Everett v. Standard Accident Insurance

187 P. 996, 45 Cal. App. 332, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 275
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 3149.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 187 P. 996 (Everett v. Standard Accident Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Everett v. Standard Accident Insurance, 187 P. 996, 45 Cal. App. 332, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 275 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for the full principal sum of an accident insurance policy providing for the payment of seven thousand five hundred dollars to plaintiff as the wife of Francis J. Everett, who was killed while riding a motorcycle in the city of Redlands as the result of a collision with an automobile. The policy of insurance was executed in due form and the premium paid, and proof of the death from accidental causes was properly made.

The company defended upon the ground that decedent had been guilty of fraudulent misrepresentations and concealment which resulted in breaches of warranties which were contained in the application for the policy. The misrepresentations asserted by the company were: (1) That the insured’s name was Francis J. Everett, whereas his true name was *335 James F. Cowie; (2) that Elizabeth A. Everett was his wife, whereas the wife of the insured was Jennie B. Cowie; (3) that the insured was the superintendent of a water company, with supervising duties only, and an orange grower with supervising duties only, whereas he was a working zanjero for a water company and a working farmer, and was accustomed to perform manual labor in each occupation; (4) that his income exceeded twenty-five dollars a week, whereas it was less than that amount; (5) that his habits were correct and temperate, whereas he was living at the time in an adulterous relation with a woman not his wife. The concealment asserted related to the failure of the insured to disclose to the company the fact that he had deserted his wife, Jennie B. Cowie, and five children in an eastern state and had come to California, taken an assumed name and contracted a bigamous marriage with plaintiff.

On each one of the defenses urged by the defendant there was a substantial conflict in the evidence, which the jury resolved in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant. On this appeal the company urges that the evidence fully supports its theory of the case and does not support the verdict in favor of the plaintiff. It is also urged, apparently with some seriousness, that any verdict against an insurance company should on appeal be treated as prima fade erroneous and that this court should take the entire matter from the jury and direct a judgment in favor of the company upon the record herein presented. Criticisms of certain instructions given to the jury and rulings upon the admission of evidence are also made, and these will be considered in their proper order.

The defenses above noted as 1, 2, and 5, together with the matter of concealment, are based upon the following testimony offered by the defendant: That one James F. Cowie was married in an eastern state in 1877 to one Jennie Burt and that these two lived together as husband and wife until June, 1890, when Cowie deserted his wife and five children. Mrs. Cowie never heard from her husband directly thereafter until about six months after the desertion, when she received through the mail in a roundabout way a letter in his own handwriting regretting his action and offering to return if she was willing to have him do so. Nothing further was heard from him until 1893, when, accord *336 ing to one of defendant’s witnesses, he appeared in San Bernardino County under the name of Francis J. Everett. Witnesses were produced on behalf of the defendant who testified that in their opinion Cowie and Everett were the same person, and one witness was produced on behalf of the plaintiff who testified that he knew Cowie well in the east, that he was also acquainted with the man named Everett in San Bernardino County, and that he did not recognize them as being the same. In April, 1895, Everett and the plaintiff in this action were licensed to marry and a marriage ceremony was regularly performed. Thereafter and continuously until the death of decedent they lived together in San Bernardino County as husband and wife. Proof was offered on the part of the defendant that the deceased never obtained any divorce from Jennie B. Cowie in San Bernardino County and that Jennie B. Cowie never obtained a divorce from her husband or received any summons or other papers in relation to an action for divorce on the part of the husband. Plaintiff relied upon the presumption of the legality of her marriage with the decedent in 1895 and their continuous cohabitation for a period of twenty years thereafter as husband and wife, failure of proof that a divorce may have been obtained during the period unaccounted for by defendant and the .failure of proof as to the identity of the parties. •

The facts relied upon by defendant in support of its defense noted as No. 3, relating to asserted misrepresentations as to the occupation of the decedent, are that though the decedent represented himself to be the superintendent of the West Redlands Company, a mutual irrigation company, he was, in fact, the zanjero for such company and was known as such throughout the district in which he was employed. It is also claimed that the decedent misrepresented his occupation as an orange grower with supervising duties only, because he performed some manual labor in and about his home and assisted with the care of the orange grove. The evidence upon both of these points was conflicting. The records of the company show that decedent was employed as its superintendent. The company was a small concern supplying an average of 110 inches of water per day for distribution among its stockholders 'during the irrigating season. The deceased had no duties to perform regarding *337 the acquisition of the supply of water other than to direct the engineer when to begin pumping. His chief duties were to look after the lines of distribution and measure the water out to the stockholders. He had full power to employ all necessary labor. He would go at 9 o’clock A. M. each day to measure the water to be delivered to the company on that day. He would then make his rounds of the distributing system, being employed in this capacity until about 12 o’clock noon. Frequently this completed bis work for the day with the company, but on many occasions he went over the system again, commencing about 2 o’clock P. M. and finishing at about 4 o’clock P. M. On many occasions he was seen to use a shovel and a hoe in making minor repairs to the pipe-line, and even carried in his Ford machine with which he made the rounds a small supply of cement with which he repaired leaks in the pipes. On one occasion he was seen to use a wheelbarrow in removing dirt from a driveway, and on other occasions he was seen to use a wire in cleaning roots from one of the pipes. Generally the evidence in this connection was that the decedent was known both as superintendent and as zanjero, but that his chief duties were to look after the distribution and measuring of the water, to make out the water schedule, and to apportion the water to the different growers. The repairs w'hich he made were all voluntary, he having the power to employ such labor for that purpose as he desired, and the repairs which he did make were occasional or “ten-minute jobs.”

The facts relating to the occupation of decedent as an orange grower are that he and the plaintiff owned two orange groves, one not quite four and the other two and a half acres. He hired the heavy manual labor and supervised the manner in which it was performed.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P. 996, 45 Cal. App. 332, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everett-v-standard-accident-insurance-calctapp-1919.