51 F. 884 | 2d Cir. | 1892
Tliis is a writ of error by the defendant in the suit below to review a judgment of the circuit court for the plaintiff' entered upon the verdict of a jury. The assignments of error impugn the rulings of the trial judge in admitting evidence, and in refusing to instruct the jury to find a verdict for the defendant as to all, and especially as to several, of the causes of action in controversy. Error is also assigned of some of the instructions given to the jury.
The complaint contains 23 counts, each of which sets forth a different and distinct cause of action. Each of them charges that, by the fraudulent acts of an agent employed by both the plaintiff and defendant., the plaintiff' was made to pay to a third party a sum of money which should have been paid by the defendant. The averments general to all are, in substance, that in the years 1882 and 1883 one Lorenzo Dimick was the general agent at Buffalo of the plaintiff, the defendant, and also of the two other insurance companies having local agents in other places, who accepted applications and issued certificates for marine insurance; that
\ In considering the assignments of error, those only will be noticed , which have been relied upon at the bar, and in the brief of the counsel for the plaintiff in error. As to those which relate to the admission of evidence, a few general considerations arc pertinent. In actions founded upon fraud, where intent is a necessary ingredient, the largest latitude is allowed in the introduction of evidence, circumstantial as well as direct, to disclose the motive and prove the fraud; and any evidence having a tendency to prove the offense, though it may be slight, is not incompetent. Such actions necessarily give rise to a wide range of investigation, for the reason that the motive of the defendant is involved in the issue. Whenever the necessity arises for a resort to circumstantial evidence, either from the nature of the inquiry, or the failure of direct proof, objections to testimony on the ground of irrelevancy are not favored, for the reason that the force and effect of circumstantial facts usually and almost necessarily depend upon their connection with each other, and circumstances altogether inconclusive, if separately considered, may, by their number and joint operation, especially when corroborated by moral coincidences, be sufficient to constitute conclusive proof. Castle v. Bullard, 28 How. 172, 187; Hubbard v. Briggs, N. Y. 518, 538; Beardsley v. Duntley, 69 N. Y. 577, 581.
The ease of fraud is one of the few exceptions to the general rule that other offenses of the accused are not relevant to establish the main charge; and it is the settled rule that, to establish fraud in a given transaction, evidence is admissible to show the commission of similar frauds
We proceed to notice more particularly some of the rulings in admitting testimony which are complained of. The pages from the insurance registers kept by Dimick contained, it is true, entries as to many risks which were in no wise concerned with this case, but no specific objection was taken on that ground. The pages were offered and marked as exhibits, properly so, even if for identification only, and the plaintiff proved and read the entries upon them relating to insurances of risks taken on vessels which were the subject of the action. To these objection was taken as immaterial and irrelevant, and in the light of that objection only is the action of the trial judge to be reviewed. He cannot be held to have erred in allowing the jury to see the entries as they stood on the pages, in the absence of a specific request that the other entries on the page should in some way be kept from them, and, in the absence of anything to that effect on the record, we cannot assume that he allowed entries which so plainly had nothing to do with the case to be read to the jury. People v. Dimick, 107 N. Y. 13, 25, 14 N. E. Rep. 178. The entries which were read to the jury against the defendant’s objection were in each instance indisputably parts of the transaction in question, which was as much a reinsurance of the defendant as it was an insurance in the plaintiff. The proposition to be established was that reipsurances pf the defendant’s risks were effected with the plaintiff, after notice- of disaster, to save it from loss. • Dimick’s relations with the three -reinsuring companies were such that he was able to effect reinsurances
Whether the various entries testified to by the witnesses whose former perjury was conceded did or did not corroborate their evidence on this trial is not material on the question of their admissibility. They were offered, not as independent evidence, or received as such, but were a part of the testimony of the witness himself, memoranda made by him at the time, sworn to by himself to have been true statements when made, and minuting a multitude of dates, names, figures, and values, the details of which no witness could be expected to retain in his unaided memory. As such they were admissible in connection with his testimony. Insurance Co. v. Weides, 14 Wall. 375, They were not “unproved copies of unproved accounts,” as in Mining Co. v. Fraser, 130 U. S. 611, 619, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 665.
To the refusal of the trial judge to strike out evidence as to instructions given by JDimick to deduct certain percentages from premiums, no exception was taken, and it cannot he considered here. The testimony as to the James Wade and the Gleniffer, not included in this action, was offered to show knowledge on the part of defendant’s manager in New York of Ilimick’s practice of protecting defendant by reinsurance when he heard of loss or peril to the property insured. It leaded to prove this if supplemented by further proof. Plaintiff failed to so supplement it, and the court expressly charged that no knowledge was proved on the part of the defendant, which is all that was required, (Pennsylvania Co. v. Roy, 102 U. S. 451,) certainly, in the absence of a motion to strike out, or to instruct the jury that all evidence as to these two vessels was to he disregarded.
The testimony as to entries touching the Coyne, Jennie Matthews, Potomac, and California, vessels not in this action, was offered to prove dates of reinsurances which were the subject of suit. The dales when reinsurance was effected nowhere appeared, and it was not to be expected that any witness, even if he remembered the fact of reinsurances, could carry all the-dates in his unaided memory. It was only by the position of the entries in the hooks, relatively to other entries where dates were minuted, (such as acceptance of original risk, reports to the companies, etc.,) that the witness who made the entries was able to testify that the effecting of the reinsurance in issue was on, before, or after some calendar date. To an extent sufficient to enable him to fix such date,- it
The defendant’s protection against inferences from the other frauds, thus incidentally shown, lay in a request to direct the jury to disregard them. But, as we have before showm, it was entitled to no such direction. The evidence was proper for the jury to consider as showing fraudulent acts similar to those which were the subject of complaint, and performed at the same time. The evidence showing the lines of insurance and reinsurance which the defendant had carried during the year in question was relevant and material. Showing, as it did, a general system or course of business, the result of which was that tUe Continental was found to be reinsured when there was a loss to be paid, and not to be reinsured, however large its risks, when there was none, it was a fact from which,' taken in connection with others, it might be fairly inferred that these results were secured, not by the exercise of sound judgment, nor by rare good chance, but by fraudulent practices of the kind testified to by Dimick’s accomplices.
The assignment of error based upon the refusal of the trial judge to direct a verdict for the defendant rests upon the proposition that it did not appear by the evidence that the defendant had received the fruits of any of the frauds committed by Dimick upon the plaintiff. It was proved that in each case of a loss upon a risk insured by the defendant, part of which had been ostensibly reinsured by the plaintiff, Dimick adjusted the loss, and paid it to the assured out of funds of the defendant in his hands, charged the whole amount to the defendant in his account with it, drew a draft on the plaintiff for its proportion as a reinsurer, credited the proceeds of the draft to the defendant in his account, and sent the plaintiff a receipt, signed by him as agent for the defendant, acknowdedging payment of the amount received. Whenever a loss was settled he informed the defendant that the transaction was closed, and of its net loss after deducting the reinsurance, by sending to it the “loss pocket;” and in each monthly statement he informed the defendant that out of its funds in his hands he had paid its whole loss by appropriating therefrom only the amount of the net loss.
The moneys thus received and applied by Dimick to pay the defendant’s losses were received by the defendant as completely, for all practical purposes, as they w'ould have been if he had transmitted them to the defendant, and the defendant had paid them over to the assured in settlement of the loss. Pratt v. Foote, 9 N. Y. 463. The law looks at the substance of the transaction, and is quite unconcerned about its form. The defendant got the benefit of these mone.ys because they were applied to extinguish its debts to the assured, and because they increased its funds in the hands of its own agent. It is quite immaterial that the moneys were not physically transferred by Dimick to the defendant, or that, after Dimick received them, and had used them to extinguish the
The assignment of error founded upon the refusal of the judge to direct the jury to find for the defendant as to the cause of action for the loss of the cargo of the Manistee proceeds upon the theory that the jury were not authorized to find for the plaintiff upon the uncorroborated testimony of the witness Richard Dimick, who concededly had testified falsely in respect to the same facts upon a previous occasion. There is modern authority to tlie effect that the question of the credibility of such a witness is entirely one for the jury, when submitted to them under prudential instructions. Dunn v. People, 29 N. Y. 523, 529; People v. O’Neil, 109 N. Y. 251, 16 N. E. Rep. 68. But this assignment of error is invalid because of the testimony of the Avitness Neff, a witness whose credibility was not impeached to the same purport as that of Richard Dimick.
The assignment of error, because the judge refused to direct the jury to find a verdict for the defendant as to the cause of action for the loss of the cargo of the Nyaek, proceeds upon the ground that there was no evidence that the plaintiff paid any part of the loss. It was not shown that Dimick had drawn any draft on the plaintiff for the amount of its reinsurance upon this loss, or that the plaintiff had remitted the amount to him; but it did appear that he charged it with the amount, and credited the defendant Avith a like amount in his cash book. As Dimick was the common agent of both parties, this AA'as sufficient prima, facie evidence that he had paid the reinsurance for the plaintiff. If ho had paid it, the case was as though the plaintiff had paid it. Unless ho or the plaintiff had paid it, the defendant would not have been entitled to be credited, as it was, for the amount. The assignments of error thus considered are the only ones which seem to require discussion.
The judgment is affirmed.