Hoyt v. Insurance Co. of North America

69 A. 110, 103 Me. 299, 1907 Me. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 17, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 69 A. 110 (Hoyt v. Insurance Co. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoyt v. Insurance Co. of North America, 69 A. 110, 103 Me. 299, 1907 Me. LEXIS 44 (Me. 1907).

Opinion

King, J.

The plaintiff’s hotel property and contents, situated in the village of West New Portland, Maine, were destroyed by fire on the 14th of June, 1905. At the time there was $3000 insurance upon the property, divided equally among three companies. One company adjusted its loss. These actions, against the other two companies, were tried together and a verdict of $600 against each company returned, which the defendants move to have set aside. It was chiefly contended in defense that the property was very largely overinsured and that the plaintiff procured one Otis A. Reed to burn it.

In May 1904, the plaintiff, a young divorced woman, moved with her mother from Mechanic Falls to Wilton in this State, where they remained for a few weeks only. During that brief stay in Wilton the plaintiff formed an intimate acquaintance with Otis A. Reed, an overseer in the woolen mill, having a wife and two children, with whom, however, he was not living. On May 28, 1904, the plaintiff purchased for $450 the property in question, and with Reed and her mother moved there about the first of June.

The condition of the property was very poor and repairs were begun. The first policy of insurance for $1000 was written July 22, 1904, through the agency of S. E. Remick, who solicited the business, and suggested that he would write more when the repairs were completed. The plaintiff claims that she expended in repairs and furnishings, "somewhere about $3000.” On the other hand the .defendants contend that she did not in fact expend one third of that sum. The character, extent and cost of the repairs actually made, the plaintiff’s claims in relation thereto, and the testimony in her behalf in support of those claims, are important because of the light they reflect upon the other vital contention that she procured Reed to burn the property "for the insurance.”

No detailed or other satisfactory account of her expenditures was given by the plaintiff. She claimed to have no such account, and no receipts, with few exceptions. But she asserted that she and her [303]*303mother had about $3000 in money, all of which she expended upon the property, in addition to the purchase price.

It appears that just before the plaintiff and her mother left Mechanic Falls for Wilton, the mother sold her home for $1000 ; that there were incumbrances upon it of about $450 which were paid at the time; that the plaintiff had about $900 of her own money; that on the way from Mechanic Falls to Wilton they deposited in a bank in Lewiston $650 of the mother’s money, and "$700 or $800” of the plaintiff’s; that the plaintiff afterwards drew from the bank the $450 with which to pay for the property in question. But the mother testified, in support of the plaintiff’s claim that they had $3000 which was expended upon the property, that before she sold her home she had $1500 in cash. She says : "I had it, part of it mine and part my sister willed me when she died.” After admitting on cross examination that no will was probated, and no inventory filed, she stated: "There was nothing only she had the will made out and I got it sealed and signed. She said she owed nobody and nobody owed her and nobody knew she had this money, and it was mine for taking care of her, and I have got the will that shows it. ” In answer to her counsel afterwards she said that her sister before her death handed her a package of money containing about a thousand dollars. She further testified that another daughter, who with her husband had conveyed the home to her subject to the incumbrances, sent her the $450 at the time of the sale, with which the incumbrances were paid, and, therefore, that she had $2500 in cash when she left Wilton, only $650 of which was deposited in the bank, and the balance of $1850 she kept on her person. "I kept it with me, round my person. I had it in a belt.” Thus they account for "somewhere about $3000” claimed to have been expended.

The defendant companies, on the other hand, appear to have made an exhaustive effort to procure from workmen employed, material men, and other dealers of whom the plaintiff claimed to have made purchases, evidence of the expenditures which the plaintiff in fact made. And it is claimed that the amount so accounted for at the trial is $401.57 for repairs to the buildings and'$352.84 for furnishings.

[304]*304It will serve no useful purpose to incorporate here an analysis of the voluminous evidence contained in the record relative to this question. We have examined that evidence with care and it satisfies us that the testimony offered to support the plaintiffs claim that she expended "somewhere about $3000” in repairing and furnishing that property is unreasonable, and unbelievable, when squared with the established facts and circumstances of the case.

It is unreasonable that any one would expend $3000 on property so situated, costing but $450, and with no business whatever to warrant it; unreasonable that the mother acquired the $2500 in the way she claims ; unreasonable and unbelievable that when she deposited $650 in the bank for safe keeping she still had $1850 in cash on her person "in a belt,” and took it with her among strangers for an indefinite stay, and with no purpose for its immediate use. If the mother had this sum of $1850 in cash on her person, which the plaintiff freely and wholly expended afterwards on this property, why was the $450 drawn from the bank to pay for the property?

The conclusion is irresistible that the amount deposited in the bank (about $1400) was substantially all the money the plaintiff and her mother had at the time, from which the price for the property was paid, leaving a balance practically equal to the amount of the expenditures accounted for; that the _ plaintiffs claim of $3000 expended was at least unjustifiable, and that her testimony and that of her mother in support of that claim is not credible.

We come now to the real vital question in these cases. Did the plaintiff procure Otis A. Reed to burn the property in question that she might obtain the insurance? Reed confessed the crime. He was called as a witness for the defense and testified that he committed the act for the plaintiff and at her request made of him at a room in the Atwood Hotel in Lewiston on the night of June 8,1905.

In order to perceive to what extent Reed’s testimony is corroborated by unquestioned facts and circumstances, and on the other hand to recognize the utter weakness and irreconcilability of the plaintiff’s attempted answer to that testimony, it is necessary to point out briefly the relations between the plaintiff and Reed and their conduct down to the time when the plot was completed at the [305]*305Atwood Hotel, and also from that time to the time of the trial.

Reed continued to live with the plaintiff and her mother from the time they moved to the property until the last of February, 1905. He assisted in making the repairs and did the chores, receiving no compensation except his board. The last of February, 1905, he went back to Wilton to work. He and the plaintiff corresponded two or three times a week, and she admits that such terms as "Dear Otis” and "Lovingly Cappie” were used by her in this correspondence. He came back in March and remained over night. On May 7, 1905 the plaintiff wrote Mr. Remick, the insurance agent, that she was ready to have more insurance put on her place. On May 10, 1905 the other two policies of $1000 each were written. There is no evidence that any hotel business was carried on at the property.

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Bluebook (online)
69 A. 110, 103 Me. 299, 1907 Me. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-insurance-co-of-north-america-me-1907.