Penn-National Hardware Mutual v. General Finance Corp.

16 F.2d 36, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3743
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 10, 1926
DocketNo. 4792
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 F.2d 36 (Penn-National Hardware Mutual v. General Finance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penn-National Hardware Mutual v. General Finance Corp., 16 F.2d 36, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3743 (5th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an action to recover for losses insured against by a poliey of indemnity insurance. The poliey was dated May 10, 1924, and was issued by the defendant Penn-National Hardware Mutual in favor of the plaintiff, General Finance Corporation. It provided against “loss resulting from the violation of the terms of any trust receipt, mortgage or lease agreement, conditional sales agreement in which the assured shall have a pecuniary interest, which, for the purpose of this policy, shall hereinafter be known as obligations, by reason of the wrongful sale, mortgage, pledge, conversion, concealment, or disposing, by any person or persons who shall have executed an obligation to the assured, of any motor vehicle in the possession of said person or persons, or by the conversion of the proceeds of sale thereof by said person or persons, or by reason of the nondelivery to any person or persons, or fraudulent or fictitious sale of the motor vehicle described in said trust receipt, mortgage, conditional sale, or lease agreement (or bills of lading therefor), subject to the warranties, stipulations, agreements, and conditions hereinafter set forth.”

The poliey also contains the following provisions: “This entire policy shall be void if the assured has concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstance concerning this insurance or the subject thereof, or in any case of fraud, attempted fraud, or false swearing willfully or intentionally done by the assured touching any matter relating to this insurance or the subject thereof whether before or after a loss.” “If the assured shall make any claim, knowing the same to be false or fraudulent, as regards amount or otherwise, said insurance shall become void, and all claims thereunder shall be forfeited.”

Paragraph XII of the form of policy usually issued by defendant required the assured to make monthly a physical cheeking of automobiles. That paragraph was not satisfactory to plaintiff, and upon its insistence was changed, so as to provide for a regular monthly checking of wholesale or dealer’s obligations accepted as security for loans made by the assured. There remained unchanged a sentence in that paragraph reading, “unless at the cost of the company, however, the method of monthly checking adopted by the assured shall be acceptable to the company,” except that for the word “cheeking” the word “cheek” was substituted. The American Surety Company was joined as a defendant by reason of its having become surety on the policy to the extent of $10,000.

Plaintiff’s claim is based upon its acceptance of 93 retail obligations, representing mortgages upon that number of Paige and Jewett automobiles purporting to have been sold by the Cooke Motor Company to individual purchasers, and upon 7 wholesale obligations; that is mortgages by the Cooke Motor Company upon automobiles purporting to have been purchased from the factory. The retail obligations aggregated upwards of $105,000, and the wholesale obligations $7,916; but both classes of obligations included 15 per cent., or about $16,000, of profit which the plaintiff expected to make. As a matter of fact, automobiles bearing the numbers described in the obligations had been manufactured, but not a single one of them had ever been delivered to the Cooke Motor Company; so that all such obligations were fraudulent and fictitious, and did not represent any automobile that had ever been in its possession. Therefore the fraud of the Cooke Motor Company in issuing the obligations is established beyond dispute.

Plaintiff claims that it had no knowledge [38]*38of the fraudulent and fictitious character of the obligations. The defenses interposed included the following: (1) That plaintiff did have such knowledge — in. fact, was a participant in the fraudulent scheme — and should be denied any recovery whatever; (2) that recovery for the face of the obligations could not be had for the reasons (a) that, at the time the policy became effective, plaintiff had in its possession fraudulent and fictitious obligations of the Cooke Motor Company aggregating about $52,000, and worthless paper bringing the total up to nearly $100,000, which fraudulent, fictitious, and worthless paper was exchanged for equally worthless paper issued subsequently to the date of the poliey; (b) that a substantial part of the money advanced by plaintiff was upon obligations accepted by it after the date of the first monthly cheeking which plaintiff was required, to make, and that, as to such obligations thereafter issued, defendant was relieved from liability by the terms of the poliey; and (c) that in any event defendant could not be held bound for plaintiff’s profits of about $16,000, but was only liable for the actual amount lost by plaintiff in its dealings with the Cooke Motor Company.

Plaintiff was engaged in the business of financing automobile dealers in the purchase of automobiles from the factory, and in selling them on the installment plan to individual purchasers, and had been dealing with the Cooke Motor Company for some time. As early as January, 1924, it applied for insurance which would protect it against loss upon acceptance of obligations of automobile dealers and individual purchasers by reason of fraudulent and fictitious sales.. Up to the time of issuance of policy in suit, it had on hand fraudulent and fictitious obligations amounting to about $52,000, which it had accepted from the Cooke Motor Company. In addition, it held paper of that company of the face value of $54,000, all of which, except about $12,000, proved to be worthless on account of having been signed by accommodation indorsers or irresponsible parties.

After the policy was issued, and up to November, 1924, when the Cooke Motor Company failed,.fraudulent and fictitious obligations antedating the poliey were taken up by the Cooke Motor Company with money advanced by plaintiff on like obligations accepted by it subsequently to the date of the policy. Throughout the whole course of plaintiff’s dealings with the Cooke Motor Company a form of purchaser’s obligation was used which included his street address, and it was plaintiff’s custom to send a letter to such address, stating that it had acquired the purchaser’s obligation and was entitled to future payments thereon, and, requesting a recognition by such purchaser of its rights. Many of these letters were returned unclaimed. More than 40 of the supposed purchasers of the 93 retail obligations involved in this suit were represented as living in El Paso, where both the plaintiff and Cooke Motor Company had their places of business; but 49 of the 93 notices were returned as unclaimed by the addressees.

Some payments were made on these contracts, but in every instance they were made by the Cooke Motor Company, which, in some unexplained manner, received some of the notices mailed to supposed purchasers. Plaintiff was a subscriber to, and received each morning, the Commercial Recorder, a publication giving information of courthouse records, including records of automobile licenses and mortgages. During the period covered by the poliey, licenses were issued for only 6 Paige cars and only 7 Jewett cars. A director of the plaintiff corporation, who, however, was not active in the conduct of its business, testified that its president, Mr. Cunningham, told him that investigations were being made of the license records of automobiles. That testimony was not denied by Cunningham, although he -testified that no investigation of courthouse records was in fact made.

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16 F.2d 36, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-national-hardware-mutual-v-general-finance-corp-ca5-1926.