Milhim v. German Fire Insurance

188 Ill. App. 186, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 475
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 15, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 188 Ill. App. 186 (Milhim v. German Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milhim v. German Fire Insurance, 188 Ill. App. 186, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 475 (Ill. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This is an action on an insurance policy brought by plaintiff against defendant Company for an alleged loss by fire, whereby goods covered by this policy were damaged or destroyed. The trial below resulted in a judgment against the defendant Company for $1,643.75 on a policy for $1,500; the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Plaintiff herein, a Syrian twenty-five years of age, had been in this country twelve or fifteen years, and had worked at various occupations. He married a girl hy the name of Barka; his wife had two brothers in this country, one, David Barka, resided at or near Indianapolis, and the other, Samuel Barka, resided in Iowa. Plaintiff married his wife against the wishes and desires of her family, running away with her to the city of Detroit, where they remained several days; they then returned to Cincinnati, where they were married. Plaintiff was located for a time in Cincinnati, but during a greater portion of the time that he has been in this country he traveled as a peddler of imported Syrian goods. On the nineteenth of August, 1910, he opened a store in the city of Bloomington, from which he claims to have supplied one hundred or more peddlers of his own country with goods, wares and merchandise which they peddled over the country.

Plaintiff did business with numerous Syrian merchants, one whose firm was conducted under the name of Brown and Company, another under the name of Solomon Brothers. Solomon Brothers had stores located in Chicago, Cincinnati and New York. On the fourth day of October, 1910, less than two months after the store was started at Bloomington, the fire occurred. At the time of the fire the plaintiff held insurance policies amounting to $13,000 upon a stock of goods. After an investigation of the loss and the conditions surrounding the fire, the defendant Insurance Company refused to pay its policy, insisting that plaintiff, together with the Solomon Brothers, who operated the Chicago store, together with a Syrian at Springfield, Illinois, by the name of A. W. Shaheen, conspired to open the store at the city of Bloomington, secure policies of insurance thereon, set fire to the store and recover upon the policies.

Defendant insists that this condition is shown to exist by this record; that the plaintiff did not have the amount of goods in the store at Bloomington that he claims; that he was not the sole and unconditional owner of the said property, and that the place was set on fire either by plaintiff or by and through his connivance and direction in accordance with the conspiracy claimed to have existed.

In support of the contention that the store was set on fire by plaintiff, or with his knowledge and consent or under his direction, defendant produced a letter written by plaintiff in the Syrian language to his brother-in-law, Samuel Barka, at some town in the State of Iowa.

While plaintiff was located in Cincinnati he became involved in trouble with his wife’s brother, David Barka and one Haboush, who then resided in Cincinnati but afterwards were located in Indianapolis, Indiana. After receiving this letter written by plaintiff, Samuel Barka went to Indianapolis; there he visited his brother David and showed him the letter received from the plaintiff. David Barka refused to return the letter to his brother Samuel, and it is contended by defendant that this letter contained a statement that plaintiff had recently opened a store for Solomon Brothers at Bloomington and that they intended soon to burn it; while plaintiff, on the other hand, contends that .that part of the letter which is as follows :

“I give you the news I have opened a store for Solomon Brothers, and pretty soon they want to burn it” was not written in the letter by him but that that part of the letter is a forgery and was placed there by David Barka or Haboush for the purpose of revenge and injuring plaintiff, and that the motive for this forgery and revenge was induced from the fact that at one time the plaintiff drove the said David Barka from his place of business in Cincinnati, and that Haboush, the other party to the forgery, desired that his son, Louis Haboush, should marry the sister of David Barka, who was now the wife of the plaintiff, contending that Haboush desired to get rid of the plaintiff so that his son could marry this woman and that plaintiff prevented this marriage by running away with the woman and marrying her.

After Samuel Barka had given this letter to his brother David he asked David to return it and insists that David told him he had burned the letter, at least, David did not return the letter, and Samuel and David had a fight over David’s failure to return it. David in

the meantime had taken the letter to a lawyer in Inlianapolis named Buick and told him the contents thereof; this lawyer then wrote to the State’s Attorney at Bloomington, Illinois, to ascertain whether there had been a fire at that place in a store carried on by plaintiff, and being informed that there had been such a fire he then took the matter up with the insurance companies, furnishing them the letter., David Barka translated the letter for the Indianapolis lawyer and made an affidavit concerning it.

Plaintiff testifies that David Barka afterwards wrote him concerning this letter and concerning the forged part of it, admitting that he had committed a wrong against plaintiff, that he together with Haboush had committed the forgery with the intention of getting plaintiff into trouble and that he, David Barka, was drunk at the time he was in the office of the lawyer in Indianapolis, but notwithstanding the character and importance of this letter alleged by plaintiff to have been written by David Barka, plaintiff lost the letter and was unable to produce it at the trial, but produced David Barka at the trial and he testified to having written the letter to plaintiff and to its contents as contended by plaintiff, and testifies that after he had received this letter from Samuel, his brother, he together with Haboush went to various stores in Indianapolis for the purpose of comparing this ink and of obtaining a similar ink with which they could write in the letter the clause that it was contended was a forgery; that he and Haboush practiced upon this writing after they obtained ink that was similar and could not be distinguished from the original and wrote in the space equal to that which they contend was vacant in the letter the words, “I have a store for Solomon Brothers, and a short time they are going to burn it, ’ ’ or that Anton Haboush wrote the eleven words contained in the letter and he said to him, “You fix it up,’’ and Louis Haboush said, “I will do it.”

The evidence of numerous friends and relatives of Milhim, the plaintiff, is that in their opinion these words in this letter is a forgery, but the preponderance of the evidence by disinterested parties who did not know plaintiff is that the lines alleged to be a forgery are written in the same hand and with the same ink as the balance of the letter.

The greater part of the goods contained in this store at Bloomington were furnished by the Solomon Brothers, who claimed to have stores in Chicago and New York. There are seven Solomon brothers, who operated under various names, in one place under the name of Brown and Company and in another under the name of Farris. One of the Solomons was known in Bloomington and Springfield as Charles Farris, but his real name was Charles Solomon.

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188 Ill. App. 186, 1914 Ill. App. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milhim-v-german-fire-insurance-illappct-1914.