Gilbane v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.

163 F. 673, 90 C.C.A. 265, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4572
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 18, 1908
DocketNo. 757
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 163 F. 673 (Gilbane v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbane v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 163 F. 673, 90 C.C.A. 265, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4572 (1st Cir. 1908).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

This was a suit at common law, the circumstances of which, so far as we need consider them, are told by the plaintiffs in error in the following language:

“The Fidelity & Casually Company of New York 'brought this action of assumpsit against William Gilbane and Thomas F. Gilbano, copartners as William Gilbane & Bro., building contractors of Providence, R. I., to recover premiums alleged to be due on policies of casualty insurance issued by the company to the assured from August 1, 1897, to August 1, 1905. The premiums payable under such policies, when the policies were issued, were based upon an estimated pay roll for the ensuing year of Uie assured’s employes who were covered by such insurance, and at the end of the policy year the policy provided for a statement for the year of the wages paid employes covered by the insurance. If the wages actually paid exceeded the estimate, the assured should pay the additional premium earned; if less than the estimate, the company would return to the assured the unearned premium pro rata. The company by this action claims that the assured’s annual returns of wage expenditures were incorrect, and the purpose of this action was to recover such additional premiums from 1897 to 1905.” “The assured’s books of account, were not so kept that the wages of insured and uninsured labor were separated.” “The premiums were based on a classification of labor, and In the record the exact classification of the labor covered by these policies is set out at length. The assured made annual returns io the company of tho wages of workmen upon whom they were supposed to toe insured, and paid the company the premiums due on the basis of such returns.” “The com[674]*674pany had never exercised its right to examine the assured’s books until 1905, when an examination of these books was made, and the company, after this examination, brought in a claim of several thousand dollars for premiums alleged to be due, covering this period of years.”

The case was submitted to the presiding judge, a jury being waived under the statute, and the judge rendered a decision for the plaintiff on which judgment was entered, and the defendants took out this writ of error. We will throughout designate the parties as designated in the Circuit Court, the plaintiffs in error as the defendants, and the defendant in error as the plaintiff.

The court made certain findings of fact and certain rulings of law; but, as is well settled, such rulings of law do not afford the basis of a writ of error, except so far as they relate to the admission or rejection of evidence, or otherwise concern the progress of the case. Beyond that, all the appellate court has to look at is the findings of fact. From these it determines whether the judgment was correct. It may, perhaps, also be added that, where the whole case comes up, and there is no evidence whatever to sustain the findings of fact, it may be that the appellate tribunal has power to set aside the judgment; but the extent to which that power may be exercised, and whether it can be exercised only where there is an absolute lack of proof, have never been explicitly decided by the Supreme Court. The rule, whatever it is, is appealed to by the plaintiff in error; but we have no occasion to analyze it.

The findings of fact were almost the equivalent of a general verdict, so that it is difficult to ascertain from the record how far we' may go, and how far we are limited, in re-examining it, and this to such an extent that it may well be doubted whether we have any power whatever over the questions submitted to us. However all this may be, we are satisfied that the proceedings of the Circuit Court were not erroneous, and we reach this conclusion in any possible view of the case.

The first point taken by the plaintiff in error is to the effect that tne Circuit Court was at fault in finding that the plaintiff had sustained the burden of proof. The facts in reference thereto are not clearly and consecutively stated on either side, but sufficient appears to make it plain that we cannot revise the judgment on account of this proposition. The proofs in behalf of the plaintiff consisted of the pay rolls and books of the defendant, the testimony of an accountant, sometimes called in the record an “auditor,” who examined the books and pay rolls in behalf of the plaintiff, and who was examined at great length, indeed to such an extent that his testimony covers 50 printed pages. As already said, the defendant did not on its pay rolls or books apportion the labor so as to show definitely what parts of it classified as concerning the 'insured occupations. The result was, as we understand it, that, although there was no explicit apportionment in the' pay rolls and books, the accountant found sufficient to show what were the gross amount of expenditures involved in connection with the different classes of occupations, including, we suppose, labor, material and profit, so that he, for the purpose of ascertaining the amounts represented in the insured occupations, adopted the method of dis[675]*675tributmg the expenditures for labor in proportion to the total amounts shown to have been expended on the various contracts. There was no evidence on the part of the defendant in any way diminishing the effect of such an apportionment. This apportionment was permitted by the court, and the court expressly found that the result sustained the burden of proof and was satisfactory to itself, and it is too apparent to need much explanation that, in the absence of any more definite proofs, the court was justified in supporting the position of th& plaintiff in this respect. Certainly it cannot be maintained that the plaintiff was not entitled to any damages whatever because the amounts which should be justly returned to it could not be found with absolute accuracy. Such a claim can never be made except under extraordinary circtunstances. Whatever proofs were offered by the plaintiff were subject to explanations, qualifications, and limitations by the defendants, so that there was no unusual danger of substantial injustice if the defendants availed themselves of the privileges to which they were thus entitled. Our observations apply particularly to this case, in which the defendants originally obligated themselves to furnish the plaintiff correct and exact details, and, if they willfully refused to furnish such details, or so conducted their business that they could not furnish them, no one can justly claim that the plaintiff should be deprived of all relief because such relief could be only approximate. The mass of the transactions involved was very great, so that whether or not the result was sufficiently approximate to form a just basis for a decision was necessarily, under the circumstances, a question of fact which it is outside of the jurisdiction of this court to determine.

The next objection of the plaintiffs in error, put in their own language, isr

“The court erred, as a matter of law, in finding specially that the returns made by the assured to the company of wage expenditure were untrue and entirely unreliable; there being no evidence in the record to support this special finding.”

This is an immaterial proposition, because the issue was whether or not the defendants had made correct returns, and the finding of the court that they had not done so, which finding we have already determined we cannot revise, was the crucial thing, and the adjectives which it used were wholly immaterial.

The third proposition is as follows;

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Bluebook (online)
163 F. 673, 90 C.C.A. 265, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbane-v-fidelity-casualty-co-ca1-1908.