Williams v. Southern Mutual Insurance

166 A. 582, 312 Pa. 114, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 682
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 25, 1933
DocketAppeal, 270
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 166 A. 582 (Williams v. Southern Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Southern Mutual Insurance, 166 A. 582, 312 Pa. 114, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 682 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

May 22, 1933:

The Perkiomen Trunk and Bag Company sued the Southern Mutual Insurance Company on a policy of fire insurance dated May 2,, 1930, insuring the plaintiff against loss by fire for a term of one year beginning April 29,1930. On December 17,1930, a fire occurred at plaintiff’s plant and a large quantity of property was destroyed or damaged by fire. The total sum of insurance carried on the property was $403,000, divided *117 among twenty-seven companies. The sound valuation of the building was estimated at $133,835.37, and the loss or damage was estimated to be $90,129.09. The parties could not agree as to the sum of loss or damage to the machinery, equipment, stock and material. When the case was tried the company presented two defenses: one was incendiarism on the part of the insured; the other was fraud in the presentation of the claim by the insured. The court below in its charge ruled out the former defense and submitted to the jury the defense of fraud. This defense rested upon a provision of the policy which reads: “This entire policy shall be void if the insured has concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstances concerning this insurance or the subject thereof; or in case of any fraud or false swearing by the insured touching any matter relating to this insurance or the subject thereof, whether before or after a loss.”

The court below charged the jury, inter alia, that “The mistake, or the inaccuracy which voids a policy and prevents the plaintiff from recovering anything, is a wilful, deliberate, intentional mistake.” Defendant claims that there was such a “wilful, deliberate mistake,” or fraud in this case. A large part of plaintiff’s claim consisted of a calculation based upon books and records. Defendant showed that the income tax return and capital stock tax report for the appropriate periods filed by the plaintiff company contained figures conflicting with the figures on which plaintiff’s claim was based. According to plaintiff’s claim there was on the first of January, 1930, $304,000 worth of merchandise in the plant, whereas, an income tax report filed by the company and duly attested by its officers, and offered in evidence by defendant, certified that only $235,000 worth of merchandise was in the plant on the above date. Defendant contended that this discrepancy proved that plaintiff’s claim was fraudulent.

*118 Defendant contended that there were two sets of books kept by the Perkiomen Company, one for income tax purposes, and the other as “window dressing” to be exhibited to creditors, especially creditor banks, and that this other or fictitious set of books was later used to support the Perkiomen Company’s fraudulent claim for insurance on goods that never existed and were therefore never destroyed. The Federal Income Tax examiner testified that he went to the plant of plaintiff company and was shown books containing figures corresponding with those contained in the income tax report. On this phase of the case the trial judge charged the jury: “If you believe there were two sets of books, one kept for the inside information of the plaintiff to know really what was what, and incidentally used to file a correct Income Tax Report with the Government, and another set of books showing mythical and exaggerated figures and giving a much better state of affairs than the other one, which latter set of books was used originally to deceive other people, but is now handed over by the plaintiff to deceive the Insurance Company and to get an improper verdict in this case, then that would be so clearly fraud and so obviously must involve a knowledge of misrepresentation that there ought to be a verdict for the defendant.” Plaintiff denied that there were two sets of books and contended that the evidence of the two sets of books rested largely on the testimony of one Fegandus, who voluntarily retired from plaintiff’s service in anticipation of being retired involuntarily. As to this witness’s testimony the court charged in effect that if this witness helped keep a false set of books “to gain credit from anybody,” and “if he did what he says, and acquiesced in what would have been a wrong act — in what would have been a criminal act — if the books were falsely kept to gain credit from anybody, in that sense he would be an accomplice, and the rule of law is that an accomplice’s testimony must be carefully scanned; that it is not as good testimony, *119 or may not appear to be as good testimony as that of a man who claims to be honest. Bnt the law says you may believe it, especially if you find it corroborated by other people or by other circumstances in the case. That is for you to say.” Plaintiff contended further that the income tax reports were not made from a distinct set of books, but were taken from figures furnished by Sedour, the company’s accountant, and by Cramer, the company’s president, that the income tax reports were based on spurious figures while the claim for insurance was based on genuine ones. In other words, the plea was that while-fraud had been committed by the officers of the Perkiomen Company, its victim was the Government and not the insurer. The trial judge correctly charged the jury that they could not find a verdict for defendant merely because they believed plaintiff company had falsified its income tax returns, that for defrauding the government the penalty would have to be imposed in another forum; he carefully submitted to the jury the question whether or not there was false swearing deliberately and intentionally done to cheat the insurance company, saying that if this was a fact, the jury’s verdict should be for defendant, but if not, the verdict should be for plaintiffs. (Ira Jewell Williams and J. Thurston Manning, Receivers for the Perkiomen Trunk and Bag Company, Inc., had been joined as parties plaintiff on the day of the trial, thirteen months after the fire.)

The jury returned a verdict that they found the actual cash value of the property was $409,733.31, itemized as follows: Real estate, $133,835.37; machinery, $34,-065.15; machines, $5,845; stock, $235,987.79. The jury fixed the loss at $352,980.83. As the insurance was for 90% of the loss, the actual verdict was $317,682.75. The amount which the defendant is called upon to pay as one of the twenty-seven companies insuring the property in question is $1,901.46. On February 1, 1932, stipulation of counsel was filed, with the approval of the court, that the verdict should be for the amount just stated, with *120 interest from January 8, 1932. Defendant thereafter filed its motion and reasons for a new trial, which motion was discharged by the court in banc. Judgment was thereafter entered upon the verdict and appeal was taken to the Superior Court. The Superior Court sustained the opinion of the court of common pleas. An appeal was then allowed to this court.

In this case there were issues of fact which manifestly had to be submitted to the jury for determination. There was only one set of the Perkiomen Company’s books actually introduced in evidence. There was testimony as to the existence of another set of books but this testimony was oral and its credibility was for the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 A. 582, 312 Pa. 114, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-southern-mutual-insurance-pa-1933.