Gibbs v. First National Insurance Co. of America

47 P.2d 943, 151 Or. 241
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 47 P.2d 943 (Gibbs v. First National Insurance Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbs v. First National Insurance Co. of America, 47 P.2d 943, 151 Or. 241 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

RAND, J.

This is an action upon an insurance policy which insured plaintiff’s household goods against loss by fire in the sum of $800. The cause was tried to a jury and plaintiff recovered judgment for $600 together with attorney’s fees and costs, and defendant has appealed.

The policy was issued on August 25, 1932, and the goods burned on September 24 of the same year. One of the conditions contained in the policy was that the entire policy should become void “in case of any fraud or false swearing by the insured touching any matter relating to this insurance or the subject thereof whether before or after a loss”.

In her proof of loss, plaintiff stated under oath that the total cost of the burned goods was $2,000, and that, after deducting the amount of the depreciation thereof, she had been damaged in the sum of $800.

The defendant contended and so alleged in its answer that this constituted a false swearing upon plaintiff’s part in that the cost of the goods did not exceed the sum of $1,200, nor the loss exceed the sum of *243 $480. The answer also alleged that plaintiff had represented in her sworn proof of loss that a Crosley electric nine-tube radio set had been burned and that the same had been purchased in 1930 for the sum of $200, and that she had been damaged by the burning thereof in the sum of $80, when, in truth and in fact, the burned radio was not a Crosley but a Knight radio which she had purchased for less than $100 and that her loss thereon did not exceed the sum of $50.

These allegations were denied by the reply which affirmatively alleged that plaintiff was assisted by a Mr. Adams, an adjuster of the defendant company, in preparing her proof of loss, and that she had told him that she did not remember the make of the radio but thought it was like a Crosley radio and, as she remembered it, the advertised retail price was approximately $200, and that she had purchased it for about the sum of $100, the exact amount not then being known by her; that he had informed her that it was not necessary to give the exact amounts but that the same should be given in accordance with her best recollection and knowledge; that, in furnishing a list of the burned items and the cost thereof, she had not intentionally or knowingly made any misstatement, or with any intent upon her part to deceive or defraud.

. . Upon the trial, the defendant attempted to show that the plaintiff, in her proof of loss, had misrepresented and falsely stated the cost and value of three items, namely: the radio above referred to, a phonograph, and the kitchen range.

In respect to said radio, the uncontradicted evidence showed that it was an all electric Knight radio and not a Crosley radio, but it was proven that at the time of its purchase the manufacturer of the burned radio had offered the same for sale to dealers for the sum *244 of $87.48 and had fixed the retail price to be charged by snch dealers at $184, and that plaintiff had purchased the same as a dealer at the dealers’ price of $87.48 and had paid the freight charges thereon which amounted to the snm of $16. These prices were established by a printed advertisement published by the manufacturer thereof, which recited that the price to the dealer was $87.48 and that the price to be charged by the dealer upon making a sale thereof was $184, and plaintiff testified that, in stating the cost price to the adjuster who inserted it in the proof of loss, she gave him the retail price and not the amount which she had actually paid therefor.

Upon the other two items objected to, there was a complete failure of any proof of any misrepresentation made by plaintiff in respect thereto.

The evidence showed that the defendant company, in resisting payment of plaintiff’s claim, had entertained a suspicion that the plaintiff herself had caused the fire. Plaintiff was not present at the time of the fire. The fire occurred in the evening of September 24 in a farm house about a mile and a half from North Powder, and while plaintiff was in the town of Union, a long distance away, and she had not been at the place of the fire at any time during that day.

The defense was based principally upon two writings which the defendant obtained from her on December 5,1932, and in one of which she stated:

“The radio which was destroyed by fire at my home Sept. 24, ’32, ivas a Knight radio purchased direct from Chicago, for which I paid less than $100.00, and was purchased in the fall of 1929 or spring of 1930. I listed this radio in my claim to the First National Ins. Co., as a Crosley purchased in 1930 at a cost price of $200.”

*245 The other of said writings was in the following-words and figures:

State of Oregon
“Time 3:45 Department of State Police No. 4497
Place Officer’s Report County-
Subject Mrs. Della Gibbs Dec. 5,1932
The inventory which I filed with Mr. Adams for the purpose of making claim against the First National Insurance Co. of America under policy No. OR-104723 which covered my household furniture for $800.00 against loss by fire was padded. The cost of this household goods would be $1200.00 and I claimed in my inventory $2000.50.
My reason for padding this claim was so I could collect the full amount of my policy, or $800.00, after the depreciation had been taken.
Signed — Della Gibbs.
Witnesses:
S. C. Linville
H. H. Pomeroy
C. A. Warren.”

These writings were not written by the plaintiff but were obtained under the following circumstances: On that day, plaintiff was living in the town of North Powder and was requested by the town marshal to go to his office. Upon plaintiff’s arrival there, he introduced her to an adjuster of the defendant company and two members of the state police, who were there for the obvious purpose of obtaining from plaintiff some admission upon which she could be charged with a criminal offense. They kept her there for some three hours and, according to her testimony, subjected her to a severe examination, causing her to become confused and to make the admissions contained in the writings. The adjuster and the two officers were witnesses in *246 the case and they each testified for the defendant. The gist of their testimony was that the plaintiff admitted that she had padded her claim, not by the insertion of any items not burned but by exaggerating the cost of the burned articles and their present value at the time of the fire. They testified that she said that she had been informed by some friend whose name she refused to disclose that she should state the values of the burned articles for enough to entitle her to the full amount of her insurance.

There were a large number of disinterested witnesses called by the plaintiff, who testified that the burned articles were worth far in excess of the amount for which they had been insured.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Spicer v. Benefit Ass'n of Railway Employees
21 P.2d 187 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1933)
Fred Christensen, Inc. v. Hansen Construction Co.
21 P.2d 195 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 P.2d 943, 151 Or. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-first-national-insurance-co-of-america-or-1935.