116 A. 603 | Conn. | 1922
"To warrant the reformation of a contract on the ground of mutual mistake, the mistake must have been common to both parties, and it must appear that by reason of it both have done what neither intended, and the evidence should be clear, substantial, and convincing as to both these facts." Snelling v.Merritt,
One of the reasons of appeal is that in this action no antecedent variant agreement was alleged or proved. As to this point the complaint alleged, and the court has found, that the plaintiff in seeking to insure his house informed the defendant's agent that it stood on ground not owned by him in fee simple. The knowledge of the agent, thus acquired while he was acting within the scope of his authority and in the course of the particular transaction which the information affected, is in law the knowledge of the defendant. Trumbull v.Hewitt,
Another reason of appeal is that the court erred in refusing to charge, as requested, that the plaintiff must establish the facts upon which he based his claim to a reformation of the policy, "beyond a reasonable doubt"; and erred in charging the jury that the fact inquired about by the first interrogatory might be established by a fair preponderance of the evidence. In support of the rule of proof contended for, the defendant relies on statements, often found in cases of this kind, to the effect that the basic facts of mistake and of consequent failure to effectuate the real intent *341
of the parties must be established by "clear and convincing," or "overwhelming,' evidence; or by evidence such as to leave "no reasonable doubt," or "no room for doubt." Snelling v. Merritt, supra; Palmer v.Hartford Ins. Co.,
The court properly instructed the jury that the actual, fair value of the house at the time when it was destroyed by fire, did not necessarily control their conclusion as to the amount of loss or damage sustained by the plaintiff; because the plaintiff might, in the near future, have been required either to abandon the house to the owners of the land, or to go to the expense of moving it to some other location, or to sell it to a purchaser who would assume that expense. Nevertheless, the jury in answering the second interrogatory fixed the fair value of the building immediately before the fire at $2,000, and in answering the third interrogatory fixed "the amount of loss or damage sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the destruction of the building by fire" at the same figure of $2,000. From the identity of these answers the defendant argues that the jury must have failed to grasp the distinction pointed *343 out by the court, and hence that the court erred in denying the defendant's motion to set aside or disregard the answer to the third interrogatory. We think, however, that the real difficulty which the jury had arose from the form of the third interrogatory, which may easily be understood as asking for the amount of the loss sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the destruction of the building, including the admitted loss of $300 on its contents. We are bound to read the answers to the interrogatories so as to make them consistent, if that can reasonably be done, and it can be done in this case. So understood, the finding of the jury is that the plaintiff's actual loss on the building alone was $1,700, of which only $1,500 was covered by the policy.
It is alleged that the court erred in ruling that the plaintiff was not guilty of laches in failing to read or examine the policy, and the attempt is made to distinguish this case from Palmer v. Hartford Ins. Co.,
Upon this issue of plaintiff's negligence the defendant relies on findings that the plaintiff has carried insurance on his house since 1900, under successive three year policies, none of which described it as standing on land not owned by him; and that the plaintiff never read any one of these former policies. We think, however, the transaction in suit stands by itself. The policy is referred to in the testimony as a "renewal"; but the essential fact is that the plaintiff at the time of applying for it informed the defendant's agent that the house stood on land not owned by him. The transaction thus begun gave rise to a fresh set of legal rights and obligations.
The court did not err in computing interest on the face of the policy from the date of the action. The money sued for was not detained by the defendant, because the value of the plaintiff's interest in the house was uncertain and unliquidated. Besides that would not justify the detention of the admitted loss of $300 on its contents. The sole ground on which the money was detained was that the defendant was not liable at all, and the detention was therefore wrongful.Capitol City Lumber Co. v. Sudarsky,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.