Salganik v. United States Fire Insurance

118 A. 815, 80 N.H. 450, 1922 N.H. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 8, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 A. 815 (Salganik v. United States Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salganik v. United States Fire Insurance, 118 A. 815, 80 N.H. 450, 1922 N.H. LEXIS 52 (N.H. 1922).

Opinion

Plummer, J.

The bill in equity praying for the cancelation of the insurance policy will be first considered. The policy contained the following clause: “This policy shall be void ... if the insured shall make any attempt to defraud the company, either before or after the loss.”

The company in its bill alleges that the insured has falsely and fraudulently stated that he had goods and merchandise in the store at the time of the fire, which were not then there, and has demanded that the company pay him for the destruction of such property; that he has falsely and fraudulently claimecl that the value of his fixtures, furniture and stock in trade in the store when, the fire occurred, was at least twice their actual value, and has. demanded payment of damages from the company upon that basis;: *452 that he has concealed or destroyed his books and papers showing his stock in trade before the fire, for the purpose of aiding him to defraud the company.

These allegations of attempted fraud if proven would work a forfeiture of the policy under the clause above quoted. Follett v. Insurance Co., 77 N. H. 457. The presiding justice found, without exception, that no question was raised as to the validity of the policy at the time it was executed, or at the time when the fire occurred, but the company sought to have the policy canceled by reason of attempted fraud after the loss. There would seem to be no occasion to invoke the equity power of the court for that purpose. The clause which the company is seeking to enforce is in effect a clause of forfeiture, and would be an irrefragable defence to an action at law upon the policy. In other words the company has a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law, and under such circumstances, a court of equity will not intervene. Walker v. Walker, 63 N. H. 321; Fisher v. Carpenter, 67 N. H. 569; Davison v. Davison, 71 N. H. 180; Harvey v. Harvey, 73 N. H. 106; Claremont v. Rand, 76 N. H. 116; Foss v. Place, 78 N. H. 147.

Furthermore, the trial court found that the equities of the case are against the enforcement of the forfeiture of the right of the insured claimed by the company. And it was, therefore, ordered that upon this ground the bill be dismissed. ' This finding of the court, to which no exception was taken, would warrant the dismissal of the bill. The company in an amendment to its bill states that a multiplicity of actions have been brought against it by the insured, and that in none of them can it litigate the issues it desires to try, and that it has no plain, adequate and complete remedy at law. So far as the multiplicity of suits is concerned, they are all between the same parties, and when the cases are tried they can be consolidated and tried together, if justice so requires. Dartmouth College v. Cameron, 77 N. H. 66.' If the actions in their present form do not allow the company an opportunity to litigate any proper issue, on motion the superior court, undoubtedly, will allow such an amendment to be made as justice. may require to effectuate that result. Owen v. Weston, 63 N. H. 599, and cases there cited.

In the action of the insured against the company, the company objected to the motion of the insured for judgment upon the referees’ report on the grounds that the court had no jurisdiction; that the company would be deprived of the right to a trial by jury; that a justice of the superior court had no authority to appoint *453 referees; and that the policy contract relating to the appointment of referees, and their report, is in conflict with chapter 170 of the Public Statutes, and void.

The trial court found, without exception, that no question as to the validity of the policy issued by the company was referred to the referees or passed upon by them, and that the question whether the insured has since the fire attempted to defraud the company, and if so, whether the policy by its terms has become void, has never been presented to or decided by any tribunal. The company has an undoubted right to the trial of these issues by jury, and the court had no authority to order a judgment that would deprive it of that right. The judgment is therefore set aside, for the company must be given an opportunity to litigate the validity of the policy. The next question which presents itself is whether the award made by the referees determining the amount of the damages sustained by the insured is binding upon the parties. The award is the result of a completed arbitration between the parties, relating to the loss suffered by the insured, and the parties must be bound by it. The referees appointed by the court, after notice, had a hearing upon the question of the loss occasioned by the fire. The company appeared and participated in the hearing. Both parties submitted the question of damages to the determination of the referees, and they must be bound by the finding of the referees relating thereto. Spofford v. Spofford, 10 N. H. 254; Whitcher v. Whitcher, 49 N. H. 176; Truesdale v. Straw, 58 N. H. 207, 216; Burleigh v. Ford, 59 N. H. 536, 541; 5 C. J. 43.

The question raised by the company that a justice of the superior court had no authority to appoint referees, is of no great importance, because the company made no objection to the appointment, and by appearing and taking part in the hearing before the referees, accepted them as the. tribunal provided for in the policy to determine the loss sustained by the insured. There is no doubt, however, that a justice of the superior court had authority to make the appointment. “Since 1879, the law which is now chapter 170 of the Public Statutes has been a part of every contract of fire insurance made in the state. In 1885 it was enacted that the insurance commissioner should provide a standard form of policy, and that all companies should conform to the regulations prescribed by him. Laws 1885, c. 93, s. 3. Acting under this authority, the commissioner prescribed the form since known as the ‘New Hampshire standard form of policy.’ Ins. Com. Rep., 1885, pp. 5, 73. Grave doubts *454 arose as to the binding effect of the commissioner’s action. A similar statute, passed by the samé legislature, was held to be invalid as an attempted delegation of legislative power. In re School Law Manual, 63 N. H. 574. In the revision of 1891, all doubts were removed by the enactment that ‘the form of policy and insurance contract now in force in this state is continued until the insurance commissioner shall change it.’ P. S., c. 170, s. 1.” Franklin v. Insurance Co., 70 N. H. 251, 257.

The same form of policy is now in force as when the above decision was rendered. And it contains a provision which gives the court authority to appoint referees to find and report the loss sustained upon a fire insurance policy, on petition of either party.

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Related

Lawton v. Great Southwest Fire Insurance
392 A.2d 576 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 815, 80 N.H. 450, 1922 N.H. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salganik-v-united-states-fire-insurance-nh-1922.