138 A. 780 | Vt. | 1927
The defendant insured Nellie M. Kelley against liability for damage caused by the operation of her Paige automobile. *428 The policy was available to any person rightfully operating the car with her consent. While it was being operated by her husband, Patrick Kelley, rightfully and with her consent, it was in collision with the plaintiff's car. The plaintiff brought suit against Patrick Kelley for the damage resulting from this collision and obtained a judgment therein for the sum of $247.24. Execution for that sum was issued and returned nulla bona. Thereupon this suit in chancery was brought to charge the defendant with liability for the amount of that judgment.
The policy in question contains a provision that "the assured shall cooperate with the company, except in a pecuniary way, in the defense of claims and suits and in prosecuting appeals"; and the only defense herein made is based upon this provision, — it being the defendant's claim that Patrick Kelley falsified in his representations to it while it was investigating the plaintiff's claim and preparing to defend the original suit as required by the policy.
The facts herein were found by the chancellor, and the decree below was for the plaintiff. The defendant appealed. The findings are inadequate.
The chancellor merely says that "the allegations in the plaintiff's bill of complaint have been proven and are true." This is wholly insufficient, and ordinarily would cause us to remand the case for adequate findings. But in the circumstances of this case, we can make it suffice, since the only defense made is an affirmative one on which the defendant carried the burden of proof. Patterson's Admr. v. Modern Woodmen,
The chancellor further reports that "the evidence introduced by the defendant is true." This is not such a finding as the law requires. It was the duty of the chancellor to sift the evidence and state the facts (Raithel v. Hall,
The chancellor then goes on to say that he fails to find that Patrick Kelley did not cooperate with the defendant as required by the policy. To this, and to the decree, the defendant excepted. *429
It is quite apparent that this failure to find concludes the defendant unless, upon the record, it must be said that, as matter of law, an affirmative finding in the defendant's favor was required by the evidence. The transcript of the evidence taken by the chancellor is referred to and made a part of the record and is before us for consideration. But no reference is made to the exhibits used at the trial, and these are not before us. We said in O'Boyle v. Parker-Young Co.,
The right of the defendant to show Kelley's lack of cooperation, unparticipated in by this plaintiff, as a defense to this suit is not called in question here, and we give that subject no attention.
To make a defense it was necessary for the company to show that Kelley failed to cooperate with it in such a way as to prejudice it. To establish this, the defendant, after showing what Kelley told its attorney regarding the accident and other facts, put in evidence the transcript of the testimony given by Kelley and R.S. Pike at the trial of the original case against Kelley. But this transcript is not made a part of the record and under the rule above referred to is not for consideration here. However, enough appears to enable us to pass upon the questions raised by the exception to the chancellor's failure to find. The defendant's counsel testified before the chancellor and from his testimony it appears that there was some slight discrepancy between Kelley's report as to the speed of his car when approaching the point of the collision as given to such counsel before the trial and his testimony on that subject at the trial of the original suit. But this discrepancy was altogether too trivial to require us to say, as a legal conclusion, that it established a failure to cooperate.
It also appears from this witness that Kelley told him that when his car approached the intersection of streets where the collision occurred he sounded the horn; and that when he *430 saw that the plaintiff's attention was diverted he gave further warning by sounding two or three sharp blasts of his horn. Whereas, Kelley testified at the trial of the original suit that he did not think he sounded the horn when he approached such intersection. Which of these statements embodied the truth is not shown by the record. We cannot say that lack of cooperation is conclusively shown, and if it was the forfeiture was waived as we shall see.
The attorney further testified that while he was preparing the original case for trial, Kelley told him that right after the accident he took his car to a certain garage in Rutland and had his brakes taken up because they were in bad condition and he did not dare to run the car longer without this adjustment; and that upon his immediate investigation, this statement turned out to be without foundation and untrue. This testimony was uncontradicted and unimpeached.
Under the cooperation clause of the policy, it was the duty of Kelley, in good faith to aid and assist the company in its defense of the Francis suit. The very first obligation he was under was to give defendant's counsel a full and truthful account of the circumstances leading up to and attending the accident and to testify to the same when called as a witness. This he did not do. In the matter of his brakes, he deliberately and wilfully falsified in such a way and on such a subject as might well have resulted in inducing defendant to settle the claim without contest. But this deliberate failure to cooperate did no harm to the defendant, for it was discovered and the truth ascertained before the trial came on and knowing all this the defendant chose to go on with the trial before the jury.
It has come to be well-established in the law of insurance that forfeitures of policy contracts are not favored and that to avert the same courts are always prompt to lay hold of any circumstance that indicates an election to waive a forfeiture already incurred. So it is that an insurer who with full knowledge elects not to take advantage of a forfeiture is thereby bound to treat the contract as if no cause of forfeiture had occurred. Webster
v. State Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
Decree affirmed and cause remanded.