Max Edlin v. Firemen's Insurance Company

225 F.2d 80
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 1955
Docket11248
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 225 F.2d 80 (Max Edlin v. Firemen's Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Max Edlin v. Firemen's Insurance Company, 225 F.2d 80 (7th Cir. 1955).

Opinions

FINNEGAN, Circuit Judge.

Seven defendant fire insurance companies resisted plaintiff’s claim, under seven policies, for loss by fire, occurring November 28,1952, to his Peoria, Illinois store’s contents and merchandise. No claim was made for damage to plaintiff’s building. For their principal defense, and reason for denying all liability to plaintiff, these insurers contended he willfully and maliciously set fire to his property and was precluded from recovery since his sworn proofs of loss, delivered to defendants January 16, 1953, recited that the cause of fire was unknown to plaintiff whereas he allegedly knew it to be an incendiary fire. From a judgment, entered February 12, 1954, entered on a jury’s verdict for plaintiff aggregating $34,389.57, defendants have appealed. Rulings on evidence, refusal to grant defense motion for entry of judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or, in the alternative for a new trial are now asserted as reversible errors requiring our mandate for another trial.

After studying this lengthy record and assaying defendants’ various points, it is clear that their prime basis for reversal pivots on an evidentiary question. Absent this question and its ramifications, and defendants’ appeal would collapse at the outset.

These insurers defended below on the theory that Edlin, plaintiff-insured, [81]*81caused his store to be burned. Defendants adduced, what they contend, was circumstantial evidence of arson. The trial judge, we think, correctly rejected defendants’ offer of proof about condemnation proceedings involving Edlin’s store. That offer was tendered on the theory that such evidence manifested motive. Or as defendants’ summarize their position (appellants’ brief, 39-40):

“If the insurers in the case at bar had been allowed to offer the evidence of the condemnation proceedings, they would have established that at the time of the fire, Edlin stood to receive a large sum for the building containing the store, plus the proceeds of the building policies. If the jury had such evidence before it, they might well have concluded that Edlin found it far more desirable to have the insurance money, rather than the store and its contents * * *. The issue was one of motive * * * the jury should have before it, in passing on the issue of motive, the evidence that would have established that by the occurrence of a fire, Edlin could make a double collection, and pocket a 100% windfall.”

We quote from defendants’ brief because that passage cogently epitomizes their thesis and uses their own words to demonstrate the fallacious position they adopted. It is only necessary to add one other aspect, which defendants insist aggravated the alleged error of rejecting their evidence, and that is the trial judge’s reception of evidence by Edlin tending to show absence of in-cendiarism.

Before disposing of defendant’s argument on this aspect of their appeal, we take cognizance of their statement (defendants’ brief, p. 21):

“We are not attacking the verdict of the jury on the basis of the limited evidence before it, but contend that if the vital evidence offered and rejected had been before the jury, a different conclusion might have been reached.”

Not only does the vitalness of that evidence escape us, even in face of allegedly “highly suspicious circumstances pointing to an incendiary fire,” but defendants’ patently conjectural reasoning alone is standing refutation of their contentions. It must be remembered that defendants have expanded and magnified their entire argument concerning evidence of condemnation from this portion of Edlin’s cross-examination occurring when defense counsel was pursuing him, in the jury’s presence, for reasons why certain photographs of his structure were taken (Tr. 146):

“Q. Why did you take these ?
“Mr. Cassidy, Sr. (Plaintiff’s counsel): Object, incompetent, improper.
“Mr. Gorman (defense counsel): They know why they were taken.
“Mr. Cassidy: I know why.
“The Court: I don’t.
“Mr. Cassidy, Sr.: They were taken in connection with a housing suit, and they know it ...
“A. They were taken in conjunction in the condemnation proceedings against my property.
“Q. There were condemnation proceedings pending against your property ?
“Mr. Cassidy, Sr.: Object.
“The Court: Objection sustained. I don’t think it is material to this case at all. This was a construction of this bridge across the river, was it, and they were going to condemn it?
“Mr. Gorman: We submit this condemnation suit is material, and w'e will be glad to argue it outside of the presence of the jury.”

At that juncture the district judge ruled the condemnation suit was immaterial to the issues then before him, saying “ * * * I am not going to try a condemnation proceeding;” and again when addressing counsel:

“The Court: I don’t see how you are going to cover up anything, either of you. This land was being condemned, but that has nothing to do with this.
[82]*82“Perhaps I am going too far, but that has nothing to do with the evidence in this case. I am not trying to conceal anything.
“Mr. Gorman: We would like to show the entire details.
“The Court: We don’t want to try a condemnation suit.” (Italics supplied.)

After completing his cross-examination, save for the following, of plaintiff, defense counsel then announced this offer of proof (Tr. 151) :

“With reference to the condemnation proceedings that were pending at the time of this fire, we wish to prove the date that the petition was filed, the time that this witness, Max Edlin, first had knowledge of the possibility of condemnation, the negotiations that were made by Max Edlin for payment of compensation for his property, the fact that this suit was pending at the time, that it was later tried, that there was an .award of $43,500.00 for the building that was paid, and the money accepted by Edlin, and thereafter that Ed-lin has filed suit against the insurance companies insuring the building in another suit pending in this ■court, seeking the recovery of $50,-000.00 for damage to the building. We wish to show all of that, Your Honor, in connection with intention or motive.”

This record is thereafter replete with counsels’ extensive arguments ■concerning that offer of proof, and we find ample indications of the trial judge’s patient and careful consideration of the problem thus generated by the defense— and which hardly merited even that degree of attention and time. A reading ■of the recitation, labeled “offer of proof,” .shows that these insurers sought to pyramid inferences and multiply innuendos for whatever influence it might have had •on the jurors’ emotions. The jury was fully aware of the condemnation proceeding and apparently defendants simply ■desired to wring out a few more drops of ■detail- for argumentative purposes. A glittering generality extirpated from Milhim v. Hawkeye Insurance Co., 1912, 171 Ill.App. 262, completely unpersuasive here, is quoted to us by defendants, i. e.,

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Related

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397 F. Supp. 490 (N.D. Alabama, 1975)
Schmid v. United States
154 F. Supp. 81 (E.D. Illinois, 1957)
Max Edlin v. Firemen's Insurance Company
225 F.2d 80 (Seventh Circuit, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
225 F.2d 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/max-edlin-v-firemens-insurance-company-ca7-1955.