Mick v. Corp. of the Royal Exchange Assurance of London, England

94 A. 808, 87 N.J.L. 628, 2 Gummere 628, 1915 N.J. LEXIS 252
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 14, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 94 A. 808 (Mick v. Corp. of the Royal Exchange Assurance of London, England) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mick v. Corp. of the Royal Exchange Assurance of London, England, 94 A. 808, 87 N.J.L. 628, 2 Gummere 628, 1915 N.J. LEXIS 252 (N.J. 1915).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bergen, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment recovered by the plaintiff in an action upon a fire insurance policy, as, a result of a second trial. The plaintiff had a judgment on the first trial which was reversed in this court upon the grouñd that it was error to refuse to charge as requested, in substance (a) that if the plaintiff delegated to anyone as his agent the duty of complying with the demand of the defendant for copies of bills showing plaintiff’s purchases of goods claimed to have been destroyed by fire, and such agent with or without plaintiff’s knowledge furnished false bills, such action would be within the scope of the agent’s employment; (b) that if the jury found from the evidence that plaintiff’s son was his general agent, "and the duties of such agent included that of complying with the company’s demand for bills,” and he furnished false hills, the verdict should he for the defendant, it being, as stated in the opinion read for this court, "a fair, if not a necessary, inference that Wilbur Mick (the son), or Dawson (the adjuster), or both, had intentionally procured and put in these false hills to augment the amount of the recovery.” Mick v. Royal Exchange Insurance (ante p. 607). It thus appears that the former judgment was reversed because the trial court refused to charge that if the plaintiff had delegated to an agent the duty of complying with the demand for copies of bills, or if the son was such a general agent that his duties as such included complying with the request, the plaintiff was chargeable to the extent he would [630]*630have been if he had himself furnished the bills. That such refusal was error, is all that was decided, and it was all that was necessary to be determined on that record, and the conclusion was rested, as was said by Mr. Justice Parker, speaking for this court, upon the inference to be drawn from the evidence in that case, that the son or the adjuster, or both, intentionally furnished false bills. But the present record discloses an entirely different situation, for in it there is evidence from which the jury might find, and as their verdict indicates they did, that the son was not the agent of the plaintiff to furnish the bills; and that the adjuster did not intentionally furnish false bills, but forwarded those which were furnished him by the son without the knowledge of the plaintiff, and which the adjuster assumed were correct coming, as they did, from the son who had charge of the buying end of the business. It is urged here that as the trial court refused to charge the same request made at the former trial, the refusal of which this court held to be error, the present judgment must be reversed for that reason. It is quite true that a request was made and refused which was substantially in the same language of the request presented on the former trial, the refusal of which was held to be error, but there was also another request which the judge charged with a qualification. That request was as follows: “If you find from the evidence that Jacob Mick, through his authorized agent, in response to the demand of the defendant company, furnished false and fictitious bills for goods never purchased by him, without knowledge whether such bills were genuine or not. and without making any attempt to ascertain whether such bills were true or false, this amounts to a fraud within the meaning of the policies of insurance, and your verdict must be for the defendant.” In dealing with this request, the court said: “If the agent fraudulently furnished proofs of fictitious bills that is imputed to the principal; but if they were furnished innocently by Dawson, and young Mick was not the agent of his father, then I do not think that the balance of the request would be true, namely, that want of knowledge or inquiry on the part of the defendant would defeat his [631]*631recovery.” We think that this request embraces, in legal effect, the other request which was refused, because the agent, if authorized, must have had delegated to him the power. The court having charged in one request the substance of another, it is not bound to repeat the charge in ail the different forms of phraseology counsel may devise. An exception was taken to the modification which the court made to this request, indicated in the record as request 31. The court also instructed the jury that if these hills “were fnr- . nished by the son under authority from the father, either under a general authority or on a special authority with respect to these proofs, it would he a fraud, which, regardless of whether it would affect the merits of the case in the end or not, would defeat the recovery on the policy. * * * It must he obvious to you that if Mick furnished this through his agent, that there can he no recovery; hut if the hills were furnished ly the son officiously and surreptitiously, without the father’s knowledge, and without authority from him, then it would be quite obvious that there is no fraud in such a situation on the part of the insured within the meaning of these policies.-” An exception was taken and allowed to this charge. The effect of the modification of the thirty-fourth request, and of the charge last quoted, is, that if the son had either a general or special authority from the father to furnish these hills, then the father would be responsible, but if the son had no such authority, and the adjuster, relying upon the representations of the son, innocently and without fraudulent intent, in compliance with the request of the defendant, and without plaintiff’s knowledge, furnished the hills and other accounts which were requested, some of which proved to be false, the plaintiff would not he estopped from any recovery. The trial court is only bound to charge the law applicable to the facts of a case, and it is not pretended in this case that the plaintiff suffered any loss through the error of the adjuster in forwarding these bills, for it made no payment because of the furnishing of these hills, and the only use made of them is io aid in the forfeiture of the policy and to defeat the recovery of what the proofs show was the actual loss of [632]*632the plaintiff. It is not a case where the insurance company is seeking to recover money which it had paid out, relying upon the truth of the bills furnished, and so the question seems to be reduced to this: is the plaintiff estopped from any recovery because the adjuster innocently and without intention of wrong furnished bills of purchases, some of which were false, upon the assumption that they were correct, because furnished by a third person without authority from the plaintiff? It was not a false representation in the procuring of the insurance, but a misrepresentation innocently made, without the knowledge of the insured, in aid of the proofs of loss theretofore filed. The pertinent clause in the policy is, that it shall be void, among other reasons, “in ease of any fraud or false swearing by the insured, touching any matter relating to this insurance, or the subject thereof, whether before or after a loss.” There is no question raised of false swearing, and the fraud, if anj'-, to which the portion of the charge criticised is applicable, is the unintentional furnishing by the adjuster of alleged false bills. To work a forfeiture under this clause of the polic3r there must be a fraud, and in order to make the misstatement a fraud, it must have been made willfully with intent to misrepresent. In the case of Little v. Phœnix Insurance Co., 123 Mass.

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Related

Little v. Phœnix Insurance
123 Mass. 380 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A. 808, 87 N.J.L. 628, 2 Gummere 628, 1915 N.J. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mick-v-corp-of-the-royal-exchange-assurance-of-london-england-nj-1915.