Horwitz v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

164 P. 77, 95 Wash. 455, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 836
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1917
DocketNo. 13660
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 164 P. 77 (Horwitz v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horwitz v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 164 P. 77, 95 Wash. 455, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 836 (Wash. 1917).

Opinion

Fullerton, J. —

The respondents brought this action against the appellant to recover on a policy of burglary insurance. The cause was tried by the court sitting without a jury. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to the respondents, and entered judgment accordingly. This appeal is from the judgment so entered.

The first assignment of error is that the action was prematurely commenced. The policy provided:

“No suit shall be brought under this policy until three months after the particulars of the loss as required herein have been furnished to the company, nor at all unless commenced within twelve months after the date of the burglary.”

[457]*457The particulars of the loss were furnished the company on January 9, 1915, and the action was commenced fey the service of a summons on March 9, 1915, a time within the limitation of three months. But the record shows that the company, on the day it received the particulars of the loss, notified the respondents by letter that it disclaimed liability and refused payment, making no objection to the form or the sufficiency of the proofs. Since the only purpose of this provision of the policy is to allow the company time to investigate the particulars of the loss and the extent of its liability without being harassed with the burdens of a suit, the requirement is satisfied when the company reaches and announces its conclusion thereon. Cascade Fire & M. Ins. Co. v. Journal Pub. Co., 1 Wash. 452, 25 Pac. 331.

It is suggested that the refusal to pay may have been because of the insufficiency of the proofs, but the announcement of a refusal to recognize liability for a loss after proofs have been furnished, without a specific objection on that ground, is a waiver of any informality or defects in the proofs. Cushing v. Williamsburg City Fire Ins. Co., 4 Wash. 538, 30 Pac. 736.

The policy provided that the company should not be liable if the accounts of the assured were not so kept that the actual loss could be accurately determined therefrom. The insured property consisted of a stock of “ladies ready-to-wear furs, raw furs, feathers, cloaks, suits and furnishing goods.” The loss claimed was for furs only. These were, in part, purchased from a person who had purchased them at a bankrupt sale, and were, in part, furs that had been purchased subsequently to the original purchase and added to the stock. The respondents conducted a cash business, and seem to have kept no regular book of account. An inventory was taken at the time the store was opened, and subsequent additions to the stock were indicated by notation on pads bound in book form which showed the article purchased and the price paid therefor. When sales were made, slips showing the article [458]*458sold were also made out. The stock on hand was ascertained by checking the one with the other. It is contended that this is not a sufficient compliance with the requirement of the policy. But we think it is. The requirement is not that regular books of account be kept, but only that the accounts of the assured be so kept “that the actual loss may be accurately determined therefrom.” Clearly these would show the stock on hand at the time of the burglary. Malin v. Mercantile Town Mut. Ins. Co., 105 Mo. App. 625, 80 S. W. 56.

The appellant argues that the evidence shows that these slips were faked, that is, manufactured for the occasion subsequent to the alleged loss. This is founded on the testimony of an adjuster for the appellant, sent to investigate the loss, who says that no such slips were shown to him. The slips in evidence are admittedly copies or, perhaps better, translations from the originals, which were written in Yiddish by the father of the respondents, who had the active management of the business. The originals were not called for by either side, nor were they introduced in evidence, but the accuracy of the copy or translation was testified to by the party who made them and no effort was made to contradict him. We do not think these facts show that they were either faked or. inaccurate, or that the trial court was not justified in finding that sufficiently accurate accounts had been kept.

In the application for the insurance, the respondents represented that the value of the stock of goods on which the insurance was desired was $8,000. It is contended that is such a false representation of the true value as to avoid the policy. The contention is rested largely on the fact that the goods were formerly the property of the respondents’ father, who became bankrupt, and were sold by the trustee in bankruptcy to one Schuman, a cousin of the respondents, for the sum of $3,500. But it was testified by one of the respondents that they paid Schuman for the goods between $8,000 and $9,000, and that the goods inventoried at the time of the [459]*459purchase — valuing them at the current cost prices — in the sum of $9,750.74. It was testified, also, that the stock had been augmented by additional purchases between the time of the purchase from Schuman and the time of the application, and that, at the time of the application, it was of no less value than it was Avhen the inventory was taken. But it is common knowledge that stocks of goods sold under compulsory process issued out of courts sell at a sacrifice. Indeed, it is Avell knoAvn that men engage in the business of buying bankrupt stocks with the idea of profit; and the fact that this stock sold at so high a price at the bankrupt sale rather supports than contradicts the testimony that its inventoried value was in excess of $9,000. But, be this as it may, we cannot say that the good faith of the transaction was so far impeached as to require a holding that the goods were overvalued.

Another contention is that the respondents were not the real OAvners of the goods and had no insurable interest therein. But as to this the direct testimony was all the other way, and nothing against it but circumstances, more or less suspicious perhaps, but seemingly as consistent with one theory as the other. For example, it was shown that the respondents were young men, aged, respectively, 23 and 24, and were following pursuits not usually very lucrative; that the fire insurance on the goods was carried in the name of Schuman, and that the father had at different times referred to the goods as his own. It is thought that the respondents could not have saved from their earnings a sufficient sum of money to buy the goods at the price they claimed to have paid in cash for them, and it is concluded that the father must have been the owner and held the goods in the name of his sons for some ulterior purpose. But the record presents presumptions equally strong supporting a contrary view. The father was in charge of the store, and naturally would speak to customers and others coming into the place as if the property was his oAvn. This is the custom of the trade. One [460]*460would gather from the pronouns used by the merest tyro in the largest department store that he was the proprietor of the establishment. Again, ownership in the father seems as improbable as ownership in the sons, if the matter is to be tested by ability to buy. As we have before indicated, the goods for the greater part were the property of the father, who became a bankrupt, and were sold, ostensibly at least, to Schuman for $3,500 in cash at a bankrupt sale.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 P. 77, 95 Wash. 455, 1917 Wash. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horwitz-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-wash-1917.