118 F. 415 | 8th Cir. | 1902
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
In issuing the policy 'of insurance to himself, the plaintiff not only acted on his own behalf, but also acted and assumed to act as the agent of the defendant insurance company. He did not send to the defendant an application for insurance to be acted on through some other agent who might investigate the risk, but made out the policy himself as defendant's agent, and sent it for approval to defendant’s manager, accompanied by his daily report of that risk; on which report he expected the manager to act, as he did act, in approving the risk. And plaintiff countersigned the policy as defendant’s agent, and charged and was allowed his commission of 15 per cent, of the premium for effecting the insurance as defendant’s agent. The court therefore correctly instructed the jury that as.such agent the duty devolved on the plaintiff to disclose to his principal, when applying for insurance, or for the approval of the insurance policy, such facts as he possessed a knowledge of, which he had reason to believe, if brought to the attention and knowledge of the insurance company, would influence them, or might influence them, not to approve the policy upon the property in question. An agent deal
“Then, on the other hand, if you find that the plaintiff, knowing of the various facts, failed to communicate them to the defendant, determine whether or not they were of such a material nature as that, under the instructions which the defendant had given the plaintiff with regard to not insuring property of a certain kind, whether or not the fact that this property had been offered in the market for a period of time at $600 and no purchasers, and the plaintiff had bought it, together with the land upon which it stood, a few days before, for $500, and all of those facts with which he was familiar, and which were alleged in the answer to have been concealed, whether or not had he disclosed them to the insurance company, whether or not they were of such a material character that the insurance company would have refused to have issued a policy of insurance in this case. If they were of that character, it was his duty to disclose them to his principal, he being the agent of the insurance company, and dealing with tile insurance company in his own behalf.”
This portion of the charge was excepted to, and is erroneous. It assumed to submit to the jury, as matters which they were to pass upon and determine, facts about which there was actually no dispute or question. The plaintiff had resided in the city and was engaged in active business there,for many years, and there was no pretense that he did not know that the building had always been unprofitable. He certainly knew that he had just purchased it, with the land, for $500. From the instructions which he had as agent of defendant, he must have known that the defendant company would regard these matters which he did not disclose, but knowingly concealed, as material to the risk; and they were plainly material, and the jury should have been instructed that they were material. The defendant had instructed the plaintiff, as its agent, to “never issue a policy for an amount that the insured would rather have than the risk covered”; and it seems reasonably certain that it would not, had it been informed of the fact, have insured for $3,000 a building which plaintiff had just bought, with the ground, for $500. The facts concealed, had they been disclosed, would have contradicted his representation that the value of the building was $3,500 to $4,000. The concealment was fraudulent, and knowingly such. In Druse v. Wheeler, 26 Mich. 189, 196, the court says:
“And when all the evidence upon the point on both sides tends clearly to prove, and if true does prove, a fact, and there is none to' cast a doubt upon it, such fact may, and generally should, be assumed as proved; and the jury should be told that there is no evidence from which they can find against the fact as proved. And under such a state of proofs, a charge which, in effect, tells the jury that it is competent for them to find either way,—for or against the existence of the fact so proved,—is erroneous, as it assumes that there is evidence in the case tending as well to disprove ,such fact as to prove it.”
See, also, Gavigan v. Evans; 45 Mich. 597, 8 N. W. 545; Seligman v. Ten Eyck’s Estate, 49 Mich. 104, 109, 13 N. W. 377.
Where the evidence leaves any doubt as to the existence of a fact, the matter should be left to the jury; but where it is established by all the evidence on both sides the jury cannot be permitted to find
For this error the judgment must be reversed, even though another issue, which was submitted to the jury, and upon which they may have found for the 'plaintiff, was properly submitted to them. Where several issues are left to a jury, and in respect to any one of them error is committed in the charge of the court, a general verdict cannot be sustained, as it may be that the jury founded their verdict upon the very issue erroneously submitted to them. Maryland v. Baldwin, 112 U. S. 490, 493, 5 Sup. Ct. 278, 28 L. Ed. 822; Coal Co. v. Johnson, 56 Fed. 810, 6 C. C. A. 148, 151; Railway Co. v. Needham, 11 C. C. A. 56, 63 Fed. 107, 113, 25 L. R. A. 833.
But, in view of the evidence in this case, the court also erred in submitting to the jury the other issue in the case, which was whether the adjusting agent, Lyon, with knowledge of the representations and concealments of the plaintiff in procuring the insurance, satisfied the jury by his conduct and actions in his transactions with plaintiff after the fire that he intended to and did ratify and accept the policy as a valid and binding policy against the company. Exceptions were duly taken to those parts of the charge which submitted this issue to the jury. It is true that the misrepresentations and concealments of the plaintiff in obtaining the policy while acting in the matter as defendant’s agent did not render the policy void, but only voidable at the election of the defendant; and such election, if to rescind the policy, should be exercised, and plaintiff notified thereof, within a reasonable time after the fraud was discovered by the defendant. .The defendant, with full knowledge of the facts, might waive the objection, either expressly or by acts evincing an intention to treat the policy as valid; or it might, after such knowledge, estop itself from urging that defense by requiring or inducing the plaintiff to take such action or incur such expenses, on defendant’s implied admission that it was still bound by the policy, as would make it inequitable to allow the defendant afterwards to interpose that defense. In this case there was no evidence of any knowledge on the part of defendant company of the misrepresentations or concealments by which plaintiff obtained the policy at the time Lyon was sent to O’Neill, after the fire, to examine and adjust the loss. So far from there being any evidence that Lyon was authorized to waive the defense of plaintiff’s fraud, the circumstances make it certain that when he was sent there no such fraud was contemplated or suspected by the defendant. That Lyon did not assume or intend to waive any defense is shown by plaintiff’s own testimony that Lyon closed the discussion, when plaintiff refused to arbitrate, by threat of litigation, saying: “ ‘If you do not, we will fight you,—bring you into the United States court, or the United States supreme court.’ ‘All right,’ says I, ‘go ahead.’ So that ended it.” Lyon learned, after he reached O’Neill, of the price which plaintiff had paid for the property. Notwithstanding that, he conferred with plaintiff, without result, as to the method or terms upon which the claim might be settled, and litigation avoided. Attempts to settle controversies are commendable, and not to be discouraged. The
The case is unlike that of Insurance Co. v. Baker, 27 C. C. A. 658, 83 Fed. 647. There it was very doubtful whether the representations could be regarded as fraudulent or untrue; and the insurance company became aware of all the facts in March, 1894, but continued to treat the policy as a subsisting obligation, dealing with the plaintiff on that basis for more than seven months thereafter. At its instance the plaintiff was induced, at considerable expense and trouble, to take out letters of guardianship, and to complete proofs of loss. Later it entered into negotiations with her for a reduction of her claim, in the course of which it first advanced the claim that the policy was void. No offer to repay the premium was made until March, 1895, a year after all the facts were known to the company, which was properly held to be estopped by its conduct. In this case there is no ground upon which the verdict in favor of the plaintiff can be supported.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to grant a new trial.