Demarest v. Westchester Fire Insurance

234 A.D. 556, 255 N.Y.S. 325, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10486
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 11, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 234 A.D. 556 (Demarest v. Westchester Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Demarest v. Westchester Fire Insurance, 234 A.D. 556, 255 N.Y.S. 325, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10486 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Sherman, J.

A fire loss was sustained on Sunday night, July 10, 1927, by a corporation, John E. C. Chambers, Inc., and this action is brought by plaintiffs, its assignees, constituting a committee acting for the benefit of its unpaid creditors, to enforce the liability of the insurers under standard form policies. The complaint asserted losses of $124,552.04 on stock, $49,820.82 on profits, and $6,957.47 on fixtures, totalling $181,330.33. After a lengthy trial the jury found in favor of the plaintiffs in the total sum of $104,000, whereupon the trial justice, who had reserved decision upon defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint, entered an order setting aside the verdict as unsupported by the evidence and for lack of sufficient evidence of damage and because of conclusive evidence of fraud, and directed that the complaint be dismissed upon the merits and judgment entered in favor of defendants. From that order and the judgment which followed, this appeal has been taken.

The business carried on by the insured under the direction of [557]*557Oliver F. Chambers was the wholesale and retail sale of handkerchiefs. It had not been successful and appears to have lost money for a period of years. During 1925 and 1926 it made no profit whatsoever. It paid only meager salaries to its officers. At the end of each of the years 1924, 1925 and 1926 its inventories reflected stock on hand valued between $23,000 and $36,000. In the early part of the year 1927 $30,000 of insurance was carried on the stock. In May, 1927, additional insurance of $40,000 was placed on the merchandise on hand, which was then further increased in the first week of June by an additional coverage of $50,000, and on July sixth, four days before the fire, $60,000 additional insurance was placed upon the stock. Thus in about two months preceding the fire the insurance upon stock on hand was increased from $30,000 to $180,000. Likewise the coverage upon fixtures, which at the beginning of the year amounted to $3,200, was increased in May and further on July eighth, two days before the fire, so that it came to aggregate a total of $9,800. Though the business had not shown any profits and the insured had never theretofore carried any insurance against loss of profits, in June the corporation took out $50,000 insurance against the loss of profits and on July 6, 1927, increased it by an additional $40,000 of like insurance.

In the proof of loss plaintiff claimed that the sound value of the insured property was upwards of $140,000 and that the loss thereon was $124,552.04. After the fire Mr. Chambers informed the adjuster of the insurance company that the stock had a value of about $175,000 to $180,000, and that the stock on hand on January 1, 1927, had been $61,000.

By way of explanation that the stock on hand on January 1, 1927, amounted to $61,000 (when the merchandise inventory taken on December 31,1926, showed less than $36,000) the insured claimed that in May, 1927, there had been found in the office safe a sheet which had become separated from that inventory and which added thereto the sum of $25,462.49, covering a section of the business known as Department B,” and that before the discovery of this missing sheet the inventory of stock in that department had been shown to be $7,344.84. It, however, appeared that at the beginning of the year 1926 the goods on hand in that department had been valued at $4,642.27, and the purchases of that department throughout that entire year amounted to $26,191.01, making the total $30,833, out of which had been taken enough merchandise to take care of sales of approximately $32,000. Obviously the insured could not have started the year 1927 with merchandise in that department amounting to $32,807, as claimed by the insured. There could not have been on hand on January 1, 1927, the quantity [558]*558of merchandise claimed. It became necessary to show large purchases during the succeeding six months whereby the stock of merchandise was greatly augmented. The purchase journal in which purchases were entered had not been placed in the safe with other books and had been destroyed by the fire.

Mr. Chambers verified by his own signature the list of various bills prepared by the insured’s adjusters, which were tendered to show such purchases after January 1, 1927. Without detailing the evidence, both documentary and drawn from the lips of vendors with whom it dealt, it appeared conclusively that many of these bills purporting to come from such vendors were altered and the amounts set forth upon these bills, as well as items thereof, were changed so as to evidence the sale of larger quantities of merchandise than had actually been purchased. Several sellers of goods, disinterested witnesses, were called by defendants. An expert gave evidence that the alterations of bills coming from various mercantile establishments had all been made by the same typewriter, which was in the possession of one of the employees of the assured. This corroborated those sellers who denied the accuracy of the bills presented by the insured in support of its proof of loss, and tended to show that the fraudulent acts were done on the premises of the assured and by its servant.

Some of the vendors had declined to give information to the insurance company without a writing from their customer, and Mr. Chambers refused to sign a written request so that the information might have been available during his examination which was being conducted under the terms of the policy before trial by defendant’s 'attorneys. He declined to answer questions and obstructed that examination. It likewise appeared that certain of the merchandise claimed to have been damaged or destroyed in the fire had either not been ordered or was not delivered until after the fire had taken place.

By way of explanation as to why the insured had increased its insurance and had added so enormously to its stock of merchandise during the several months immediately preceding the fire, Mr. Chambers presented what was on its face a summary of a number of “ open orders ” for merchandise taken by salesmen for future delivery, which, it was claimed, presaged a huge increase in business during the latter part of the year 1927, but the proof at trial demonstrated that the fist did not consist of orders actually obtained. It, however, gave the name of each so-called customer and set out opposite his name the precise amount in dollars and cents of each advance and unfilled order so taken. If true, it supported the assured’s good faith; if false, it was clearly designed [559]*559to mislead. At trial the list was not substantiated. Defendant presented the testimony of several whose names appeared on that paper but who had entered no orders with the assured. The salesmen said to have taken these orders were not called to substantiate this claim, and the plaintiffs seem now to urge that they were estimates and rather the expression of hope than a list of actual orders. But this suggestion is not convincing, for these disproved “ orders ” were not in round numbers; the particular items gave exact figures of each specific order, such as $247.95, $1,000.37, $3,999.50.

The defense, asserted at trial, was foreshadowed in the preliminary examination of Mr. Chambers and set forth in the answer, so that plaintiffs had ample opportunity to prepare to meet it with proof. Upon the trial this proof of fraud remained virtually undisputed and the position taken by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
234 A.D. 556, 255 N.Y.S. 325, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demarest-v-westchester-fire-insurance-nyappdiv-1932.