209 Pa. 286 | Pa. | 1904
Opinion by
Edward Highlands, the plaintiff, owned and occupied a farm near Leesburg, in Cumberland county. The defendant company’s road runs through the farm, and on the afternoon of January 30, 1900, the plaintiff’s barn and all its contents, with some other property on the farm, were destroyed by fire caused by sparks emitted from the company’s locomotives. The value of the property destroyed was $3,378.50, a part of which was insured for the sum of $2,100 in the Cumberland Valley Farmers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Company, and the residue, of the value of $1,278.50, was not insured. The plaintiff gave immediate notice of his loss to the defendant company, and in two or three days thereafter, its agent, Mr. Bosworth, called to see him. Bosworth was informed of the value of the property destroyed and of the amount of the insurance. He said to the plaintiff that his company would not pay for the property that was insured, but would likely settle for the uninsured property. On February 12, 1900, Mr. Bosworth again went to see the plaintiff in reference to his loss. He found him at Leesburg and they with Reuben Karper, whose property had been destroyed by the same fire, drove to the plaintiff’s home. After some discussion of the loss and the liability for it, Bosworth paid the plaintiff $1,100, in consideration of which the latter signed a release releasing the defendant company from all claims for damages, loss or injury “ sustained by me in consequence of the fire alleged to have been caused by sparks from locomotive on my property near Leesburg, Pennsylvania, on January 30, 1900.” The release stipulated that the payment óf the money was not to be construed as an admission of liability in consequence of the accident.
The plaintiff brought an action in the common pleas of
On June 14, 1902, the present action was brought to recover from the defendant $2,100, the value of the insured property which the plaintiff alleges was destroyed by the negligence of the defendant company, and for which he “ has never been in any manner compensated or paid, either by the said insurance company nor by the defendant company.” On the trial of the cause, the defendant denied that the fire which destroyed the property was caused by its negligence, and as a further defense set up the release of February 12,1900. The plaintiff denied the validity of the release so far as it purported to include or affect the property the loss of which is sued for in this action, and alleged that it was intended to'be a discharge of the defendant from liability only for the loss on the uninsured property destroyed by the fire. He averred that the release in its present form was procured from him by fraud by the agent of the defendant; that when he executed it he -was unable to read and that the company’s agent in reading it to him “ interpolated into it certain words that were not there to the effect that the payment was only to cover and be in satisfaction of the loss sustained on the property that was not insured.” The trial court, after charging the jury that the testimony to change a written instrument must be clear, precise and indubitable, submitted for their consideration two questions: “ First, whether or not the defendant was negligent in causing this fire; and secondly, whether or not the obtaining of a release by fraud has been established by evidence of the character I have spoken of.” The verdict of the jury was for the. plaintiff for the amount of his claim, and was taken subject to
Before the plaintiff can recover in this action, he is compelled to reform the release of February 12, 1900, so that its terms will be confined to the property which is not included in the insurance policy. On the face of it, the instrument releases the defendant company from liability for the destruction of any and all of the plaintiff’s property caused by the fire of January 30, 1900. If, therefore, the release correctly represents the contract entered into by the parties at the time it was executed, it is a complete defense to this action. The plaintiff, however, claims that it does not contain the agreement of the parties and alleges that in so far as it relates to the insured property it was obtained from him by the fraud of the defendant’s agent. He, therefore, seeks to reform the instrument so that it will apply to and cover only the uninsured property. To accomplish this purpose, he invokes the equity powers of the court. Under our mixed system of jurisprudence, it is permitted in a common-law action to interpose an equitable defense, which, however, to be successful must be supported by proof of a character and degree that will satisfy the conscience of a chancellor. If he has failed to sustain his allegation of fraud by proof that would warrant a chancellor'in reforming the release in an equitable proceeding instituted for the purpose, his attack on the instrument must fail here and will not avail him as a defense to this action. The duty of the trial judge and of this court in such cases is stated by Sterrett, J., in Rowand v. Finney, 96 Pa. 192, as follows : “ Under our peculiar system of administering equitable
The degree or measure of proof required to reform a written instrument on the ground of fraud, accident or mistake, has been the subject of frequent consideration by this court. In Boyertown National Bank v. Hartman, 147 Pa. 558, Sterrett, J., quoting from Hart v. Carroll, 85 Pa. 508, states the rule thus : “ The standard of proof in, such cases (suits to reform written instruments) is ‘ clear, precise and indubitable.’ What is meant by ‘ indubitable ’ proof, in connection with such cases, is evidence that is not only found to be credible, but of such weight and directness as to make out the facts alleged beyond a reasonable doubt. In the very nature of things, that conclusive and absolute proof, which results from the production of record evidence, or rests on the solution of a mathematical problem, can never be the effect of the verbal testimony
Again, in Honesdale Glass Co. v. Storms, 125 Pa. 268, it is said that “ in all this class of cases, the evidence must be clear, precise and indubitable ; not indubitable in the sense that there must be no opposing testimony, but in the sense that it must carry a clear conviction of its truth.”
In his charge cto the jury the trial judge stated the degree of proof required to reform a written instrument as follows: “ It (the evidence) must be in the language of the law, clear, precise and indubitable; not indubitable in the sense that there must be no opposing testimony, but in the sense that it must carry a clear conviction of its truth to the- minds of the jury. What is meant by the term indubitable is that the evidence to sustain a claim such as that of the plaintiff in this case must not only be found to be credible, but it must be of such weight and directness as to carry a clear conviction of its truth to the minds of the jury.” This is substantially the language used in our decisions to define the degree of proof required to reform a written instrument procured by fraud. The jurjq by its verdict, finds that the plaintiff produced such proof on the trial of the cause. The court as appears by the form in which he states the reserved question concedes that the proof of the alleged fraud was clear and precise but denies that it was indubitable, and for this reason declined to enter judgment on the verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The correctness of this ruling is the question for determination on this appeal.
Applying to the testimony in this case the rule as to the measure of proof in cases of this character, we are of opinion that the learned trial judge erred in directing judgment to be entered for the defendant. His action in directing the entry of the judgment was, as appears by his opinion, manifestly controlled in a large measure by the failure of the plaintiff and his wife to make an explanation, satisfactory to him, of alleged inconsistencies in their testimony given on the two trials relative to the fraudulent representations by which the plaintiff was induced to sign the release. While different language was used by them in testifying on the two trials as to the al
It is not denied by the defendant company that the plaintiff’s property was destroyed by the fire which originated from sparks emitted from the company’s locomotive, nor that the value of the property thus destroyed was $3,378.50. It was found by the jury, as we have seen, that the fire was the result of the defendant’s negligence, and this finding was sustained by the trial court. It further appears that at the time of the fire, the property destroyed was insured in the sum of $2,100, and the uninsured property was of the value of $1,278.50. The controlling question in the case, therefore, as suggested above, is the validity of the release so far as it affects the insured property. The jury denied its validity, but the court held that the evidence to reform it was not indubitable and hence sustained it. Highlands testified in detail as to all the negotiations between himself and the insurance company and the railroad company from the time the property was destroyed until after the release was procured from him. His testimony is direct and positive. He says that at the first interview, shortly after the fire, he told Bosworth the amount of the insurance, and that Bosworth said that his company would likely settle for “ the $1,278.50 worth of uninsured property.” Bosworth went again on February 12,1900, to see the plaintiff in regard to the matter. He met Highlands and Reuben Karper at Leesburg and the three drove to the plaintiff’s home. On the way Bosworth inquired if the insurance company had done anything for the plaintiff, and receiving a negative reply, said that the railroad company would not pay the whole loss, but had sent him there to pay for the uninsured property. At the house, the plaintiff says he agreed with Bosworth to accept $1,100 “ provided he did not ask me to sign a release that would relieve the insurance company from paying me my money.” Bosworth then said to Highlands “ that the railroad company did not intend to pay for anything that was insured; the $1,100 we are paying you and the release we want you to sign is only a payment under the release for the goods that was burnt that was not insured and cannot relieve the insurance company.” A release was produced but the plaintiff’s eyes were so badly injured by the fire that he could not read it. He requested
Mrs. Highlands’s testimony is equally distinct and positive as to what occurred at the house when the release was' signed. She fully corroborates her husband as to every material matter that took place on that occasion between Bosworth and the plaintiff. Reuben Karper corroborates Highlands as to the conversation which took place between the two men as they were driving from Leesburg to the plaintiff’s'home. He further testifies that while they were in the house Bosworth said to Highlands : “ This release that you are to sign and the money that I pay you, he said, has nothing to do with the insurance nor the insurance company; it is merely to cover outside of what was not insured.” John Stamy, since deceased, also had property destroyed by the fire of January 30,1900.’ After Mr. Bosworth had procured the release from Highlands, the latter took him to see Stamy whose loss he adjusted. Mrs. Stamy testifies that Bosworth then said that he had paid Highlands for that part of his property destrojmd by the fire that was not insured.
This, in part, is the direct testimony offered by the plaintiff to reform the release. It is met on the part of the defendant company by the instrument itself, by the testimony of Mr.
Aside from his positive declaration that he read the release in the language in which it was written, we think Mr. Bosworth’s testimony corroborates the evidence on the part of the plaintiff as to what occurred prior to, and at, the time the release was executed. In fact, with the one exception, there is very little difference between his testimony and that of the plaintiff and his witnesses as to the details of the occurrences leading up to the execution of the release. They substantially agree as to what took place at both interviews, save the denial of Bosworth that he misread the release to the plaintiff when it was signed.
We do not regard the testimony of the four officers of the fire insurance company, called as witnesses on the part of the defendant company, as tending to sustain the contention that Bosworth read the release correctly to the plaintiff. On the contrary, the testimony seems to indicate that the insurance officials anticipated that the defendant’s agent would overreach the plaintiff just as the plaintiff alleges he did. George H. Stewart, one of the witnesses, testifies that he saw Highlands prior to his settlement with the railroad company, gave him the form of a receipt to be signed and delivered to the company, and admonished him to be careful to do nothing that might invalidate his insurance “ by signing some papers such as railroad companies usually have.” The substance of the testimony of the three other witnesses is that they together called on Highlands and that he said the railroad company would not accept a release in the form given him by Mr. Stewart and that he had signed the release presented by the company, that “he was ignorant of these things ” and that if he had made a mistake it
We are of opinion that the testimony adduced at the trial was ample to sustain a chancellor in reforming the release set up as a defense of this action. All the probabilities arising from the testimony in the case are against the position of the defendant. With the knowledge that his loss exceeded $3,300, it is incredible that the plaintiff, although illiterate, was willing to release his entire claim against a solvent company on payment of $1,100. It is true that he expected to get the insurance money, but, as the testimony conclusively shows, he persistently insisted on every occasion when the matter was discussed, that his settlement with the railroad company was strictly confined to the uninsured property. There is no reason disclosed by any testimony in the case, nor can any be assigned, why he should accept in satisfaction of his claim less than one third of his total loss. On the other hand, the evidence clearly shows that in all of his negotiations with the representatives of both the insurance company and the railroad company, he distinctly asserted his intention to collect the entire loss. Bosworth’s own testimony leaves no doubt that such was Highlands’s intention. It is, therefore, inconceivable that he would with a knowledge of its contents, execute the release in question which would deprive him of his right to recover two thirds of his loss.
We are fully convinced that in executing the instrument in question, the plaintiff did not intend to release the defendant