Northwestern National Insurance v. Chambers

206 P. 1081, 24 Ariz. 86, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 185
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1922
DocketCivil No. 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 206 P. 1081 (Northwestern National Insurance v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern National Insurance v. Chambers, 206 P. 1081, 24 Ariz. 86, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 185 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

McALISTER, J.

This is an action upon a policy of insurance issued by the Northwestern National Insurance Company of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to appel[88]*88lee, plaintiff below, insuring Mm in the sum of $1,500 against loss or damage by fire.or theft of an automobile in consideration of certain warranties and the payment of a premium of $48.75. From a judgment in favor of appellee for $1,150 principal, fifteen per cent penalty thereon, attorney’s fees and costs, and a denial of its motion for a new trial, defendant appeals.

It appears from the complaint that the car was stolen on the night of September 8, 1920, while parked on Ninth Street in the city of Douglas, driven several miles into the country, and burned, resulting in its total destruction with the exception of two tires valued at $100; that the contract of insurance was made and entered into for the purpose of insuring appellee against the loss of Winton touring car No. 17070, a second-hand car of the 1915 model, but that, as reduced to writing, the policy, by mutual mistake, inadvertence and oversight of the parties, described said ear in clause 3 of the subsection denominated •“Warranties” as a 1916 model, and in clause 4 thereof as a new car, and the prayer is that said policy of insurance be reformed to read as the parties made it and as so reformed enforced. The answer alleges that, appellee’s agent, one Borrego, who applied for the insurance, informed appellant’s agent that it .was a new car and purchased by appellee as such in 1916, and that, acting solely upon this information, it was determined that the sum of $1,500 could be written thereon, but that, if it had been’ represented to appellant at -the time the application was made that it was a 1915 model and a used car when purchased by appellee, appellant corporation would not have allowed insurance to the extent of $1,500 placed thereon.

The case was tried to the court without a jury, and written findings of fact, full and complete, filed. [89]*89The errors assigned challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to substantiate the complaint, the findings, the conclusions of law, and the judgment.

It appears from the testimony of appellee that he drove the ear from Douglas to Tucson in the summer of 1920 for the purpose of selling or trading it for a house and lot, but, being unable to do either, he returned home July 29th, leaving the car in a Tucson garage to be disposed of, if possible, by one A. F. Borrego, a real estate dealer there, whom he also requested to have it insured for $1,500 or as much as it would carry; that the policy was issued July 30, 1920, and forwarded to him at his home in Douglas, where it was received, placed in his desk without being examined or even read, and his check in payment of the premium thereon sent to L. Boca.

Borrego testified that he spoke to L. Boca, Tucson agent of appellant, a day or so after appellee left and told him that appellee wanted insurance on his car, which was then at the Holliday Garage; that Boca inquired how much he wanted, and was told $1,500, or as much as the car would carry; that he had no further talk with Boca than to tell him what appellee had said, that the car was a 1916 model and cost something like $2,900; that he did not tell him the number of the car nor whether it was new or second-hand because these facts were unknown to him; that Boca was a man about five feet ten and one-half inches tall and of Mexican or Spanish nativity. Boca, however, testified that neither he nor anyone else for him made an examination of the car, but that Borrego gave him its number and told him that it was a 1916 model and ■ was purchased new by appellee. It appears further from his testimony that at the time of the issuance of the policy he had in his office a record published by an automobile publishing company describing all cars, and that by an examination of it he could have [90]*90ascertained whether this 'car was a 1915 or 1916 model. A witness by the name of Tracy residing in Tucson testified that at the request of appellee, whom he had known for five or six years, he went to the garage occasionally to look at the car, and on the 29th or 30th of July, 1920, passed there and saw two men examining’ the car, but did not know them; one was tall and looked like a Mexican, and the other short, though he did not pay close attention to them; that one appeared to be examining the engine with a pencil and paper, but he did not stop to watch them as he was merely walking along and looked that way; that Borrego was not one of them.

The court accepted the testimony in behalf of appellee and found that Borrego requested a personal examination of the car by Roca, that the latter complied therewith, either personally or through another, and that in so doing he obtained the information upon which the policy was written. The first three assignments are based on the insufficiency of the evidence to uphold these findings, but we are unable to see wherein they are not supported by the evidence. It was found upon conflicting, though ample, testimony that Borrego knew neither the factory number of the car nor whether it was purchased by appellee new or second-hand, and in addition to this its cost price was placed in the policy at $3,500, instead of $2,900, as stated by him. Though Borrego told Roca it was a 1916 model, yet the court was justified in view of the foregoing in finding that the information contained in the policy was not furnished by Borrego, but was gained from an inspection of the car by Roca or someone else for him. Borrego did not have the information, and necessarily could not have supplied it.

The finding that the errors in the policy which are complained of were due to “mutual mistake, inadvertence and oversight of the plaintiff and defendant” [91]*91is objected to as wholly unsupported by the evidence. Borrego, as agent of appellee, told Boca, when he applied for the insurance, where the car could be found, and requested him to examine it and to insure it for all it would carry. By this action appellee furnished appellant, or placed within its power to ascertain correctly for itself, the information it was necessary for the policy to contain. Such action clearly negatives any intention or attempt on the part of appellee’s agent to mislead Boca or misrepresent the facts to him, or do anything other than furnish correctly the data required for procuring a policy of insurance on this particular automobile — Winton touring car No. 17070, model 1915, then in a garage at Tucson. No statement as to whether appellee purchased the car new or second-hand was made by him or his agent because the former saw Boca for the first time at the trial, and there was no communication between them on the subject, and the latter had no knowledge concerning it. It is clear that appellee wanted this particular car and no other insured, and that appellant’s agent,'Boca, intended to insure it and wrote a policy covering it, and, having been in a position to ascertain correctly the information upon which the policy was based, it must be assumed that he obtained it accurately, and naturally it should have been inserted that way in the policy, but instead he entered part of it erroneously — the figures “1916” to describe the model of the car, and the word “new” its condition when purchased. It is true that whether it was new or second-hand when purchased by appellee was unknown to him, since this could not have been ascertained by an inspection of it, but the fact that it was not then a new car must have appeared to him, because, according to the evidence, it had been driven five years or longer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 P. 1081, 24 Ariz. 86, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-national-insurance-v-chambers-ariz-1922.