Hare & Chase, Inc. v. National Surety Co.

60 F.2d 909, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2640
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 29, 1932
Docket399
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 909 (Hare & Chase, Inc. v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hare & Chase, Inc. v. National Surety Co., 60 F.2d 909, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2640 (2d Cir. 1932).

Opinion

SWAN, Circuit Judge.

The 'plaintiff’s appeal presents a single question of law, namely, the correctness of' the District Court’s ruling that the plaintiff' is estopped from claiming that losses arising; from taxicab obligations acquired by Hare & Chase, Inc., from the General Finance Corporation are within the coverage of the insurance contract in suit. This ruling is based' upon findings of fact respecting the plaintiff’s representations and silence while the contract was being negotiated, and such findings are not now challenged. Since the facts appear in detail in the thorough and scholarly opinion of the District Court reported in 49 F.(2d) 447, it will suffice here to recapitulate-them briefly.

Hare & Chase, Inc., was engaged in the business of financing sales of motor vehicles purchased on the installment plan. Up to the summer of 1924 substantially all its financing-related to passenger automobiles of well-known makes. At that time it extended its business to include the rediscounting for General Finance Corporation of notes secured on fleets of taxicabs. Beginning in 1920, National Surety Company issued contracts of insurance, in the form of “ultimate loss bonds,” by which it agreed to indemnify Hare & Chase against loss resulting from defaults on its automobile paper. In all there were four such bonds. The present actiqn is upon the one last issued, effective from January 1, 1925, until its cancellation in February, 1927. The prior bonds gave coverage to only such paper as the insured reported to- the insurer, and the insured was not obliged to report any paper which it did not wish to have covered. Premiums were figured on the amount reported. None of the General Finance Corporation business was reported or covered under these prior bonds. But the 1925 bond, we are to assume for the purpose of considering the defense sustained below, covered all the insured’s financing. Negotiations for this bond began in the spring of 1924, and continued until its execution in January, 1925. The main points of negotiation were that the plaintiff wanted to obtain a reduction in the premium rate and the defendant an increase in the “deductible,” that is, in the initial loss to be borne by the insured before liability of the insurer should attach. In the words of the court below, “the parties were negotiating *911 the 1925 bond with (.lie background of their mutual experience under the earlier bonds.” Yet during the protracted negotiations the plaintiff did not disclose to the defendant that it had entered into a contract with General Finance Corporation to rediscount taxicab paper, nor the fact that it held more than $3,-000,000 of such paper on January 1, 3925, when the contract in suit became effective, although Mr. Hare knew that (lie defendant considered paper secured on fleets of taxicabs an inferior risk to paper secured on individual pleasure cars. His silence, however, was not intentionally fraudulent, because he did not appreciate that the 3925 contract differed from the earlier contracts in respect to coverage; lie thought that only such paper as was reported would be insured, and he did not desire to insure the General Finance Corporation paper. Accordingly, neither before execution of the 1925 bond, nor at any time thereafter prior to its cancellation, was the rediscounted taxicab paper reported, nor was it taken into account in figuring and paying premiums. But after Hare & Chase had suspended business and put their affairs in charge of a reorganization committee, the error was discovered, payment of the additional premium was tendered, and a claim was presented for some $3,000,000 of losses sustained on account of such taxicab paper. In defense of this claim the defendant seis up Mr. Hare’s silence as to facts material to the risk. By consent the issue was referred to the equity side of the court to he heard with the defendant’s claim for a reformation of the contract so as to include a provision requiring the plaintiff to report all paper as a condition to coverage. As already stated, reformation was denied, hut the defense of concealment was sustained.

The question presented is whether an insured who intentionally fails to disclose material facts because of his belief that the insurance is not to cover the undisclosed risk and who pays no premium for such risk until after loss thereunder has been incurred may establish a claim in respect to such a risk. In our opinion it was properly answered in the negative.

An insurance contract is a contract uberrima, fides; hence known changes in conditions material to the risk which occur between the opening of negotiations for insurance and the issuance of the policy must be divulged. Stipcich v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 277 U. S. 311, 316, 48 S. Ct. 512, 72 L. Ed. 895. This rule, originating in marine insurance, was extended in England and in a few early American cases to other types of insurance. See Vance, Handbook on Insurance (1930 Ed.) pp. 339-341. In Lindenau v. Desborough, 8 Barn & Cr. 586, .Justice Bayloy declared: “I think that in all cases of insurance whether on ships, houses, or lives, the underwriter should be informed of every material circumstance within the knowledge of the assured; and that the proper question is, whether any peculiar circumstance was in fact material, and not whether the party believed it to be so.”

The reasons underlying the rule are expressed in the leading case of Carter v. Boehm, 3 Burr. 1905, where Lord Mansfield explained that insurance is a contract upon speculation, and, since the special facts upon which the contingent chance is to be computed most commonly lie in the knowledge of the insured only, the underwriter proceeds upon confidence that he does not hold hack any known fact affecting the risk, and is deceived if such a fact is concealed, even though iis suppression should happen through mistake and without fraudulent intention. While this principle still persists in full vigor in marine insurance, it has been relaxed, at least in the United States, in the case of fire and life policies because of the practice of insurers to make inspections or ask questions which may reasonably he supposed by the insured to produce whatever information the insurer wants. See Stipcich v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., supra; Clark v. Manufacturers’ Ins. Co., 8 How. 235, 248, 12 L. Ed. 1061; Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Mechanics’ Savings Bank & Trust Co., 72 F. 413, 434-441, 38 L. R. A. 33 (C. C. A. 6). In the case last cited Judge Taft said at page 441 of 72 F., that the modern tendency -is “to require that a non-disclosure of a fact not inquired about shall be fraudulent, before vitiating the policy.” The plaintiff contends that this relaxation now represents the general rule applicable to all insurance, except marine. We do not so understand the law. We think the marine rule is exceptional only because in other types of insurance the applicant usually may honestly consider himself discharged from any duty of affirmative disclosure about matters concerning which he has not been interrogated. Where that is not the case, the rule of uberrima fides should still he enforced. In the case at bar the defendant did not set a questionnaire to the plaintiff which he might assume to he exhaustive. This type of insurance business has not developed to a point where, as is true with fire and life insurance, the issuance of a policy is based up

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 909, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 2640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hare-chase-inc-v-national-surety-co-ca2-1932.