Marcus v. St. Paul Fire Marine Ins. Co.

1 P.2d 567, 35 N.M. 471
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1931
DocketNos. 3580-3587, 3589.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 P.2d 567 (Marcus v. St. Paul Fire Marine Ins. Co.) 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
Marcus v. St. Paul Fire Marine Ins. Co., 1 P.2d 567, 35 N.M. 471 (N.M. 1931).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

WATSON, J.

These nine appeals are from the same number of judgments recovered severally against insurance companies for fire losses on a stock of merchandise. As there was but one fire, the causes were consolidated below for trial. Here they have been consolidated for hearing. No. 3589 is presented upon a full record. In the other cases the record is partial. We have heretofore denied a motion that the transcript in No. 3589 be deemed filed also in the other cases. As it transpires, the result in no case is changed by this ruling.

Points relied on for reversal arise upon certain of the affirmative defenses set up in the several answers and summarized in the court’s instructions as follows:

“a. That the plaintiff filed claims against the defendants for the value of certain coats and dresses, claimed by him to have been destroyed, but which he had in fact, previous to the fire, removed from the store and sent to El Paso, and which he had brought back to his home and possession after the fire ;
“b. ^ That certain answers and statements concerning matters material to the inquiry, set out in full in the answers, made by the plaintiff while he was being examined on oath concerning the loss, were false.
“c. That the plaintiff failed and refused after demand to exhibit to defendants’ agent all that remained of the plaintiff’s stock of merchandise after the fire, in that he failed to exhibit the property which he had sent to El Paso and brought back to his home after the fire.”

These defenses are founded upon the theory that appellee, in his proofs of loss, claimed for certain dresses and coats which were not destroyed or damaged, but which he had shipped to El Paso a night or two before the fire and reshipped to Albuquerque, and had stored at his residence when he made his proofs.

Appellant’s first point is that the court erred in refusing to instruct:

“The jury are further instructed that, under the provisions in the foregoing instruction, an attempt by the insured to collect for property known not to have been destroyed will amount to fraud and forfeit the policy; and if you find from the evidence that plaintiff, Benjamin Marcus, has attempted to collect insurance for property that he knows was not destroyed or injured by the fire, it is your duty to find your verdict in favor of defendants in all these cases.”

Appellee’s able counsel do not question that the legal proposition here embodied is sound. We may therefore safely assume that it is.

Appellee first contends that, as to the eight appeals in which the record is partial, we may not consider the point. He argues that there can be no review of an exception to the giving or refusal of instructions unless it affirmatively appears from the record that all evidence necessary to such review has been included, and that on a doubtful record it will be presumed that evidence omitted would have sustained the ruling.

But the practice has been changed and former decisions have lost force by the adoption of App. Proc. Rule XI, § 4. Appellants specified this question in their praecipes and stated the portions of the record deemed necessary for the review. By failing to call for additional portions of the record, appellee' is in the position of having “consented to the record as made up by the appellant * * * on the praecipe first filed.” In such a situation it is now a conclusive presumption that omitted portions of the record are unnecessary to the review. The responsibility thus put on an appellee is lightened by liberal provisions for diminution of the record, contained in the same rule and section. If, through inadvertence, he finds himself in the situation appellee here occupies, he may move the court’s discretion for certiorari, but he may not defeat a review. This is the principle applied in Farmers’ Cotton Finance Corporation v. Green, 34 N. M. 206, 279 P. 562.

Appellee next contends that the subject matter of the request was sufficiently covered by the instructions given. After summarizing the affirmative defenses in the instructions, as above stated, the court thus refered to the replies.

“The plaintiff has replied to these answers first denying that the goods which he admits were removed from his store shortly before the fire and sent to El Paso and thereafter brought back, were his stock or covered by the insurance; and denying that the goods so sent were ever included in his inventory, or that any claim has been made therefor, or for any damage or destruction thereto.
“He further denies that he-made any intentional false. statements in any of his answers, while being examined, or concealed from the companies or their adjuster the facts or goods concerned in the El Paso shipments.”

Paragraphs V, VI,- VI-A, and VII of the instructions are as follows:

“V. The jury are instructed that each policy sued upon in these several cases contains the following provisions:
“ ‘This entire policy shall be void if the insured has concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstance concerning his insurance or the subject thereof; or in case of any fraud or false swearing by the insured touching any matter relating to this insurance or the subject .thereof, whether before or after the loss.’
“You are instructed that a misstatement in the proofs of loss, to forfeit the policy, must not only be false, but wilfully false. A mere innocent mistake will not constitute fraud or false swearing within the provisions of the policy.
“If, however, you find from the evidence that the insured, Benjamin Marcus, knowingly and wilfully concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstance concerning the insurance or the subject thereof, or knowingly and wilfully practiced fraud or false swearing touching any matter relating to this insurance or the subject thereof, either before or after the loss, it is your duty to return a verdict for defendants in all these cases in which you find such fraud and false swearing.
“VI. Not every false swearing or false statement on oath by the plaintiff will void the policies. To have such effect the false statement must be material; that is, the false statement must be one which might influence the defendant to act, or affect the fact or amount of the defendants’ liability under their policy. A false statement to void any policy of insurance must also be knowingly and wilfully made.
“VI-A. To constitute a statement false for the purpose of yoiding the policy you must take the entire statement as a whole and consider it all together and not separate answers which are qualified by other portions of the testimony or statement; and it must convey the false meaning when so taken as a whole.
“VII.

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Related

Baca v. Ceballos
469 P.2d 516 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1970)
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237 P.2d 923 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1951)
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203 P.2d 368 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
1 P.2d 567, 35 N.M. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcus-v-st-paul-fire-marine-ins-co-nm-1931.