101 Neb. 825 | Neb. | 1917
Plaintiff, a wholesale jeweler, procured from the defendant insurance corporation a burglary insurance policy. The material parts of this policy which apply to fire-proof safes are that the defendant agrees to indemnify the assured “for all loss — ■
“ (A) In consequence of the felonious abstraction during the day or night from within the safe or safes described in the schedule and located in the premises as hereinafter defined, by any person or persons who shall have made entry into the safe or safes by the use of tools or explosives thereupon,” of money, securities and merchandise.
“(B) By damage to the said safe or safeSj and to the said property contained therein, and to the premises, and to the office furniture and fixtures therein, caused by any person or persons while making or attempting to make entry into the safe or safes, or into any vault containing such safe or safes, by the use of tools or explosives thereupon.”
It further provided that the company shall not be liable for any loss—
“(g) If any servant or employee of the assured, or any person lawfully upon the premises, is criminally implicated as principal or accessory in effecting or attempting to effect loss covered under this policy;
“(h) Unless books and accounts are regularly kept by the assured and the loss can be accurately determined therefrom by the company. * * *
*827 “(1) From within any safe unless at the time of the occurrence of the loss the safe was properly locked by all combination locks on same.”
The proof on the part of the plaintiff tended to show that on the evening of Sunday, May 23,1915, the office rooms of the insured, which are located in an office building in the city of Omaha, were opened by the use of a chisel or jimmy near the latch, and the outer door of safe No. 4, which was locked with a combination lock, opened without the use of tools or explosives, and the double inner doors, which were locked with a key lock, blown open by an explosion, and diamonds and other property to the value of $3,357.91 feloniously abstracted; that this was discovered by the night watchman on beginning his rounds about 7:30 p. m., who immediately notified the plaintiff’s manager, T. J. Bruner, and the police. Plaintiff at once gave notice of the loss to defendant, which denied liability and refused to pay for the loss. In its answer defendant denied that any person unknown to plaintiff made entry into the safe by the use of tools or explosives thereupon, and feloniously abstracted any property covered by the policy and damaged the safe. It pleads the conditions of the policy above set forth, and alleges that, if the plaintiff suffered any loss from said safe No. 4, access was not had by the use of tools or explosives upon the outside of the safe; that all the combination locks were not then locked; that the plaintiff has failed to keep proper books of account; and that the loss, if any, was occasioned and caused by some person or persons connected with plaintiff and being lawfully upon the premises, whose names are unknown to defendant. The reply is a general denial. The plaintiff recovered a judgment in the sum of $3,391.88. The court allowed the sum of $800 as attorney’s fees and taxed the same as part of the costs. Defendant appeals.
A number of assignments of error are made. Defendant insists that the provision that the policy only insures against loss caused by “any person or persons who shall have made entry into the safe or safes by the use of tools or explosives thereupon” means the use of such instrumen
It is next said that the court should have directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant because Bruner, the manager of the plaintiff corporation, was the only man who knew the combination, and since the outer doors were opened in the ordinary way, and the chance of working the combination in an hour’s time is one in several millions, the conclusion is inevitable that the safe was not locked, or else it was opened by Bruner. We think this conclusion is a non sequitur. There is' evidence that such safes may be opened by experts by manipulation of the knob of the combination lock, and other evidence which is sufficient to support a finding by the jury that no employee was a participant in the burglary. The evidence on behalf of plaintiff is that Bruner lgft tiie office about 12:45 on Sunday afternoon and did not return until about 7 o’clock that evening when called by the night watchman. This man came on duty at 6 o’clock, and in making his rounds noticed some marks upon the office door and jamb indicating that the lock had been forced. On making an investigation he found that the outer doors of one of the safes were open, and that the inner doors had been blown open by an explosion. There were remains of a soap dam around the keyhole of the inner doors, and soap apparently had been used upon the flanges of the outer doors to confine the air and gases of the explosion and to silence the noise. The lock to the inner doors was broken, scattered and destroyed. A witness for defendant testified^ that he heard a sound like an explosion in the building between 1 and 2 o’clock in
Another assignment is that the plaintiff had not kept books from which the loss could be accurately determined. It is claimed that a memorandum book which listed the diamonds purchased, with their weight and cost, had a number of erasures and alterations in it. The testimony shows that when a diamond left the place of business, either when sold or upon approval, an entry was made in the margin of this book showing the disposition of the gem. Many of these entries were customarily made in pencil. Sometimes stones would be returned. Instead of making a new entry, the pencil memorandum would be erased, and when the diamond went out again a new pencil entry would be made. It developed upon the witness-stand that' some mistakes had been made with reference to the description and disposition of some of the stones listed as having been stolen. The jury were instructed by the district court that such items should not be charged against the defendant insurance company, and that certain discounts which it was shown by cross-examination of Bruner had been received on certain articles should also be allowed defendant. These mistakes were in small proportion to the amount of the loss. It is shown that full sets of double-entry books of account had been kept since the business was begun, and these, with cash book, sales books, invoices and inventory taken January 1, 1915, were produced to the defendant long before the trial. We are of opinion that the provision of the policy mentioned should not be construed so strictly as to forfeit the insurance on
The district court instructed the jury that plaintiff admitted there were errors in the account amounting to $39.39, and that discounts had been taken amounting to $106.83, for Avhich plaintiff could in no event recover: The court further instructed the jury in substance that, before the plaintiff could recover the burden of proof was on it to prove by a preponderance of the evidence: (1) That the safe Avas feloniously entered by the use of tools or explosives; (2) that the property described in the petition was in the safe and was stolen therefrom; (3) the value of the property stolen; (4) that the safe was properly locked; “(5) that plaintiff kept books of account from which the loss could be accurately ascertained; (6) that no employee or servant of the assured, and no person or persons laAvfully on the premises, was implicated as principal or accessory in the burglary: If plaintiff has so proved all the above facts, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff. If plaintiff has failed to so prove all the above facts, then your verdict should be for the defendant.”
The defendant argues that in its opening statement to the jury it asserted its reliance upon the violation of the conditions that there should be no recovery if the combination lock Avas not locked at the time of the entry; and that no recovery could be allowed unless the assured kept books of account from which the loss could be accurately ascertained, and complains that these two defenses were “improperly and indiscriminately included and commingled in a general instruction;” that the refusal to give specific instructions upon these points deprived it of its right to submit to the jury its theory of the case. The district court had correctly instructed the jury upon each of these points and it was unnecessary to restate the law. The instructions, taken as a whole, are pertinent,, clear and concise, without unnecessary repetitions or involved language, plain to the understanding of the average man.
The next assignment of error, and that which is perhaps most earnestly argued, is that a new trial should have been
Where charges of such serious moment and grave import are made against parties interested in an action, the district court should scrutinize the evidence in support of the charges or in denial thereof with great care, and should
The trial court alloAved a fee of f800 to plaintiff’s attorney, Avhich is assessed as costs, and which is complained of as excessive and unauthorized. The plaintiff argues that a motion to retax costs was necessary, and that although one Avas filed it has never been acted upon by the district court, and hence cannot be reviewed. In Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Corey, 53 Neb. 209, and American Fire Ins. Co. v. Land fare, 56 Neb. 482, it Avas held that a motion in the lower court to retax costs is unnecessary to review a judgment awarding an attorney fee in an action on an insurance policy. The fee alloAved is nearly 25 per cent, of the recovery and seems excessive. It seems to us that a fee equal to 10 per cent, of the judgment is as much as should be taxed as costs, and the allowance is reduced to that amount.
In conclusion, while there is a possibility that the safe might have been opened in the manner charged by the
Affirmed.