87 Wis. 297 | Wis. | 1894
The litigated question was whether, by the alteration of the books of the Island Sash & Door Company, the defendant was defrauded. The alteration was not denied, nor that the books as altered were presented to the adjusters as representing with substantial correctness the true condition of the business of the insured at the time of the loss. The case was tried on the part of the defendant, and submitted to the jury by the court, upon the theory that the alteration of the books, if from a.bad motive, was
The court refused to submit, in the special verdict, this .question asked by the .plaintiff: “Was the liability of the
The law does not undertake to furnish remedies for wrongs which are so impalpable or imaginary, as not to cause damage. The law does not regard or treat as a fraud a deception so intangible as not to cause damage. To amount to a legal fraud, it must both deceive and damage. McDonald v. Daniels, 58 Wis. 428. This was a vital question in the case, and should have been submitted, and the instructions asked should have been given.
So in regard to the suppression of the inventory. Although this inventory was produced at the trial, it was not attempted to show that it represented any different condition of stock from that assumed as the basis of the adjustment; so its suppression could neither have deceived nor damaged the defendant.
And it does not appear that the defendant had a defense against an action on the policy, which it has waived or lost by the settlement. There was a provision in the policy of insurance that the “ entire policy shall be void if the assured has concealed or misrepresented, in writing or otherwise, any material facts or circumstances concerning the insurance or the subject thereof, ... or in any case of
The adjusters were permitted, against plaintiff’s objection, to state that they would not have made the adjustment if they had known of the alteration of the books. It is difficult to see how this is more than their opinion of what they would have done .under altered circumstances. One cannot very surely predict what he will do in any hypothetical situation. If the alteration of the books had come to the attention of the adjusters at the time of adjustment, and they had investigated,— as they did not upon the trial, — and had found, as the plaintiff claims, that the books were really made more truthful, as related to the loss, very likely they would have made the same adjustment. This was not an improbable result of investigation, from anything that appeared upon this trial. The jury could have answered this question with as much knowledge and certainty as the adjusters themselves. It should, not have been permitted to be answered, under objection.
Mr. Conrad Bohn, the business manager of the insured,— the person who caused the alteration of the books to be made,— was asked, “ Did you have any intention of deceiving or defrauding this defendant by so doing?” (meaning altering of the books). Upon objection the answer was excluded as incompetent, and not on account of the form of
The real questions upon which the rights of the parties depend were neither tried nor submitted to the jury.
By the Cov,rt.— The judgment of the superior court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.