Johnson v. Mercantile Ins. Co. of America

133 P.2d 708, 47 N.M. 47
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1943
DocketNo. 4706.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 P.2d 708 (Johnson v. Mercantile Ins. Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Mercantile Ins. Co. of America, 133 P.2d 708, 47 N.M. 47 (N.M. 1943).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

The plaintiff (appellee) sought and was awarded recovery on a fire insurance policy issued by the defendant on account of the destruction by fire of an automobile. Trial was before a jury. Judgment was entered on the verdict and the defendant appeals. Several claims of error aré made which will be considered in the order of their importance.

First, it is asserted that the verdict is without substantial support in the evidence and is contrary to the great preponderance thereof, in that the proof shows incontrovertibly that the plaintiff himself set fire to and caused the destruction of the automobile in question. In the presentation of this contention, the defendant proceeds along dual lines, viz., (1) that the testimony of defendant’s witness should have been believed, and; (2) that the physical facts prove the fire was of incendiary origin. The testimony for and against the verdict is related and from it the defendant concludes fair and reasonable minds could not differ as to the origin of the fire.

In this connection it is pointed out from defendant’s evidence that the plaintiff, a single man, employed at a salary of $35 per month with room and board, a short time before the fire purchased a four door Buick sedan for $876 under a conditional sales contract which acknowledged a down payment of $245 and called for payments of the balance at the rate of $32 per month for five months and then a lump sum payment of $410; that up to the time of the fire the plaintiff had paid the January 10, 1940, installment, had defaulted as to $10 on the February 10, 1940, installment, and that the March 10, 1940, installment was due on the very day of the fire with plaintiff having no apparent means to meet the same; that plaintiff lacked the money with which to purchase his 1940 license for the car; that on the morning in question, the plaintiff started out in the car on a journey to one Fred King’s place near Dillon, south of Raton, to collect some money claimed to be owing him by King with which he proposed to buy a license for the car and also to purchase some laying hens; that within eighty or ninety yards of King’s house the car stopped at the top of an arroyo near an old well and rolled back into the arroyo; that pretending he was out of gasoline he walked to King’s house for the purpose of borrowing some gasoline with which to start the car.

The defendant further calls attention in its evidence to testimony that some gasoline was siphoned from King’s car into a gallon fruit jar and that plaintiff carrying the fruit jar proceeded with King toward the car; that as they approached the car smoke was seen coming from it; that King ran to the car, opened the door, looked in and saw a fire in it; that there was an odor of gasoline at that time coming from the car; that King hurried to the other side of the car and tried to open the door but failed and was about to return to the side where he had opened the door when the plaintiff, after having admonished him to “look out”, suddenly exclaimed, “Look out, I will finish it”, and threw gasoline into the car, whereupon it burst into flames; that when King asked plaintiff why he had not advised him of what was taking place, since this would get him, King, into trouble, the plaintiff replied, “No, you don’t know anything about this”.

So much for the gist' of the eye witness testimony supporting the defendant’s claim that the plaintiff set fire to his own car. It is enough to say, without uriduly extending this opinion by a detailed recital of it, that in addition to himself denying outright that he set fire to the car and also contradicting the testimony of defendant’s witnesses that he did, the plaintiff produced witnesses giving testimony from which reasonable inferences could be drawn directly impeaching the defendant’s testimony as to origin of the fire, if the jury saw fit to believe the testimony and draw such inferences. This, it apparently did. The plaintiff points to testimony that he had worked the starter a number of times in trying to start the car; that this could have caused a flow of gasoline into overheated parts of the car where it might have become ignited. He also calls attention to the fact of his absence from the car for about thirty-five or forty minutes as shown by the testimony. Stated simply, the evidence of the plaintiff and his witnesses was to the effect that the plaintiff did not burn the car and he could offer no explanation as to how it started. The evidence of defendant and its witnesses was to the effect that the plaintiff did burn the car through the use of gasoline which he poured directly into the car on a smouldering fire. This conflict in the evidence was resolved by the jury in plaintiff’s favor and, unless the verdiet is to be disturbed by reason of defendant’s contention that it is contradicted by compelling physical facts, a matter next to be discussed, under well established rules of review, the verdict cannot be overturned as lacking substantial support.

But it is contended that incontrovertible physical facts support defendant’s charge that plaintiff set fire to his own car. Counsel points to the testimony of defense witnesses that the glass portions of the car melted and that the sheet metal portions of the car buckled. In developing this point in his brief, he argues: “The incontrovertible physical facts of the molten glass, the buckled sheet metal, are such that are diametrically opposed to the result of an upholstery fire only, and are consistent with a gasoline fire, therefore plaintiff’s theory of upholstery fire only, and any of his evidence thereon, together with all legitimate inferences that may be drawn therefrom must be disregarded and this Court is not compelled to believe them as substantial evidence tending to sustain the verdict. We think the Court can and should take judicial notice of the nature and extent of an upholstery fire and a gasoline fire and the comparative results produced by each.”

In the last sentence just quoted from his counsel’s brief, the defendant practically admits that we must take judicial notice of the nature and extent of an upholstery fire and a gasoline fire and the comparative results produced by each before his case is complete for an application of the doctrine invoked. Without this apparent concession, it is obvious there must have been some proof on the subject, either through indisputable evidence or by way of judicial notice before the doctrine relied upon becomes applicable. In Larsen v. Bliss, 43 N.M. 265, 91 P.2d 811, 813, called to our attention by defendant, we quoted approvingly from 10 Blashfield’s Cyc. of Automobile Law and Practice, Perm.Ed. § 6554, as follows: “Where facts testified to are opposed to all natural laws and common experience, so that it is inconceivable that any such thing could have occurred, courts will refuse to believe it, on the ground that they will take judicial notice of its incredibility.” But also, further on in the opinion, we quoted from Owen v. Appalachian Power Co., 78 W.Va. 596, 89 S.E. 262, the following: “Where there is appreciable doubt or contradiction in the testimony relied upon to establish the very thing which in turn is relied upon as an incontrovertible physical fact, the rule has no place.”

The last quotation describes the present situation.

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Bluebook (online)
133 P.2d 708, 47 N.M. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-mercantile-ins-co-of-america-nm-1943.