Concordia Fire Insurance Co. v. Wise

1926 OK 120, 246 P. 1117, 114 Okla. 254, 46 A.L.R. 456, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 1013
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 9, 1926
Docket14575
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1926 OK 120 (Concordia Fire Insurance Co. v. Wise) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Concordia Fire Insurance Co. v. Wise, 1926 OK 120, 246 P. 1117, 114 Okla. 254, 46 A.L.R. 456, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 1013 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

•CLARK, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment rendered in the district court of Craig county, Okla., in favor of defendants in error and against the several plaintiffs in error in an action to recover for the loss by fire on January 3, 1922, of a building and the contents thereof, at Vinita, Okla.

The plaintiffs in error are the insurance companies which carried insurance on the said property. Separate actions were filed against each company on the policy or policies issued by it. The Concordia Fire Insurance Company was sued for $6,000; the Retailers Fire Insurance Company was sued for $21,000; the Patriotic Assurance Company was sued for $4,000; and the Patriotic Assurance Company was sued by1 the receiver for $2,000; the total amount of the insurance carried on the property being $33,-000. The several cases were consolidated by agreement and -stipulation between plaintiffs and defendants in the trial court and the action went to trial before a jury in the case against the defendant Concor-dia Fire Insurance Company; W., L. Lyons being the owner, and insured, of the furniture store and rooming house, and a mem-iter of an undertaking, furniture and mercantile company known as Taylor & Lyons, of which company P. H. Crahan was receiver and as such joined as party plaintiff with Lyons in the suit in the trial court.

The defendants filed their answer and raised the sole question of¡ the origin of the fire, and alleged that the plaintiff willfully, intentionally, and deliberately set fire to and destroyed the property mentioned in said petitions and policies.

The plaintiffs replied by a general denial in each ease. Upon the issues thus joined a trial was had.

One Martin Berry, a mortgagee mentioned in the mortgage clause forming a part of the policy for insurance sued upon, filed; his petition for leave to intervene, and the trial court entered an order allowing him to intervene and file his petition, and the trial court rendered judgment in, favor of the in-tervener in the sum of $5,530.83. This was assented to by counsel for all parties and the mortgagee, intervener, was eliminated lrom the case. The jury rendered separate verdicts as to each defendant and rendered judgments in the total amount, for plaintiffs in the trial court, in the sum of $33,030. Numerous assignments of error are presented.

Defendants in error, in their brief, pre-. -sene argument to the effect that the answ r on the part of the .plaintiffs in error, defendants below, fails to plead fraud as relied upon for a de ense. We do not think this contention of defendants in error is well founded, fop the reason that the allegation “that said fire was caused through the acts of the plaintiff in that said plaintiff willfully, deliberately, and intentionally set fire to and destroyed said bulidings and their contents, described and set forth in plaintiffs’ petition, and that by reason of the said acts of the plaintiff, in the destruction of said property by fire, that the said plaintiff is not entitled to recover herein,” though not in direct terms, reasonably sets forth a plea of fraud. The phrase, “willfully, deliberately, and intentionally set fire and destroyed said buildings.” negatives an accidental fire, a fire negligently caused. Plaintiffs in er- or’s answer constitutes an alleged fraud, and it is not necessary that an answer should be in specific terms, stating a conclusion of fraud. The defendants in error cite no authorities upon this subject, and we conclude the defense pleaded in the answer, which was the only defense in the case at bar, was suffi-' cient in form to embrace a plea of fraud.

The plaintiffs in error offered to prove previous losses by fire on the part of the defendant in error, and to prove that the insured had collected insurance on the property lost. The plaintiffs in error offered to prove that the insured had property burned at Fayetteville, Ark., in 1905 and 1906; and that he owned an interest in property that burned in Vinita in August, 1906: and that he also had a residence which burned five or six years before the date of of the trial of the present case; and that property belonging to Pearl Frye, a former ward of the insured, burned about five years *256 before the date of the trial of the present cause; and that the insured had collected insurance on all the property burned. This otter was rejected by the trial court, and plaintiffs in error complain that this was reversible error. This evidence was offered to show a continuous, loss by lire of the property of the insured, beginning some 1< years before, and ending some five years before the trial of the case at bar. The theory upon which this offer of testimony was made was that it was a plan or scheme of the insured to burn his property for the insurance. Plaintiffs in error also offered a sworn examination of the insured, as given under the terms of the policy sued upon, relative to fires Gf previous occurrences. All of such evidence could only be admitted under the theory or general plan or scheme bearing upon the intent as above set out. All of such evidence offered, and rejected by the trial court,, standing alone, only proves that the insured must have been most unfortunate. It is when connected with and shown to be a part of a scheme to defraud that such evidence becomes admissible. It •cannot be said in the case at bar that the alleged fraudulent burning of the property insured in the policies sued upon was a necessary part of a general plan. The element of time enters materially into our consideration of the case at hand. It will be borne in mind that neither in the ease at bar nor in the offered evidence is there shown a reason or motive underlying the willful destruction of property by fire. That is to say, the insured was not shown to be overinsured, that this property was not salable, that he was in financial distress; nothing of the kind appears, and in the case at bar the exact opposite is to some extent admitted in the answer of plaintiffs in error — that the property destroyed was greater in value than the amount of insurance" covering it. Yet we have concluded that there can be no recovery by insured for a loss caused by his intentional destruction of property, and such rule applies whether such destruction be. wanton destructiveness or for fraudulent gain. We are therefore of the opinion that the evidence offered was insufficient to prove a fraudulent plan or scheme on the part of the insured, and was properly rejected.

AY. S. Copeland testified for, the defendants in the trial court that he was in Vinita on the night of the fire that destroyed the store of insured, «pnd was across the street from the store; that he saw the defendant in error, plaintiff below, in his building, on the first floor thereof, pouring something out of a can on the materials in the building, and he saw the insured start the fire; that he had come from Chelsea, arriving at Vini-ta after midnight; that a.ter having seen Lhe insured start the fire, he met and sx>oke to policeman Murphy; that he went to a restaurant to get something to eat, and from there to the fire, and was later ordered by Grady Stough to report for arrest for running over the fire hose. Copeland also testified that he came to Vinita on the Vinita-Chelsea road and had crossed the creek known as Big Cabin creek, over a bridge about two miles south of Vinita, coming from the west, and had turned north into town. The policeman Murphy testified for defendants, corroborating Copeland’s presence at the fire.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 120, 246 P. 1117, 114 Okla. 254, 46 A.L.R. 456, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/concordia-fire-insurance-co-v-wise-okla-1926.