70 instead of $29.65. This dresser was purchased on the installment plan, $2.50 being paid at the time it was ordered in February, 1917, and the last payment of one dollar was made Oc[681]*681tober 17, 1917, six weeks after the proofs of loss were made and less than one week after his examination under oath. We thus have appellee’s written order for the dresser dated January 5, 1917, his letter of February 16, 1917, wherein he said the cost of the same was $10.70. Payments were made from time to time and, on October 17, 1917, he made the final payment; yet, .in his proof of loss dated September 5, 1917, he says the dresser is worth $29.65. In his examination taken October 11, he makes oath that it is worth $29.65, because that is what he paid for it, and again on the trial of the case we find him again stating under oath that its value is the same because it cost him that amount. He is positive in his statements and emphasizes it by saying that he cannot be mistaken, because he sent Harris Brothers a check for that amount, notwithstanding his written order wherein he says he sent $2.50. After the introduction of all this evidence, after appellee had seen his written orders and letters, wherein he over his own signature conclusively fixes the cost of the items, he takes the witness stand in rebuttal, but makes no attempt to deny this evidence, makes no attempt to explain his oral statement, or admitting his error, -on the ground of forgetfulness. It would thus appear that, even after his attention had been called to his written orders and letters, and refreshing his recollection thereby, he, by his silence, reaffirmed his former untruthful statements and testimony as to the cost, when he must have known to a certainty that his testimony on this subject was absolutely false. The larger part of his household furniture was purchased from his mother and sister, and, in view of this evidence, we are justified in assuming that the values placed upon it are as fictitious and excessive as the values placed upon the articles purchased from Harris Brothers and the Hartman Furniture Company. This is not a case like Sisk v. [682]*682American, etc., Ins. Co. (1902), 95 Mo. App. 695, 69 S. W. 687, cited by appellee, where it is said that the plaintiff “had a better knowledge of the quantity and value of the goods than any one else could have.” There the owners gave their estimates of the value; no better proof was there available; the defendant in that case offered no evidence whatever and, as said by the court: “There is not a ray of testimony anywhere to be found in the record that intimates that the loss was not an honest one, * * * or that the goods were of less value than that placed upon them by the plaintiffs.” The instant case is not one, as appellee would have us hold, where he innocently misstated the value of his property. It is a case where he knowingly and intentionally misstated material facts bearing upon the value of the property destroyed. The jury by their verdict found that the value of the property destroyed was $450. According to the undisputed testimony of appellee, if believed, the value of this property, not including the above-mentioned items, was $716.88, and appellee was entitled to a verdict for the face value of his policy— $600. Accepting the value of the piano as $325, as testified to by appellee and about which there is little or no dispute, we find that the jury allowed appellee $125 as being the value of the property destroyed when its value as testified to by appellee was $461.78.

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Bluebook (online)
128 N.E. 468, 73 Ind. App. 677, 1920 Ind. App. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-insurance-v-paggett-indctapp-1920.