The sole substantial question in this hoary claim which soon rounds out its tenth year is whether, to avoid the policy because of fraud, misrepresentation, concealment and false swearing by an assured in connection with a loss for windstorm damage from the Miami hurricane of September 17, 1947, the insurer must prove that it relied, to its detriment, prejudice and damage, upon such fraudulent acts.
The issue is squarely posed. First, the contract
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is categorical. Second, the assured for this appeal virtually concedes, as the record requires in any event, that there was ample evidence to warrant the inference by the jury that the assured knowingly made false, untrue statements and representations on substantially material matters in connection with the loss.
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Third, the Court, without requiring proof or finding of
We think that, as against this attack, the Court’s charge was eminently correct. We start, first, .with a contract which, plain in its terms, cannot be ignored by invoking the principle which deplores forfeitures, Fidelity-Phenix Fire Insurance Co. of New York v. Benedict Coal Corporation, 4 Cir.,
The contract does not u out ^ -t is only false swearingj misrepresentation, concealment or fraud which “ successful that avoids the policy, Nor “ there any reason why any such condition should be read into it. Clearly, “ tbe .absence of a statute, 5 the law, which is founded on truth and justice, wl]I not re^ard as unsound that a perf_on has lost the benefit of the contract wllfu1’ «moral, dishonest acts which the contract ltself condemns.
Moreover, if the law out of some misgivings about forfeitures, were to require that the insurer demonstrate that it had been misled to its prejudice by the fraud, the policy provision would both be virtually worthless and put a premium on dishonest dealings by the assured, For if, by its own investigation, inspired perhaps by suspicions of the assured’s efforts to misrepresent, the insurer satisfied itself that a fraud had been attempted and declined to pay, such a rule would mean that the assured’s claim would then stand as though no dishonest acts whatsoever had been practiced. The mendacious assured, surveying the possibili
Additionally, such a rule would cast the underwriter in a role for which it is unsuited and in a process which the general good, out of long experience, considers best performed by government machinery. Convinced, as here by its own investigation of the claim, of dishonest acts by the assured, it would then have to undertake the talks of segregating truth from untruth, ferreting out the honest from the dishonest, choosing the right from amongst the wrong with all or much of the factual material coming from one now considered to be morally unreliable.
The public interest is not furthered by these likely consequences of reading into the contractual language this burden nowhere expressed. A judge-made policy which thus gives advantage to dishonesty will retard, not accelerate, the orderly adjustment of insurance losses. If the insurer, from the strong language of the contract interpreted in equally plain terms by the law, is entitled to assume that the assured is dealing honestly and fairly, asserting only that which in good faith is believed to be the substantial truth of the matter, the claim can be handled in a spirit and atmosphere of confidence. If, on the other hand, the insurer must realize that fraud is significant only if it is finally successful, that the slate is wiped clean if its own investigation uncovers the assured’s cozening, the setting may then become one of hostile antagonism, reluctance and apprehension forcing more, not less, litigation.
Courts have long recognized that, “The moral hazard is one of the main elements, if not the chief element, of an insurance risk, and it is never negligible. It is always material to the risk”, Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. v. Manning, 8 Cir.,
This presents no danger that valuable rights will be lost by mere mistakes or errors in calculations, exaggerations in the amounts of the claims, or the assertion, even though doubtful, of coverage or other contentions as to all or particular items when these flow from the mistaken good faith judgment or opinion of the assured or his agents. Canners Exchange Subscribers at Warners Inter-Insurance Bureau v. North American Canning Co., 5 Cir.,
Attesting, we think, to the fundamental justice of a position which exacts genuine compliance with an undertaking to be honest and truthful, is the fact that there is a scarcity of case law
The charge was correct and, no other error being demonstrated, 8 the judgment was right.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The standard Extended Coverage Endorsement insuring “direct loss or damage by windstorm, cyclone, tornado and hail * * * ” was a part of a fire policy written on the 1943 New York Standard Fire Insurance Policy form, see Annotation of the 1943 New York Standard Fire Insurance Policy, published by Section of Insurance Law, American Bar Association, 1953. Of interest, see note 6, infra, is the special endorsement expressly providing: “This policy is written subject to the provisions, stipulations, agreements and conditions of the 1943 ‘Standard Fire Insurance Policy of the State of New York,’ (Chapter 671—Laws of New York, 1943 [Insurance Law, McKinney’s Consol-Laws, c. 28, § 168]) and to the terms and conditions of the forms and endorsements added hereto, and shall be construed in accordance therewith.”
The policy provided:
“This entire policy shall be void if, whether before or after a loss, the insured has wilfully concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstance concerning this insurance or the subject thereof, or the interest of the insured' thereon, or in case of any fraud or false swearing by the insured relating thereto.”
. Viewed favorably to the jury verdict for the insurer, these included with much
. “ * * * since the insurance company has alleged fraud in this case, the burden is upon it to prove the fact of fraud by the greater weight of the evidence; that is to say, that the evidence or proof tending to establish fraud on the part of the plaintiff must bo more convincing to the jury to sustain the claim of fraud then the testimony tending to show an absence of fraud or good faith * * *
“It is not the purpose of a provision making a policy void or voidable where the insured has wilfully misrepresented facts, wilfully concealed facts, or, is guilty of false swearing to put every insured in danger of losing the entire benefit of his insurance if, in an honest effort to determine and state the property damaged and the value thereof, he inadvertently misstates or over-estimates its value, the damage thereto or the cost of repairs. A mere misstatement of the loss, based upon erroneous estimate which is but the expression of an opinion, does not operate to void the policy. The misstatement must be false and fraudulent.
“In this ease, as the Court has already advised the jury, it is the claim of the defendant that the plaintiff overstated or exaggerated the exent of his damage and that he made material misrepresentations to the insurance company for the purpose of influencing them to pay him money to which he was not lawfully entitled and to which he knew he was not lawfully entitled under the terms of the policy.
“Now, in cases of insurance where the insured knowingly and wilfully makes any statement or representation as to a fact material to the claim under the policy with knowledge of its falsity it is presumed that he intended to defraud the company. It must be established, however, by a preponderance of the evidence that the insured in making such statements, if they wore false, knew they were false and that they were material to the claim involved, that is to say, that they affected the liability of the company to pay. If the plaintiff in this case made representations to the insurance company that were false and were material to the claim and he knew them to be false, then he would be guilty of fraud which would defeat his action in this case. However, if such statements were made in good faith, even though erroneous, if they were an exaggeration of the value or other claims although made in good faith with the honest belief that they were true, then he would not be guilty of actionable fraud which would defeat his action in this case. * * *
“The Court further charges the jury that if you find that the plaintiff has knowingly made a false statement as to
Then followed an instruction putting the burden of proving fraud on the insurer and authorizing the jury to eon-sider both direct and circumstantial evidence which was defined.
. The Court refused the requests, separately requested but adapted suitably at the italicized words for false representation, concealment, false swearing:
“The Court further charges you that the defendant must have relied upon the representation as an inducement to action by it or an injurious change of position. A party may not just accept any statement as being true. A person to whom false representations have been made is not entitled to relief because of them if he might readily have ascertained the truth by ordinary care and attention, If defendant investigated the truth of the statements, or if it had full and ample opportunity to do so, it is bound by its investigation or whatever an investigation would have disclosed.”
. E. g.; Art. 21.19, Texas Insurance Code, V.A.T.S.; Firemen’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Reynolds, Tex.Civ.App.,
. Columbian Insurance Co. of Indiana v. Modern Laundry, 8 Cir.,
“ * * * If the plaintiffs, knowingly and willfully with intent to defraud the defendants, swore falsely in making the proofs of loss, such act amounted to a fraud upon the defendants, which avoided the policies, irrespective of the ultimate effect upon the defendants. If the false swearing must secure an advantage to the insured in the adjustment and payment of the loss to the prejudice or injury of the insurer, in order to avoid the policies, the purpose of this provision would, in many cases, be nullified * *. Such a construction would defeat the object of this wholesome provision designed to prevent fraud and false swearing, and is wholly inconsistent with its purpose and policy. * * * ”
Kline v. Washington National Insurance Co.,
The cases distinguish between fraud inducing the execution of a contract and the defense of a claim under the contract. Columbian Insurance Co. of Indiana v. Modern Laundry, supra, and Annotation of the 1943 New York Standard Fire Insurance Policy, supra, at p. 66, “The distinction between false swearing, fraud and misrepresentation after a loss and prior to loss is that in the former the policy is specific that it shall be void where such false swearing and fraud occur. In the latter, such conduct must be relied upon and have induced action * * * ” (Emphasis in the text).
. See, 45 C.J.S., Insurance, supra, at p. 1250, “According to some cases, in order to defeat a recovery, the false statements must have misled the insurer to its injury * * * ”, citing Alma State Savings Bank v. Springfield Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
. The innocuous catchall in the very last sentence of the assured’s brief, “ * * * it is further pointed out to the Court that the District Court’s charges to the jury concerning the quality of evidence to prove fraud, and the unnecessary and unwarranted emphasis of the Court on the question of fraud served to work to the appellant’s prejudice and constituted additional error * * * ”, is, in the face of a 435-page printed record containing
