Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. Winn

5 L.R.A. 841, 43 N.W. 401, 27 Neb. 649, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 272
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 5 L.R.A. 841 (Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. Winn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. Winn, 5 L.R.A. 841, 43 N.W. 401, 27 Neb. 649, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 272 (Neb. 1889).

Opinion

Maxwell, J.

On the 26th day of May, 1886, the plaintiff in error issued to the defendant in error a policy of insurance, against loss or damage by fire for one year, upon the ■ general stock of merchandise carried by the latter as retail merchants in their store at Elk Creek, Neb. The policy contained permission for four thousand dollars concurrent insurance and a clause limiting the company’s liability in case of loss to its pro rata share of the total loss with other companies insuring; and afterwards, on the 29th day of October, 1886, the amount of concurrent insurance permitted was increased to six thousand dollars. The policy contained the usual provision requiring notice and preliminary proofs in case of loss, and the submission by the insured of. their books, papers, vouchers, etc., to the inspection of the underwriters, and the submission of themselves to examination under oath if required by the latter. It also contained a clause in the following words: “All fraud or attempt at fraud, by false swearing or otherwise, shall forfeit all claim on this company, and shall be a complete bar to any recovery for loss under this policy.”

Concurrent insurance amounting in the aggregate, together with the policy in suit, to seven thousand dollars was procured, and was in force when on the 21st day of December, 1886, a fire occurred, entirely destroying the property insured. One S. F. Holmes was the local agent of the companies and had notice of the fire at the time of its occurrence, and no formal notice seems to have been given to or required by the insurers, but Winn, who was apparently the sole owner of the property insured, and of the business connected therewith — Nail, who represented the [653]*653“ Co.,” being a nominal partner only — testified that at the suggestion of one Dale, who was an adjuster of one of the companies interested, he came to Lincoln, two or three weeks after the fire, and submitted his books, or a part of them, to Dale and to Wm. Fulton, the adjuster of the plaintiff in error.

Upon inspection of the books, discrepancies were found therein which, it is claimed, aroused the suspicions of both Dale and Fulton, who represented all the interested companies directly and indirectly, to such a degree that they expressly declined to pay the loss or recognize any liability under the policies until their suspicions should be removed by subsequent investigation. The parties separated with an understanding that there was to be a future meeting at Atchison, Kansas, at which Winn was requested to furnish copies of papers, vouchers, invoices, etc., and make fuller and more satisfactory proof of the amount and value of the property burned. Fulton attended at the time and place appointed for this meeting, but Winn then professed to be unprepared to comply with what had been required of him, and the matter was again postponed, to be taken up again at some future time at Plattsburg, Missouri.

On or about the 21st day of March, 1887, Fulton met Winn at Plattsburg, at which time and place the latter made a statement under oath showing that according to an inventory made February 1, 1886, witness then had on hand, of the stock insured, $8,245.35, and that he had afterwards purchased goods to the amount in value of $8,028.43. From the aggregate of these two sums the amount of sales was given, to be deducted so as to show the value of the goods burned. The items of the several purchases purporting to give dates, amounts, and names of persons and firms from whom purchased were included in this sworn statement. There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff below, from which the cause is brought into this court by petition in error.

[654]*654The proof clearly shows that at the time of the fire the defendant in error had in his store at Elk Creek property covered by the policies in this case of greater value than $7,000, and that a notice of the loss was given to a local agent of the insurance company immediately after the fire and that the adjusters of the insurance companies appeared to endeavor to adjust the loss. Up to this point no fraud is claimed, and had the proof of loss conformed to the facts no objection would be made by the insurance companies, so far as we can see, to the payment of the loss. The fraud which is claimed to vitiate the policies is as follows : The defendant in error in making out his first proof of loss increased the amount of a number of the bills of goods purchased by him for some months before the fire, in the aggregate about $1,700. This proof was duly sworn to and cannot be justified, and probably would subject the affiant to a prosecution for perjury; but does it forfeit the insurance ? If so, why ? So far as the testimony shows the design was not to defraud the companies, but to exaggerate the loss and thereby secure, if possible, prompt payment. This is reprehensible, but if no one is defrauded thereby it is difficult to perceive any just ground upon which to base a forfeiture. Such exaggeration may furnish a just cause for suspicion that the property burned was not of the value claimed for it; but that question is one of fact to be submitted to a jury, who are the judges of the credibility of the witnesses.

This is a new question in this state, and we desire to establish a rule which, while it will protect insurance companies in their just rights, will also shield the insured from the confiscation of their property upon fanciful or insufficient grounds. In Marion v. Great Republic Ins. Co., 35 Mo., 148, a case in many respects resembling this, the policy provided that “If there appear any fraud or false swearing, the insured shall forfeit all claim under this policy.” At the trial, evidence was given tending to prove [655]*655that the statement of loss made to the defendant by the plaintiff was false in regard to the amount of the loss. An instruction that the company was not liable in such case was refused by the trial court, and the refusal to give the same assigned for error. The supreme court says: “ The clause in the policy in respect to false swearing is to be viewed in connection with all the other parts of the policy and the general nature of the contract; and so viewing it, it is obvious that it was intended thereby to require the insured to give the insurer real and reliable information as to the amount of the loss, and that a mistake or unintentional error,* or misstatement of an immaterial matter, in the sworn statement would not avoid the policy, but the false statement must be willfully made in respect to a material matter, and with the purpose to deceive the insurer. Now, this instruction requires that the false statement (that is, the statement made in ignorance of its truth) shall have been knowingly made, but does not require that the jury shall find that it was in respect to a material matter, or made with an intention to deceive the defendant. It might probably be inferred that the matter was material; but under that instruction, if given; the jury would have been required to -find for the defendant, notwithstanding that the false statement was not intended to deceive the defendant and did not deceive it, and that the plaintiff derived and could derive no advantage from it, and the defendant received and could receive no detriment from it. (Hoffman v. Western Marine and Fire Ins. Go., 1 Lou., 216.)

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Bluebook (online)
5 L.R.A. 841, 43 N.W. 401, 27 Neb. 649, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-fire-marine-insurance-v-winn-neb-1889.