Royal Ins. Co. v. Eastham

71 F.2d 385, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3099
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 9, 1934
Docket7306
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 71 F.2d 385 (Royal Ins. Co. v. Eastham) 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
Royal Ins. Co. v. Eastham, 71 F.2d 385, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3099 (5th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

This suit is ou fire insurance policies on account of fire damage to furniture sustained in a fire in plaintiff’s residence, March 19> 1932. The defenses were arson, and fraudulent and false swearing in the proofs of loss and in the suit. There is a counterclaim to recover back moneys the company had paid Eastham on account of damage to his house from the same fire, and damage he had sustained in a fire in his residence just a year before. By these appeals consolidated under one number, appellants challenge the result below as fundamentally unjust to them. Arguing the ease here as .they did to the jury and to the trial court, they urge upon us that plaintiff’s conduct and actions as they relate to his claims on the policies, both before and since the fire, so smeÜ to heaven of fraud and rascality thjit the verdict he got ought not to stand. Specifically, the claim is that the proof overwhelms that the two fire losses he suffered within the year, together with other fires and dynamitings occurring in that vicinity, were set out by incendiaries in plaintiff’s employ, with spleen and revenge as the motives for some of the outrages, and the insurance he had the motive for the fires in his home. They claim, too, that by false swearing in connection with the proofs of loss and other papers and proceedings relative to his claim, plaintiff has cut himself off from recovering. Beside these claims of fundamental error there are claims of errors in rulings on evidence, in refusing special charges, and in denying plaintiffs’ motions for a new trial, an ordinary one claiming errors on the trial; an extraordinary one based oil a claim of newly discovered evidence.

Plaintiff insists that all of this is water under the mill; that every matter now complained of was presented to the District Judge below, and by him correctly ruled. He argues that defendants were offered every opportunity to prove their defenses to the jury. He points to the voluminous record for confirmation. He asserts that they were in fact given far too wide latitude in proving matters having no direct, and hardly any indirect bearing on the fire loss claims, and sensationally prejudicial to him. That defendants, in respect of their testimony and the instructions the court gave, were in no manner limited in making their defenses. He insists that the District Judge correctly submitted to the jury for their resolving every issue the defendants presented, and that the jury, upon amply supporting testimony, resolved these . issues against defendant. He says that all of defendants’ lurid and sensational testimonjr was directly denied, and their witnesses impeached, and that unqualifiedly put to the jury it was not believed by them. He argues that in effect all the defendants are trying to do here is to get a rehearing of the ease by another jury which they hope will be more favorable to their claims. Of the evidential points raised by defendants, plaintiff says that none of the rulings complained of were in fact erroneous; that if there was error, it was not correctly saved; and further, in view of the enormous mass of- testimony the defendants put in, the error, if there was any, was academic and unsubstantial, and furnishes no ground for setting the verdict aside.

As to the claimed errors in overruling the ordinary and extraordinary motions for a new trial, plaintiff points out that such rulings are discretionary, and only when clear abuse is shown will the action of the District Judge be disturbed. He insists that no- abuse whatever is shown here in respect to them. That on the contrary, the record shows a careful and painstaking consideration and a correct disposition of them.

Because of the gravity of the charges made against plaintiff and particularly because of Ms admission of attempted bribery, we have read the record with great care. We have given particular consideration to defendants’ insistence, Assignments Nos. 1, 9, 10, that their proof of the dynamitings and burnings going on in the eommumty and of East-ham’s admission that he attempted to bribe the fire marshal not to charge Mm with complicity in them, taken with the other evidence in the case, have so discredited him and Ms claims that a verdict for Mm may not stand.

We cannot agree with defendants that the evidence demanded a verdict for them, or that there was abuse of discretion in refusing their motions for a new trial. Serious and damaging as were the charges and proofs against Mm, plaintiff met them with opposing *387 proofs. As to the bribe, he testified that this was induced not by a sense of guilt, but by blackmail through threats of public charges, and in this lie was not without corroboration. Of other testimony against him it may be said that the witnesses offering it were impeached, and that all of the adverse testimony was flatly denied by plaintiff and his witnesses. In the long drawn out trial, with its sensational charges and proofs, the court gave defendants the widest latitude in searching out the truth, to inquire fully into matters which, though collateral, might throw light on motives and actions. In addition to the direct testimony, there was a mass of circumstantial evidence offered by both sides. Veracity and credibility were directly attacked and supported. The very gravity o £ the charges, the sharp contradictions the evidence afforded, the wide range it took, made this peculiarly a .jury case. It was for the jury to weigh it all and to say whether the defenses were made out. There was ample evidence to support ihe view they took that they were not. Because this is so, we may not disturb the verdict as unfounded in fact, or the judgment on it unless from, appellants’ assignments it appears that the conduct of the trial was marked by reversible error, within the meaning of section 269, Judicial Code, 28 USCA § 391, that is, errors affecting the substantial rights of the parties. Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co. v. Blake (C. C. A.) 231 F. 417; Community Natural Gas Co. v. Henley (C. C. A.) 54 F.(2d) 59.

We turn then to the consideration of the claimed errors. Some of them are so lacking in merit as to he frivolous. The assignments complaining that plaintiff was allowed to prove "more damage on some items than he had claimed in his proofs of loss are of this kind. It is perfectly clear from the evidence that the failure to claim these amounts was inadvertent, and that defendants were not prejudiced thereby. Equally without merit are the assignments complaining of the statement of the court preliminary to his charge to the jury, that there was no issue as to the 1931 fire, and his refusal to submit defendants’ charges as to whether claims made by plaintiff in connection with that fire were falsely made. The bona tides of the 3 931 fire and of claims made on account of it, were not put in issue by any evidence in the case. There was some suspicion directed that way by the bribe evidence, but no evidence whatever was offered tending to impeach that fire or the settlement made on account of it. There were in short no issues regarding the 1931 fire to submit to the jury. Besides, defendants’ exception to the informal preliminary summation of the issues by the court presented nothing for review. It cannot be told from it what part of the summation was excepted to, nor the grounds of the exception.

The assignments to the refusal to permit Frank Raper to testify to Jim Raper’s ability to work, and Crewos to answer whether or not he took affidavits in connection with his investigation, are equally frivolous and unsubstantial. On their face the questions are objectionable.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F.2d 385, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-ins-co-v-eastham-ca5-1934.