Ohlson v. Sac County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance

191 Iowa 479
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 6, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 191 Iowa 479 (Ohlson v. Sac County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohlson v. Sac County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance, 191 Iowa 479 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

WeaveR, J.

Few more tragic stories find their way into the Law Reports than is embodied in the brief record of this cause. Jacob Neubauer was a farmer in Sae County. His name suggests a man of foreign birth or lineage. He had acquired a farm of 120 acres of land, well improved, on which were a dwelling house, barn, machine shed, poultry house, hog house, tool house, corncrib, and other conveniences. The buildings were in good condition, and the house well furnished. He had an automobile, for which he had paid $1,700, and.farm machinery in considerable profusion. Before the fire, he had been offered $30,000 for the farm, but was holding out for a price of $32,000. t He was a married man, with a family of wife and one child. It is said, and is probably true, that he was addicted to drink; and it appears that, from this or some other cause, the relations between himself and wife were not harmonious, and that, sometime during the summer of 1915, the wife instituted proceedings for divorce. The parties were represented by counsel, through whom an agreement was made for adjustment of property rights, in the event that a divorce was granted. The stipulation bears date of September 8, 1915, and by its terms the husband agreed to pay his wife the sum of $13,500 alimony, in full of all her claims upon him. To facilitate and secure the payment of this money, the parties united in executing a deed of the farm to blank grantee, and deposited it with counsel. The decree of divorce was granted, the property settlement affirmed, and the custody of the only child given to the wife.

[481]*481On the same day, the deceased met one Burnquist, the man who was proposing1 to purchase the farm, and told him he had settled with his wife, but that he had been offered $32,000 by another buyer, and asked Burnquist if he would pay that amount. Burnquist refused, but told him, in substance, to come to him when he got the best obtainable offer from others. In the early morning of September 10th, a fire destroyed the house and outbuildings on the Neubauer farm, together with practically all their contents. Sometime in the night of September 11th, Neu-bauer drowned himself in the cistern on the site"* of his ruined home. The plaintiff herein was appointed administrator of the estate of the deceased, and brought this action to recover the insurance upon the burned property. This action, as we have already said, was defended on the sole ground that Neubauer designedly set the fire which consumed his property. On trial to a jury, this defense was sustained, and verdict was returned for defendant. A new trial was denied, and plaintiff appeals.

The argument for reversal is largely devoted to two propositions : First, that the court erred in refusing a requested instruction on the effect to be given to a presumption of the innocence of the deceased of the wrongful act attributed to him by the defense; and second, that the verdict is without sufficient support in the evidence. It is to these assignments of error that we shall confine our discussion.

i Evidence• pre- ■ lnaPeff?ct: o?roe presumption. I. The instruction asked by the plaintiff is to the effect that, if Neubauer designedly burned the property, such act would constitute a crime; and that, where a charge of that kind is made, “a nafural presumption of innocence exists,” an<^ the ¿'“T may Pr°Perly consider the improbability that one “will commit an act of a criminal nature.” The court was also requested to further charge that “a presumption has the force of affirmative evidence, and, unless negatived by testimony or surrounding facts and circumstances of the case, it should prevail. The weight, however, to be given a presumption when considered with other evidence in the case is a matter for the decision of the jury.”

Counsel on either side have gone deeply into discussion of the law with respect to the force and effect of presumptions in the trial of an issue of fact. We deem it unnecessary, in this [482]*482ease, to attempt any final answer to this more or less vexed question, upon which some modern law -writers and courts have expended (or wasted) a vast amount of learning, without shedding upon it any appreciable degree of light. We are not disposed, at this time, to go the length insisted upon by counsel for appellee, and hold that a presumption is never “evidence of anything.” We have often held otherwise. But it does not follow that our rejection of such broad contention requires or justifies us in holding that the trial court erred in refusing the requested instruction in this case. It is not always advisable or permissible for the trial court to instruct a jury upon abstract legal principles. To do so tends often to obscure the question of fact on which the jury is to pass, and thus serves to mislead, rather than aid, the triers of fact in reaching a just conclusion. There are presumptions and presumptions. It has been said that “presumptions, like probabilities, are of different degrees of strength.” Decker v. Somerset M. F. Ins. Co., 66 Me. 406. That the rule denying the force of evidence to presumption is not necessarily of universal application is implied in the holding quoted by appellee from our case of State v. Linhoff, 121 Iowa 632 (a criminal case), that the refusal of an instruction somewhat like the one asked in the present instance was not error. The meat of the ruling there found is in the language “it is enough to say we do not approve of the doctrine that legal presumptions such as the one m question are to be treated as evidence,” thus carefully limiting the effect of the decision to the class or kind of cases of which the one then being considered was an example.

The case of Agnew v. United States, 165 U. S. 36, often cited as having overruled the decision in Coffin v. Umted States, 156 U. S. 432, is not authority for that proposition. The most which can be said of the Agnew case, so far as it relates to this particular question, is that it holds that, the trial court having already fully instructed the jury that “the defendant is presumed to be innocent of all the charges against him until he is found guilty by the evidence submitted to you, [and] this presumption remains with the defendant until such time in the progress of the case that you are satisfied of the guilt beyond a reasonable doubt,” there was no error in refusing a request [483]*483for an additional instruction sucb as was given in the Coffin case, which is, in substance, the instruction requested by the defense herein. In the same connection, it was there said that the instruction asked might well have been refused “on the ground of the tendency of its dosing sentence to mislead.” The closing sentence referred to reads:

“This presumption is to be treated by you as evidence giving rise to resulting proof to the full extent of its legal efficacy.”

There can be no doubt that this sentence emphasized or overemphasized the effect of the presumption as evidence, in a manner calculated to mislead; but, if the “closing sentence” so criti-cised be stricken entirely from the instruction in the Coffin case, there is still left in it the definite declaration that the presumption “is evidence in favor of the accused.” We refer to these precedents because they are urged upon our attention by counsel for appellee as authority for their contention that in no case

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Bluebook (online)
191 Iowa 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohlson-v-sac-county-farmers-mutual-fire-insurance-iowa-1921.