Citizens Insurance v. Herpolsheimer Implement Co.

111 N.W. 606, 78 Neb. 707, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 227
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1907
DocketNos. 14,984, 14,985, 14,986
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 111 N.W. 606 (Citizens Insurance v. Herpolsheimer Implement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Insurance v. Herpolsheimer Implement Co., 111 N.W. 606, 78 Neb. 707, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 227 (Neb. 1907).

Opinion

Albert, C.

These appeals are a continuation of the litigation involved in Citizens Ins. Co. v. Herpolsheimer, 77 Neb. 232. There a judgment against each of the insurance companies was affirmed. The opinion referred to will assist to an understanding of the questions involved at this time. The judgments reviewed in those proceedings were rendered by the district court on the 8th day of April, 1905. On the 12th of April, 1906, the insurance companies each filed a petition for a vacation of the respective judgments, and for new trials, under the provisions of section 602 of the code. The petitions charge that the judgments were procured by wilfully false testimony given on the trial of the three cases by the judgment plaintiffs, whom we shall hereafter refer to as the Herpolsheimers. It is also alleged in the petitions that the insurance companies had no knowledge of any witness by whom such testimony could be contradicted and shown to be false, until long after the term at‘which the judgments were rendered, and about two months before filing their petitions. The answers are voluminous, and it will suffice for present purposes to say that they put in issue the charge of perjury, and state a legal conclusion, to the effect that the delay of two months on the part of the insurance companies in filing their petitions after the discovery of the witness by whom they could show the alleged falsity of the testimony of the Herpolsheimers constitutes laches. The insurance [709]*709companies demurred to the so-called plea of laches, but their demurrers were overruled. They then filed replies, amounting in each case to a general denial. The issues in the three cases were tried at the same time, and submitted on the same evidence. The trial court found generally for the Herpolsheimers, and dismissed the petitions. The insurance companies prosecute separate appeals, which were submitted at the same time and on the same briefs, and may be disposed of in one opinion.

The testimony given by the Herpolsheimers at the original trial, and now relied upon by the insurance companies as a basis for the charge of perjury, was Avith respect to two items: (1) The number of buggies totally destroyed by fire; and (2) the extent of the damage to certain binding twine.

As to the first item, two of the Herpolsheimers at the original trial testified that 81 buggies were totally destroyed. Their testimony on that point sIioavs that they arriAred at that number by taking the whole number of buggies shown by their last inventory, taken some nine months before the fire, adding thereto such additions to their stock as Avere shown by subsequent invoices, deducting therefrom the number shoAvn by their account of sales to have been sold subsequently to the talcing of the invoice, and subtracting from the result the number of buggies which were only partially destroyed by the fire. On the trial of these applications, the insurance companies produced a witness, who had been employed by the Herpolsheimers in and about the building where the buggies Avere destroyed for a period of about four months preceding the fire, and Avho had continued in their employ for about four weeks thereafter. He testified that about three months previous to the ■ fire he had counted the whole number of buggies in stock for the purpose of listing them for assessment, and that the whole number then on hand was 64; that he knew the number of buggies sold between that time and the- date of the fire, the number added to the stock between those dates, and the number that were only [710]*710partially destroyed by fire. Prom this data he placed the total number of buggies totally destroyed at 25. He further testified that within two days after the fire he counted the iron running gears in the ruins of the building where the buggies had been kept, and found the remains of only 25 buggies that had been totally destroyed; that he assisted in removing a portion of the debris, and, while doing so, again recounted the running gears of such buggies as were totally destroyed, and found the number to be 25. The testimony of this witness, so far as it relates to the so-called inventory taken by him for the purpose of listing the property for assessment, is entitled to little weight. He took no inventory. He merely counted the buggies and made no book entry, and preserved no memorandum of the number on hand at that time; neither did he keep any record of new buggies bought and added to the stock, or of the sales made therefrom. He depended entirely on his memory. On the other hand the Herpolsheimers based their estimate on an inventory regularly taken and reduced to writing about nine months before the fire, and their invoices, sales books, and other written memoranda. As to the count made by this witness of the running gears of the buggies regarded as totally destroyed, there are certain facts and circumstances that tell against its credibility. In the first place, both the Herpolsheimers and the adjuster for the insurance companies, almost a week after the fire, found it impracticable to count the running gears, or to ascertain with certainty, by an examination of the debris, the number of buggies which had been totally destroyed by fire. In short, the Herpolsheimers, testifying to the result of their computation from certain data, placed tbe number of buggies totally destroyed at 31; the witness produced by the insurance companies on the hearing of these appli- ' cations, basing his computations on entirely different data, placed the number at 25. It will hardly be claimed that this state of the record does not sustain a finding against the insurance companies on the charge of per[711]*711jury with respect to the number of buggies totally destroyed.

As to the second item — the damage to the binding twine —that was a subject of expert testimony on the trial of the cases on their merits. The twine was not consumed by the fire, but was damaged by the water used to extinguish the fire. A considerable amount of testimony was adduced at that time to the effect that binding twine is of no value after it has been wet. Two of the Herpolsheimers testified to that effect, and that all of the twine got wet by the water used to extinguish the fire and was thereby rendered worthless. On the trial of these applications, the insurance companies produced a witness — the one who testified on their behalf with respect to the buggies — who testified, in effect, that a considerable portion of the twine had not been damaged, and it is conceded that after the judgment sought to be vacated by these proceedings the Herpolsheimers sold the twine in question for $308, or a trifle more than one-third of what they .claimed was its value before the fire. So far as the testimony of this witness, to. the effect that a portion of the twine was not damaged, is concerned, it will not be seriously claimed that it is so convincng that it necessitated a finding that the testimony of the Herpolsheimers was faise, or that a finding contrary thereto is not supported by sufficient evidence. But counsel lay great stress on the fact that the twine was afterwards sold for a substantial sum, and seem to regard that fact as a demonstration of the falsity of the testimony of the Herpolsheimers. We think it falls far short of demonstrating anything of the kind. At the original trial, all the parties proceeded on the theory that the damage to the twine was a matter calling for the opinion of experts. They submitted the cases on that theory. There is nothing to indicate that the Herpolsheimers, or any of the witnesses for that matter, gave any other than their honest opinions.

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Bluebook (online)
111 N.W. 606, 78 Neb. 707, 1907 Neb. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-insurance-v-herpolsheimer-implement-co-neb-1907.