Lexington Fire, Life, & Marine Insurance v. Paver

16 Ohio St. 324
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Ohio St. 324 (Lexington Fire, Life, & Marine Insurance v. Paver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lexington Fire, Life, & Marine Insurance v. Paver, 16 Ohio St. 324 (Ohio 1847).

Opinion

Hitchcock, J.

Before proceeding to consider the errors assigned in this case, it is necessary that we understand fully the •issues made up by the parties, and which were submitted to the jury for trial. The record shows that the defendants below, after craving oyer of the declaration, filed no less than eleven special pleas, no doubt supposing they were all proper and necessary for the protection of their rights in the case. The first plea is, that at the time of effecting the insurance, the plaintiff did represent the said steamboat Ellen Dale to these defendants otherwise than the same really was, and so as to cause and induce the said ^defendants to effect said insurance at a lower premium than they would otherwise have done.”

“ 2. That the plaintiff did cause the said steamboat Ellen Dale to be represented to the defendants otherwise than it really was, in matters material to the risk assured by the defendants,” and thereby induced the defendants to effect the insurance, which otherwise they would not have done.

“3. That plaintiff caused said boat to be represented to the [276]*276defendants otherwise than the same really was; that is to say, that said Ellen Dale was of the value of $3,000 and upward, when in truth the value of said boat was less than $800, and that the same was unknown to the defendants; that the same was material to the risk,” etc.

4. That the plaintiff concealed facts material to the risk assured, and that without such concealment the defendants would not have assured, etc.

5. That the plaintiff concealed facts material to the risk, to wit: That the hull of said steamboat had been the keel of a keel-boatr that the bottom thereof was constructed of thin, red-oak plank, without sheathing; that she was more light and fragile than steamboats usually are; was nearly worn out; that the planks of the bottom were worm-eaten, “ and also many other facts material to the risk.”

6. That the plaintiff, intending to defraud the defendants, did cause said steamboat to be overvalued in and by said policy, by representing to the defendants that the same was worth $3,000, when the true value was less than $800, and by said false and fraudulent representations induced the defendants, to whom the true value of the boat was unknown, to fix the value thereof at $3,000, and insure thereon the sum of $2,000.

7. That the plaintiff concealed from defendants *the value of said boat, in this—that knowing that the defendants had no knowledge of the value of the same, except as they arrived at such knowledge from the survey and report of one Joseph Pierce, and well knowing that the valuation of the same, made by the said Joseph Pierce, in and by said report, to wit, $3,000, was far greater than the value thereof, viz., less than $800; yet the plaintiff concealed the same from the defendants; that the said concealment was material to the risk, and that the insurance was obtained by the concealment.

8. That the loss by fire was caused by the fraudulent and willful act of the plaintiff; that the plaintiff caused said boat to be burned and destroyed, with intent to cheat and defraud the defendants.

9. That the plaintiff caused said boat to be represented to the defendants to be worth $3,000, although of less real value than $800, as was well known to plaintiff, although unknown to the defendants, and did thereby induce the defendants to value said [277]*277boat at $3,000, and to insure thereon $2,000, with the intention of causing the boat to be destroyed by fire, for the purpose of defrauding the defendants.

10. That from the time of effecting the insurance to the time of the destruction of the boat, the same was unseaworthy.

11. That the said boat was unseaworthy in this, that she was unfit and unsafe to navigate the southern rivers, by reason of the slender and feeble timbers and planks of which she was constructed ; by reason of worm holes in her bottom ; by reason of the fragile character of her original construction; by reason of the rapid deterioration she had undergone; by reason of injuries she had received ; by reason of the bad character and incompetency of her captain; and by reason of many other defects.

The foregoing is the substance of the several pleas. They may all have been necessary and proper; but it really seems *to us, to say the least, that there is some little repetition in them ; and we should doubt whether some of them would well boar the test of a demurrer. The plaintiff below, however, replied to each plea specifically, traversing all the facts set forth.

The first error assigned is, that the court refused to permit the defendants below to open and close the testimony and the argument. The rule upon this subject, as recognized by this court, is this, that the party having the affirmative of the issue, shall •open and close. Where, by the pleadings, it is apparent that no evidence is required from the plaintiff, the defendant ought to open ; but if any, no matter how slight, proof is required of the ■plaintiff, he must be allowed to go forward. In this case, however, there was not á single issue to be determined; but eleven separate and distinct issues, in some of which, at least, the plaintiff had the affirmative. Take, for instance, the tenth plea, which is, that the boat was unseaworthy. This plea is traversed by the plaintiff below, by the affirmation that she was seaworthy. And “the same is the fact in some of the other pleas. Looking at the whole case, the court entertained the opinion that the plaintiff should open the case. We are not prepared to say that there was anything wrong in this. And even had there been a mistake, I •should be unwilling to hold that this was an error in law, for which a judgment should be reversed. There is no such uniform practice in this state as would induce me to say it had become a principle of law.

[278]*278The second error assigned is, that the court erred in charging the jury, as set forth in the bill of exceptions.

The charge given, as appears from the bill of exceptions, which is complained of, is this: “That the plea of the defendants, that, the plaintiff fraudulently caused the said steamboat ‘ Ellen Dale ’ to be burnt, charged the plaintiff with a crime, and that they ought not to find a verdict for the defendant on that plea, unless the evidence that the plaintiff did burn his boat was so strong as to satisfy them *of the fact beyond a reasonable doubt.” I arprehend that it will not be insisted that the court erred in saying that the plea, in charging the-plaintiff below with burning his own boat, charged him with a crime. And it is a question worthy of grave consideration, whether a man should be found guilty of a crime, let the charge be made against him either in a civil or criminal proceeding, if there be doubt whether or not he is guilty. It is the duty of the jury in all cases to find the truth of the fact presented to them. Bat if, after hearing all the evidence upon the point, it still remains doubtful where the truth lies, what is to be done? We have always held, that under such circumstances, it is the duty of a jury to resolve the doubt in favor of him against whom the charge is made. For instance, after hearing all the evidence, if it remains doubtful whether a plaintiff has sustained his cause of action, that doubt must acquit the defendant; and so if a defendant relics upon a special plea, if it is doubtful whether the plea is sustained, a jury can not, with propriety, return a verdict sustaining the plea.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio St. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lexington-fire-life-marine-insurance-v-paver-ohio-1847.