148 F. 683 | 3rd Cir. | 1906
This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. In that court the Meily Company, a merchandizing corporation, brought suit against the London & Lancashire Fire Insurance Company to recover on two fire insurance policies — one upon its store goods, and the other on its store fixtures. The insurance company defended, inter alia, on the ground the plaintiff had set fire to the store. The jury found for the defendant, and the plaintiff sued out this writ.
While there are numerous assignments of error, the case may be treated from the aspect well summarized in the brief of the plaintiff in error, viz.:
“The verdict was practically equivalent to a finding that the plaintiff corporation intentionally and fraudulently caused the fire, or knowingly participated in an act of incendiarism upon the stock and fixtures destroyed, and therefore it was not entitled to recover."
The allusion‘'in the charge to George W. Meily as the plaintiff was a mere verbal slip, which could not have misled the jury, in face of the clear and repeated statements therein that the Meily Company was, the plaintiff.
The judgment will be affirmed.