Insurance Co. of North America v. Whitlock

216 A.D. 78, 214 N.Y.S. 697, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9160
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 216 A.D. 78 (Insurance Co. of North America v. Whitlock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. of North America v. Whitlock, 216 A.D. 78, 214 N.Y.S. 697, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9160 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The complaint alleges that the defendants were employed as general agents by the plaintiff, a foreign insurance company, to direct its business in this State, and that in the course of such employment the defendants misappropriated moneys of the plaintiff, which fact the plaintiff did not discover until after the termination of the agency. The relief demanded is an accounting.

The answer, in addition to denials, sets up as a separate defense the plea of a general release from the plaintiff. In reply the plaintiff alleges that the release was given without knowledge of the fraud of the defendants, and that the acts constituting the fraud were concealed by the defendants, who occupied a fiduciary relation to the plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s business is that of insuring merchandise during transportation. The defendants were employed to write insurance, receive premiums, adjust losses, salvage goods lost, and, generally, to transact the business of the plaintiff in this State. • Defendants’ compensation was five per cent of the gross commissions, plus a commission of fifteen per cent of the net profits of the agency. The defendants made monthly reports in connection with the business transacted. Plaintiff claimed that these statements were false in certain particulars. Whereas on this record the evidence is such as to create issues of fact on many of the items, yet, in one instance certainly, and in two instances probably, there is no doubt but that the defendants were guilty of willful and deliberate fraud, which at all times was concealed from the plaintiff.

First, the plaintiff claimed that the defendants wrongfully appropriated five per cent of recoveries made through legal proceedings by Levy & Becker, a firm of New York attorneys, for whose services the defendants charged the plaintiff a contingent fee of twenty-seven and one-half per cent of recoveries, but secretly retained from such fees five per cent of recoveries, the attorneys receiving the remaining twenty-two and one-half per cent. According to the plaintiff’s testimony, by mutual agreement the defendants undertook to retain, on behalf of the plaintiff, attorneys in New York city to prosecute such claims as required legal action for their [80]*80collection, upon a contingent fee basis of twenty-seven and one-half per cent of the amounts recovered, to be paid to said attorneys. The defendants denied that this was the agreement, but claimed the agreement was that the defendants should establish a legal department for the purpose of obtaining recoveries through legal proceedings, and that, as compensation for such services, the defendants were to receive twenty-seven and one-half per cent of any amounts recovered. Whatever doubt might otherwise exist as to the weight of the evidence upon this issue of fact clearly is resolved» in favor of the plaintiff’s version by the following facts concerning which there is no dispute: The defendants engaged as attorneys Messrs. Levy & Becker. Said attorneys brought an action against the Director-General of Railroads on behalf of the Botany Worsted Mills, to which the defendants had paid a loss on behalf of the plaintiff of $14,796.67. A net recovery of $12,966.10 was returned to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff requested a statement from the defendants of the charges against the recovery. In response the defendants forwarded an alleged self-explanatory copy of a letter from Levy & Becker. The original of this letter contained the reasons for the settlement of the claim and rendered an account of the proceeds, concluding with a statement of the deductions for petty disbursements and the following: Our fees at the rate of 22\% amounting to $2,913.14, remitting to you net the sum of $10,034.16.”

The defendants forwarded to the plaintiff what purported to be a true copy of the aforesaid letter, and Which was a true copy m all respects, except that the two last lines were changed so as to read: Our fees at the rate of 27jr% amounting to $3,560.51, remitting to you net the sum of $9,386.79.”

This letter cannot be regarded as anything less than a deliberate and intentional falsification for the purpose of concealing from the plaintiff the fact that defendants were receiving and retaining five per cent of the amounts recovered over and above the cost of collecting the same. The explanation which defendants gave for this falsification of the letter of Levy & Becker was the testimony of the employee who made the alteration and who for many years had been in full charge of insurance losses and recoveries for the defendants, as follows: “ Now, rather than have an endless chain of correspondence and obviating any further correspondence, I simply quoted the 27|% rather than the 22\%. If I had quoted 22\, the figures would not have jibed and "there would have been considerable more correspondence.”

In other words, the alleged explanation was no explanation at all.

[81]*81The question also immediately presents itself, why, if the agreement between the parties was as the defendants claim, namely, that they were to receive an allowance of twenty-seven and one-half per cent "for the collections and make such arrangements as they saw fit to effect the collections, was there any need of explanation. Since it is apparent that there would have been no need for explanations if the plaintiff had no interest in what the defendants paid to counsel hired by them, the conclusion follows that the version of the plaintiff is the true version of the agreement, and that the defendants were wrongfully appropriating five per cent of recoveries by legal proceedings and deliberately concealing such fact from the plaintiff.

While the amount gained through this scheme in this particular instance was but $647.37, yet it might amount to very much more when taken into consideration with the vast amount of business that was done under similar circumstances. This deliberate scheme to obtain additional moneys by false representations lends color to the inferences which may be drawn from other portions of the evidence where other schemes were employed to obtain moneys in other departments.

Secondly, the appellant charges that the defendants secretly and fraudulently retained ten per cent of sums claimed to have been collected through the freight claim agency, but which in fact were returned to the defendants by the assured when no actual losses had been sustained by the assured, the defendants having willfully or through their own negligence or oversight paid the claims to the assured and charged a commission on the amounts returned. In support of this charge the appellant has shown the following facts: On or about October 25, 1918, the defendants received on behalf of a firm known as Pelgram & Myer a claim of $3,667.78 on account of a loss of certain silk goods in transit. On January 8, 1919, the "defendants were notified that goods of the value of $3,261.44 had been recovered by the police of Paterson, N. J. Notwithstanding this advice, the defendants on January 15, 1919, notified plaintiff of the loss of goods amounting to $3,667.78 without advising plaintiff of the fact that most of such goods had been recovered. On February' 27, 1919, the defendants paid the claim in full to Pelgram & Myer, receiving shortly thereafter from said Pelgram & Myer a repayment of $3,261.44 to cover the overpayment made by the defendants. Upon receiving this repayment the defendants credited the freight claim agency with ten per cent of the amount.

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

Related

Hollis v. Charlew Construction Co.
302 A.D.2d 700 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2003)
Desideri v. D. M. F. R. Group (USA) Co.
230 A.D.2d 503 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1997)
Rockwood Computer Corp. v. Morris
94 F.R.D. 64 (E.D. New York, 1982)
Cutler v. Hartford Life Insurance
239 N.E.2d 361 (New York Court of Appeals, 1968)
De Vito v. Perillo
36 Misc. 2d 791 (New York Supreme Court, 1962)
Irving Trust Co. v. McKeever
44 F. Supp. 842 (E.D. New York, 1942)
Dusing v. Nuzzo
177 Misc. 35 (New York Supreme Court, 1941)
Mercadante v. Empire Trust Co.
253 A.D. 881 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1938)
In re the Estate of Robertson
165 Misc. 710 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1938)
Irving Trust Co. v. Deutsch
73 F.2d 121 (Second Circuit, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 A.D. 78, 214 N.Y.S. 697, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-of-north-america-v-whitlock-nyappdiv-1926.