Beatrice Nelson v. New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company, a Corporation

263 F.2d 586, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4443
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 11, 1959
Docket15999_1
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 263 F.2d 586 (Beatrice Nelson v. New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beatrice Nelson v. New Hampshire Fire Insurance Company, a Corporation, 263 F.2d 586, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4443 (9th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

BONE, Circuit Judge.

This is a diversity case and comes to us on an appeal from a judgment of the District Court against appellant who was plaintiff below. The action involves an insurance contract entered into on or about June 12, 1956 between the parties, *587 whereby appellee agreed to insure a certain “trailer house” from loss by fire, lightning, transportation or theft in an amount not to exceed $5,000, in return for the premium paid by appellant. The trailer house was materially damaged by fire on or about September 23, 1956. Subsequent to this event, appellant made Proof of Loss to appellee, but upon investigation of the facts and circumstances surrounding appellant’s acquisition of the aforementioned trailer house, appel-lee denied liability for the loss and tendered back the premium paid by appellant.

The trailer house here insured was manufactured by the Supreme Trailer Company of Bonham, Texas, 1 and on May 17, 1956, was in the possession of one Joseph Roberts, an employee of that company, for the purpose of delivering the said trailer to the Aetna Trailer Sales Company (hereafter Aetna) at a sales lot in Boise, Idaho, pursuant to the terms of a contract of sale between Supreme and Aetna. En route to Boise, and before reaching American Falls, Idaho, the trailer was slightly damaged but its value was not materially affected thereby.

On the said May 17, 1956, this Joseph Roberts, in company with one Albert Pauls 2 met appellant in American Falls, Idaho and there purported to sell to appellant the trailer house here involved for the sum of $2,000. Roberts and Pauls executed and delivered to appellant a Bill of Sale; the Bill of Sale was executed in the names of Roberts and Pauls and did not purport to be from Supreme, the then owner of the trailer house. The court found that neither Roberts nor Pauls had any right, title, or interest in the said trailer house or any right, or authority to sell or dispose of the same.

The lower court also found that appellant had been “in the market” for a trailer house for some time and was “fully conversant” with the prices and values of trailer houses; that the trailer house in question was worth more than $4,000 at wholesale and nearly $6,000 at retail; that appellant made no substantial effort to ascertain the authority of the said Roberts and Pauls. The court concluded that appellant’s purchase of the said trailer house was other than innocent.

Shortly after her acquisition of the trailer house, appellant began negotiating with appellee, through an authorized agent, to have the trailer house insured against loss from fire, lightning, transportation and theft. The said agent inspected the trailer and expressed an opinion that it was worth about $6,000. Appellant told him that she had not paid that much for it. In the ensuing conversation, it was agreed between appellant and appellee’s agent that the house trailer should be insured for $5,000 though appellant never told appellee’s agent what she had actually paid for the said trailer nor did appellee’s agent ever ask what the purchase price had been. The resulting insurance policy, countersigned by the aforesaid agent of appellee on June 12, 1956, was for the period June 12, 1956 to June 12, 1957.

The lower court concluded that appellant acquired no insurable interest in the trailer house by virtue of the sale from Roberts and Pauls and that therefore she should take nothing from, appellee by the instant action.

On this appeal, appellant contends: (1) that the court erred in finding lack of good faith on the part of appellant in making the purchase of the trailer; (2) that even if appellant did purchase the trailer in bad faith, the court erred in finding that she did not have an insurable interest in the said trailer; (3) that the court erred in failing to find that Supreme was bound by the act of *588 its agent, Joseph Roberts; (4) that even if the lower court properly found an absence of insurable interest on the part of appellant, that it erred in not finding ap-pellee to be precluded from using this absence as a defense in the present suit.

I

We conclude that the lower court’s finding of fact to the effect that appellant was not an innocent purchaser of the subject trailer is adequately supported by the record. The only evidence to support appellant’s claim of good faith, as an innocent purchaser, is her own testimony to the effect that she believed Roberts and Pauls when they told her that the price was so low because it was better to make a quick sale than to haul the trailer house back to Texas after Aetna rejected its delivery, as the said Roberts and Pauls claimed it (Aetna) would do.

Arrayed against this testimony are the inferences to be drawn from the fact that appellant purchased the trailer from complete strangers after seeing them for less than an hour; that she knew the trailer to be worth at least $2,000 more than she paid for it (the value shown on the invoice which Roberts and Pauls showed her was $4,276.70) and by her own testimony believed it to be worth $3,000 more than she paid for it; that appellant’s vendors had no documents of title to show or deliver to her; that the invoice which Roberts and Pauls displayed to her clearly indicated the subject trailer was to be delivered to Aetna Trailer Sales; and that appellant’s only effort to determine whether Roberts and Pauls had authority to sell the trailer was in the form of a question directed toward those persons.

This Court has often stated that a trial court has a great advantage in determining the facts because it hears the testimony and views the demeanor of the witnesses on the stand. We will not overturn a finding of fact unless it is clearly erroneous. Western Canada S. S. Co. v. United States, 9 Cir., 245 F.2d 921. The finding of the lower court that appellant was not an innocent purchaser is not clearly erroneous in this case since it was supported by competent evidence.

II

It would appear that the question whether an insurable interest is conveyed to the vendee by a purchase of property under circumstances other than innocent from one who has no right, title or interest in the property or authority to sell the same, has never been determined by the Idaho Courts. We are obliged to look elsewhere to determine what the Supreme Court of Idaho might decide if such a question was presented to it in the posture here shown.

An “insurable interest” is defined by statute in the State of Idaho.

“ ‘Insurable interest,’ (property), shall mean every interest in property, or in relation thereto, or liability in respect thereof, of such a nature that a contemplated peril might directly damnify the insured, is an insurable interest. An interest in property insured must exist when the insurance takes effect, and when loss occurs, but need not exist in the meantime.” Idaho Code, § 41-201(14)

Appellant contends that this statutory definition patently includes any form of possession, including naked possession of the vendee of the nature found by the lower court in the instant case.

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Bluebook (online)
263 F.2d 586, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beatrice-nelson-v-new-hampshire-fire-insurance-company-a-corporation-ca9-1959.