195 Mich. 417 | Mich. | 1917
Plantiffs brought this action as assignees of Elmer P. Forbes to recover damages for an alleged breach of a contract by defendant to insure for Forbes as well as itself his stock of merchandise at Chippewa Lake, Mich., upon whicji defendant held a chattel mortgage and policy of insurance as trustee for certain creditors. Plaintiffs, who are relatives of Forbes, were not witnesses in the case, and apparently had no personal knowledge of the transactions involved. Their declaration alleges, and it is not denied, that Forbes assigned to them “all his right, title, and
On July 17, 1912, Forbes, who resided at Chippewa Lake, Mich., was engaged, amongst other activities, in running a general store of limited capacity, and had become indebted in an amount slightly exceeding $1,-400 to Rindge, Kalmbach, Logie & Co., the Grand Rapids Dry Goods Company, and the Judson Grocery Company. Lester J. Rindge held, as trustee for the benefit of these three creditors, a $1,000 chattel mortgage covering Forbes’ stock of merchandise and fixtures. The condition of his accounts was such that the creditors were dissatisfied, and Mr. Stanton, of the Judson Grocery Company, after consultation with Rindge, engaged the services of the attorney who had usually looked after the Judson Grocery Company’s collections, but in this action appeared as attorney and witness for plaintiffs, to visit Chippewa Lake and, as he testifies, “look the situation over and get more security if I could.” He did so, and obtained from Forbes a new chattel mortgage for $1,407.75, dated July 17, 1912, in the plaoe of the former one, running to Rindge as trustee, which, among other things, provided that the mortgagor should—
“keep the interest of the parties of the second part in said goods and chattels insured against loss or damage by fire, and in default thereof, within ten days, it shall be lawful for said second party to effect such insurance and the premium so paid shall be a lien added to the amount secured hereby and payable forthwith.”
At the time this mortgage was executed the stock was insured for $2,500 and they had some talk about insurance. The attorney states that he told Forbes—
“the chances are that these agents up here, as quick as they learn of the chattel mortgage, will cancel the policy. * * * If they cancel the insurance, let us*420 know, and we will take out insurance down there,” etc.
Forbes testified that the attorney said:
“If there was any objection to the policy, * * * he would have it insured down at Grand Rapids. * * * ■ I should see that these companies were informed of the mortgage, and if there was any objection, that I should inform him of it. * * * I understood it was to be made out the same as they had always been.”
On his return to Grand Rapids the attorney made a report on Forbes’ financial condition and prospects, and of securing the new chattel mortgage, but not in regard to any assurances or understanding between himself and Forbes as to insurance beyond what appeared in the mortgage. He stated that he “had quite a struggle” to get his clients to accept this mortgage and extend the time of payment for a year. Mr. Stanton, who had been the active party in sending the attorney to Chippewa Lake, then called up Mr. Rowe, an insurance agent of Grand Rapids, with instructions “to protect him,” and directed Rowe to call up the attorney for particulars. Mr. Rowe testified that he did so, and obtained from the attorney a description of the property and the name of the party to whom the policy was to be issued. The policy, dated July 20, 1912, was for $2,500, and ran to Rindge as trustee for the three named creditors. It was renewed the following year in the same form, except that the trustee was changed to defendant, owing to the intervening death of Mr. Rindge, which occurred May 15, 1913. These policies, each for the term of one year, also contained an “iron safe clause” requiring insured to take an inventory and keep books and keep the same in the safe when the store was not open for business. • On the same date the attorney wrote Forbes, saying, amongst other things:
“We don’t like to be without insurance, and there*421 fore we have insured your stock and fixtures here in this city for $2,500.. As soon as you get policies send them to us and we will cancel those that we have taken out. In the meantime you as well as the creditors are protected.”
He had not seen this policy, and was not informed of its provisions beyond what he might infer from the particulars he gave Rowe. On July 23d Forbes answered the letter, thanking the attorney for placing him “on a solid footing,” and two days later wrote that the local agent refused to carry his insurance. Neither Stanton nor Rindge had authorized the attorney to give such assurances, or knew of the correspondence until after the attorney was employed by Forbes, or his assignees. Forbes was required to and ultimately did pay the premium on this insurance, although he allowed his check for the same to be protested for nonpayment. He states that he never wrote Mr. Rindge about the insurance of his stock of merchandise.
In the spring of 1913 the condition of Forbes’ indebtedness, credit, and stock of merchandise was such that these creditors were unwilling to carry him longer on the stock alone as security, and a real estate mortgage on his store building was added. The chattel mortgage was renewed for another year when it fell due, in the name of defendant as trustee in the place of L. J. Rindge, trustee, then deceased. The insurance was also renewed for another year with the name of the insured also changed from Rindge, trustee, to defendant as trustee. These policies were to the trustee as though owner, and made no mention of Forbes. After the death of Lester J. Rindge, who had acted as trustee, his son, Harry C. Rindge, had charge of credits and collections for their firm. He wrote Forbes a number of letters urging him to make payments on his mortgage, amongst other things to take care of the premium for insurance on his real estate, which
“I was buying in small lots most assuredly. I know I was hard up, and small checks went to protest.”
As early as June 19, 1913, he wrote to Stanton complaining:
“I have to send the money before I can get the goods; consequently I am short on many things before I can get an order from you and have to buy locally with no profit and I cannot keep the trade and be out of goods.”
A Mr. Hughes, sent by defendant at about that time to look up the condition of the security, testified that he found a very dilapidated stock which he estimated worth $1,225, including fixtures.
About the first week in September, 1913, Forbes and his wife were in Grand Rapids, and called at the office of defendant, where they talked with Harry Rindge about their indebtedness. Mrs. Forbes testified that she . asked him in regard to the policy on the stock whether “if anything should occur, we are protected as well as yourself. And he said, ‘Yes,’ the policy did so.” This Rindge denied, and testified that their only talk about insurance was in regard to the policy which he secured on the real estate, and of which he had written them repeatedly urging them to pay the premium, which they had failed to do.
Forbes had one fire the latter part of September, 1913. The resulting loss on stock and building was adjusted by- an adjuster named Shaw, who visited Chippewa Lake for that purpose. He testified that
Early in November, 1913, Harry Rindge sent one of their salesmen to Chippewa Lake to investigate conditions there, as'Forbes continued to be delinquent in his payments and allowed checks to go to protest. This salesman was at the store on November 2, 1913, and testified that on an examination of the stock on hand he estimated that it would not exceed $1,000, including fixtures. On the following day, November 3d, Mrs. Forbes took her children and drove to Big Rapids to visit relatives. About noon Forbes locked the store and went to the hotel for dinner. Not long thereafter a fire broke out in the store, destroying it and its contents. A week later Mr. Logie, one of the defendant firm, in company with Shaw, the insurance adjuster, called on Forbes for his inventory and books to endeavor to make adjustment on his stock and fixtures. Forbes opened his safe and took out an inventory taken 11 months previous at the instance of the attorney of plaintiff, then acting for the Judson Grocery Company, and some check books, stating that all his other books and invoices had been left out of the safe when he went to dinner and were destroyed by fire when the store burned. The adjuster then refused to enter upon an adjustment, and Forbes was later called before the insurance commissioner at Big Rapids, where he was examined in regard to the fire. He there claimed that he had over $1,700 worth of stock in the store, but in an endeavor to specify the goods and their values he was not able to total more than $974. Defendant put the matter in the hands of its attorney to try
On November 20th plaintiff’s attorney, then representing Forbes, wrote defendant that insurance on Forbes’ stock was taken out in its name by mistake, and the adjuster refused to recognize Forbes in the matter, asserted the latter had an interest in the policy, and notified defendant not to cancel and surrender it “until Mr. Forbes has also received his money.” On December 24th defendant’s attorney wrote plaintiff’s attorney that, as the loss had never been adjusted, they had taken up the matter and effected an adjustment for $737.38 on the fixtures and $950 on the stock; that Forbes owed the three creditors for whom defendant was trustee, and for whose benefit it had taken out the policy, $1,628.44, with interest, and, if Forbes would pay this indebtedness, defendant would turn over the policy to him, but, if he did not accept the proposal within a reasonable time, defendant would accept the amount of such adjustment from the insurance company. In reply to this plaintiff’s attorney wrote that Forbes’ loss was in excess of the amount of the policy, and the proposed adjustment was not acceptable.
Defendant ultimately adjusted the loss with the insurance company for $1,687.38, and this action was brought by Forbes’ assignees to recover the differ
“(12) If -you find that Mr. Shaw, the insurance adjuster, told Mr. Forbes on the 24th of September, when he adjusted the first loss on the stock, that his name was not mentioned in the policy, and he had no interest in it, then he is estopped from claiming that he was deceived by the representations made by Mr. Smedley that he was protected by the policy. * * *
“ (15) If you find that Mr. Forbes knew that the insurance was not in his name, as Mr. Smedley had written him, and neglected to look after his own interest, then he is estopped from claiming that he had been deceived by the defendant and cannot recover.”
Subsequently defendant moved for a new trial on various grounds, which was denied. The claimed errors were saved for review by proper objections and exceptions. Defendant’s numerous assignments of error are grouped for argument, in substance, as follows:
Refusal to direct a verdict for defendant; want of authority to make the alleged contract to insure the stock in Forbes’ interest; want of consideration for the alleged contract; violation of the iron safe clause; varying terms of written contract by oral testimony; refusal of the court to give defendant’s twelfth and fifteenth requests to charge; denial of defendant’s motion for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict is against the great weight of the evidence and against the just rights of the defendant.
When the incumbrance on Forbes’ stock was increased from $1,000 to $1,407.75, on July 17, 1912, he was carrying $2,500 insurance on it. He was required by the mortgage to keep the mortgagee’s interest in
The trial court charged that the two possible questions for them to consider were whether there was. any such contract to insure Forbes’ interest as alleged, and, contingent on the jury so finding, the damages sustained by reason of defendant’s failure to comply with the contract; that if there was no such authorized contract plaintiffs could not recover, and it was not sufficient to show that such agreement was made between Forbes and the attorney, but it must appear that the latter had authority to make such agreement, “or, if he had no such authority, then it must appear that defendant, or some one acting for it, afterwards consented to the agreement and took out the policy to protect his interest as well as their own.”
If the contract as claimed was authoritatively made, defendant’s contention that it was nevertheless conclusively and as a matter of law void in its entirety for want of consideration is not tenable. Forbes’ stock and fixtures were then insured. An increase of the incumbrance upon them might, and apparently did, jeopardize this insurance, as the attorney suggested, and in the negotiations for increased security, protected by insurance for which Forbes was to pay,
Defendant was entitled to have its requests 12 and 15, or at least the substance of them, given to the jury. Shaw testified positively to telling Forbes in September that his name was not mentioned in this policy and he had no interest in it. Forbes claimed that he understood it was, and denied any recollection of Shaw advising him to the contrary. If he was in fact advised of the claimed breach of agreement by defendant to procure insurance for him a sufficient time before his last fire to have attended to it himself, it was his duty under the rule of avoidable consequences to do so, and in such case the measure of damages is not the loss resulting from a subsequent fire, but the value of the policy at the time the failure to insure is discovered. 2 Sedgwick on Damages (9th Ed.), § 623. In Brant v. Gallup, 111 Ill. 487 (53 Am. Rep. 638), which was an action for an alleged breach of an agreement to keep a building insured for a certain amount, the court approved an instruction in substance that, if the jury believed from the evidence that plaintiff had been informed a sufficient time before the fire that his building was inadequately insured, then it was his duty to have effected additional insurance, if he deemed
Aside from the more technical questions raised, an examination of the testimony of the respective parties as to the stock and fixtures on hand and their value at or about the time of the fire impels the conviction that defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict because against the great weight of evidence is of much force. The burden of proof rested upon plaintiffs to show by a preponderance of evidence that the insured property destroyed by the fire in question exceeded in value the amount defendant collected from the insurance company. Forbes and his wife are the primary parties in interest, and the only witnesses whose testimony tended to support the verdict. With the books and records by which their testimony might be tested destroyed, they testified to goods with values in excess of the amount of the policy. A year and a half before this trial, and but a comparatively short time after the fire, Forbes was examined before the insurance commissioner, and was only able to furnish a list of the goods constituting his stock valued by him at less than $1,000, which more nearly approximates the appraisal of three experienced men who examined his stock near the time of the fire. Young, the salesman sent by defendant to investigate conditions just before the fire, was accompanied by his father, who resided at Big Rapids. They drove over to Chippewa Lake together on Sunday, November 2d, and examined Forbes’ stock with a view to determining its value.
Mrs. Forbes, who assisted her husband in the store, but was absent at the time of the fire, testified along the same lines as her husband to the amount and value of the stock consumed by the fire, and also told of the attorney visiting Chippewa Lake in July, 1912, when he secured a larger mortgage, to which she asserts she “objected very much,” and proposed instead to pay him $400 which they then had in bank, but he was not agreeable to the proposal, and said it would be better for them to put the money in stock.' Her testimony is yet more difficult to reconcile with established facts. Recalled for further cross-examination by defendant as to this version of the transaction, the attorney testified that he would have brought back the $400 if given a chance, that he did not remember being told they wanted to pay instead of increasing the mortgage, and would have remembered it if proposed, stating, in substance, that an offer to him of $400 under the attending circumstances would have resulted in a fatal shock.
Forbes began business in 1909, renting the store, which he afterwards bought for $800, and the fixtures, consisting of showcases, counters, shelving, drawers, desks, safe, scales, ice box, etc., which he
We are constrained to conclude that, in the face of the abundance of contrary convincing evidence found in. this record, direct and circumstantial, plaintiffs have not only failed to establish by a preponderance of evidence that the goods destroyed exceeded in value Forbes’ indebtedness to defendant to the amount of the verdict, but that the same was so against the great weight of evidence as to require that it be set aside under applicable rules and reasons discussed in Wierengo v. Insurance Co., 98 Mich. 621, 625 (57 N. W. 833); Brassel v. Railway Co., 101 Mich. 5, 13 (59 N. W. 426); Wheeler v. Jenison, 120 Mich. 422, 429 (79 N. W. 643); County of Montmorency v. Putnam, 127 Mich. 36 (86 N. W. 398); Baldwin v. Railway Co., 128 Mich. 417, 421 (87 N. W. 380); Whipple v. Railroad Co., 130 Mich. 460, 462 (90 N. W. 287); Cole v. Railway, 132 Mich. 122 (92 N. W. 935); Hintz v. Railroad Co., 132 Mich. 305, 310 (93 N. W. 634);
The judgment is therefore reversed, with costs and a new trial granted.