MEMORANDUM ORDER
I
In this case in which jurisdiction is predicated upon diversity of citizenship, plaintiff Erwin DeMario Trucking Co. (“Trucking”) seeks to collect on an insurance policy covering loss of a missing truck, issued by Lloyds of London and assigned to defendant Alan Francis Jackson (the “insurer”). Trucking has also sued the insurance agent it contacted, Beslyn Associates (“Beslyn”). Trucking and the insurer have filed cross-motions for summary judgment against each other, and Trucking seeks a default judgment against Beslyn. I grant the insurer’s motion and deny those of Trucking.
II
The operative facts, as distinct from legal inferences to be drawn from them, are undisputed. Trucking had suffered an earlier disappearance of a truck, and found it difficult to get theft insurance thereafter. Trucking’s principal knew people at Beslyn and asked them to help Trucking obtain a policy. Beslyn contacted Lloyds of London, leading to issuance of a policy by the insurer. Trucking, not the insurer, brought Beslyn' into the transaction.
The insurer routinely required, and received from Beslyn, an application form. The form filed on behalf of Trucking failed to disclose the prior loss although such information was requested by the form. A loss thereafter occurred, Trucking invoked the policy, and the insurer refused to pay.
II
Where a claim is “implausible,” its proponent must “come forward with more persuasive evidence to support [the] claim than would otherwise be necessary.”
Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. v. Zenith,
in
Where an insurer fails to take reasonable precautions to obtain truthful information,' or recruits agents who in turn misled applicants as to 'the necessity of truthful answers to questions on applications, this may , estop the carrier from asserting nondisclosures as a defense or a basis for rescinding a policy. See generally
Kane v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
The current case, however, involves a situation in which the insured was aware that its prior loss experience was an obstacle to coverage and chose to keep it from the insurer, thus forfeiting any claim to the policy. See N.Y.Ins.Law .3105;
Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co. v. JMR Electronics,
Prior losses are necessarily material to insurers considering whether to accept a risk
IV
Although Beslyn has not responded to the complaint, its personnel did testify at a deposition, and thus did not ignore its duties in connection with this lawsuit. Based on the deposition of Trucking’s own personnel, the case against Beslyn appears debatable at best. Trucking was aware of the. problem posed and necessarily knew the strategy of nondisclosure adopted; there is no indication in the current record that Beslyn was more at fault than Trucking, so that it would be monetarily responsible to Trucking for the loss. See
Pinter v. Dahl,
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 55(b) states that a judgment by default “may” be entered under specified circumstances, not that it must. New York law, applicable in this diversity suit, requires courts to supervise default judgments with extreme care to avoid miscarriages of justice. See generally
In re Vigilant Protective Systems,
Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 55(b)(2), the court may require an inquest to determine what damages if any are due the applicant. The papers submitted on the motions now before me amount to an inquest, and indicate that Trucking is not- entitled to damages against Beslyn based on its own submissions including deposition testimony of its personnel.
SO ORDERED.
