Plaintiff, a jeweler, sought to recover almost $8,000 from defendant because of the loss of some diamond jewelry allegedly covered by an insurance policy issued by defendant. Upon undisputed facts the trial court made findings exonerating defendant from liability under the exclusionary clause of the policy. Plaintiff appeals from the adverse judgment accordingly entered and from the order denying
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Ms motion to vacate such judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 663, 663a;
Rounds
v.
Dippolito,
Plaintiff was in the business of selling diamonds and jewelry set in diamonds to retailers. He received a telephone call from a person representing himself to be Bill Bates, an employee of a retail jeweler, advising plaintiff that there was in Ms store a customer who desired a three-carat diamond and that he, Bill Bates, wished that plaintiff would let him have several diamonds on memorandum. 1 Plaintiff was well acquainted with Bill Bates, thought that he recognized his voice over the telephone and when, within a few minutes, a person presented himself as Irving Davis, sent by Bill Bates, plaintiff assumed that he was the relative named by Bill Bates ’ ’ and sent to pick up the desired items. Accordingly, plaintiff handed to “Irving Davis” diamond jewelry costing approximately $8,000. Later in the day plaintiff learned that neither Bill Bates nor any other employee of the retail jeweler had telephoned plaintiff, and that the retail jeweler never received the diamond jewelry that plaintiff had placed in the hands of “Irving Davis.”
The jewelry disappeared with “Irving Davis,” and the sole question is whether the loss occurred under circumstances which excluded it from coverage under plaintiff’s insurance policy. The policy, as here pertinent, insured “Against All Risks of Loss or of Damage to the Above Described Property Arising From Any Cause Whatsoever Except: ‘(A) Loss, damage, or expense caused by or resulting from sabotage, theft, conversion or other act or omission of a dishonest character (1) on the part of the Assured or his or their employees or (2) on the part of any person to whom the property hereby insured may be delivered or entrusted by whomsoever for any purpose whatsoever. . . .’ ” (Emphasis added.) The emphasized language presents the narrow question whether the diamonds were “delivered or entrusted” to “Irving Davis” within the meaning of this clause of the policy.
Following the precedents of this court and courts generally, “any ambiguity or uncertainty in an insurance policy is to be resolved against the insurer”
(Continental Cas. Co.
v.
Phoenix Constr. Co.,
It is clear that under the undisputed facts a theft was committed (Pen. Code, § 484) through false personation (Pen. Code, § 530) immediately upon the obtaining of the diamonds by “Irving Davis.” It is equally clear that the obtaining of the possession of the diamonds by “Irving Davis” by means of the fraudulent representations employed accomplished a conversion of the diamonds, which would immediately support a civil action sounding in tort.
(Wendling etc. Co.
v.
Glenwood etc. Co.,
Concededly insurance policies may be so written as to exclude from coverage a loss occurring by reason of a fraudulent scheme, trick, device or false pretense; and as the cases cited by defendant demonstrate, an exclusion so expressed will be sustained.
(Jacobson
v.
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
The judgment and order are reversed.
Gibson, C. J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., McComb, J., Peters, J., and White, J., concurred.
Notes
That is, for examination and approval, according to the custom of the trade. If the merchandise is satisfactory to the retailer, a sales invoice would be executed.
