82 Pa. Super. 302 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Argued October 4, 1923. This is an action on a policy of insurance issued by defendant company on plaintff's automobile and covering loss by theft. From a judgment entered on a verdict for plaintiff comes this appeal. The only assignments of error which need to be considered are the refusal of defendant's point for binding instructions and judgment for defendant n.o.v. There is no dispute about the fact of the issuance of the policy, or the theft of the automobile when it was in the possession of plaintiff or the due furnishing of proofs of loss. The insufficiency of plaintiff's case is urged on several grounds, but one of which need be considered. The policy sued on contains this stipulation:
"2. It is a condition of this policy that it shall be null and void...... (c) If the interest of the assured in the property be other than unconditional and sole ownership......"
Plaintiff testified that he purchased the car from one Taylor, a dealer in Chester, Pennsylvania, for $1,475, that he made a cash payment on account and gave ten notes of $88.50 each in further payment, and that at the time of the theft of the car seven of these notes had been paid. Defendant offered in evidence a lease from Taylor *304
to plaintiff for the car, which lease plaintiff admitted he signed. He testified, however, that he could not read, could only write his name, that the lease had not been read or explained to him, that he did not ask or request that it be read or explained and that at the time he bought the machine he signed several papers, but did not know what they were. The lease which was offered in evidence provided that upon payment of the notes, the car should be returned to the lessor. It contained no option to purchase. The learned trial judge left it to the jury to say whether or not there was a lease between Taylor and plaintiff, or whether or not plaintiff was a purchaser of the car. The jury was told that if the paper, called a lease, was not the real contract between the parties, and plaintiff was in fact a purchaser, then there was no misrepresentation as to his being the sole and absolute owner. In this we think the learned court fell into error. The rule applicable to the case is correctly stated in 13 Corpus Juris, page 372: "So, where a person cannot read the language in which a contract is written, it is ordinarily as much his duty to procure some person to read and explain it to him before he signs it as it would be to read it before he signed it if he were able so to do, and his failure to obtain a reading and an explanation of it is such gross negligence as will estop him from avoiding it on the ground that he was ignorant of its contents." Our Supreme Court has so held. In Bauer v. Roth, 4 Rawle 82, KENNEDY, J., said: "It was settled in Manser's Case, 2 Co. 3, that the reading of the writing to an illiterate man, who is about to execute it as his deed, or the interpretation of it to one unacquainted with the language in which it is indited, is not necessary to make it a valid deed, unless he required it to be read or expounded." Said Chief Justice GIBSON in Greenfield's Estate,
The judgment is reversed and the record remitted to the court below, with direction to enter a judgment in favor of the defendant notwithstanding the verdict.