The maifi-'issue in this case, as raised by the only special demurrer insisted upon and also by the general grounds of the motion for new trial and the motion for a-judgment notwithstanding the verdict is whether the plaintiff is barred from prosecuting his action because it was not commenced within 12 months of the loss. It is undisputed that the house burned down on May 24,- 1955; this action was not filed until August 29, 1957. The policy contains a provision as follows: “No suit or action on this policy for the recovery of any claim shall be sustainable in any court of law or equity unless all the requirements of this policy shall have been complied with, and unless commenced within twelve months next after inception of the loss.” The appraisal provision in the contract is to the effect that in case of failure to agree “on the written demand of-either, each shall select a competent and disinterested appraiser,” those two selecting a third, and the three appraise the loss, the result to be binding upon the parties. The petition alleged and the plaintiff’s testimony, corroborated to some extent by that ■of his wife, affirmed that George Stacey as salesman wrote the policy and received the first notice of the loss; that Mr. Carson, an insurance adjuster representing the defendant, came out soon-afterward; that he made a settlement offer of $1500 which was refused; that he then “said the only way was to appoint appraisers. You will appoint one and I will appoint one and then they *367 appoint one.” The plaintiff agreed with Carson, that this would •be done, and he thereafter appointed his appraiser, who testified •on the trial as to the value of the burned premises. Nothing further was heard from the insurance company and'the plaintiff then wrote the insurance company that “if -they didn’t pay it in 10 days I would get a lawyer.” He then testified that a man -from Atlanta representing the defendant company called; that he had on him credentials and a copy of the letter which the defendant had written the insurance company; that this man, .whose name he did not know, said it would be “fixed up in a few days” and that “whatever arrangements me and Mr. Carson made would be okay.” Later the defendant again called Carson’s office in Brunswick, was told1 not to worry, that it would “get straight”, and eventually, when nothing further was done, he turned the claim over to his attorney. While the petition alleges that the Atlanta 'representative of the insurance company was a vice-president, the evidence demands a finding that this was not so. Other testimony of the plaintiff was controverted, making an issue of fact both as to the amount of the loss and the question of whether the parties had- entered into an agreement of appraisal.
In
Peeples
v.
Western Fire Ins. Co.,
96
Ga. App.
39 (2) (
Special ground 8 complains because the trial court charged on the subject of fraud.
The petition in this-case alleged that the defendant fraudu
*370
lently. led the plaintiff into false security about his claim by wilfully keeping the plaintiff in suspense through the misrepresentations and misleading statements of its agents,..as set out above, and that the plaintiff relied on the defendant’s good faith and promises; that these promisés were not made>in good faith and that the adjuster, Carson, later told the plaintiff’s lawyer, “that he disliked old man Peeples, was glad that he did not collect on the policy, and that if he could help it, he never would collect.” This was supported by evidence to the same effect. Further, Carson denied entering into any agreement to arbitrate, and the testimony of the president and four vice-presidents of the defendant company that none of them had any dealing with the plaintiff was for the purpose of contradicting his testimony as to the agent who he testified approved any arrangements made between him and Carson. If the jury believed that there was. in fact an agreement to arbitrate, and that Carson was deliberately trying to defeat the claim, then it was; also authorized to believe from all the .evidence, including Carson’s denials and later statements, that these acts were in bad faith. The charge, which was to the effect that, although fraud will never be presumed, slight circumstances may be sufficient to establish it, was a correct statement of the law and was not an expression of opinion by the court that the action of the defendant’s agent did in fact amount to fraud.
Scott
v.
Gillis,
202
Ga.
220 (10) (
Special grounds of a motion for new trial which are not complete and understandable within themselves without reference to the pleadings or record,'or which make no such reference in the ground itself by pointing out the pages in the record where the matter necessary to an understanding of such 'special ground is located, are too vague and indefinite to'require any 'consideration by this court.
Hartsfield
v.
Hartsfield,
87
Ga. App.
707 (2) (
The trial court did not err in overruling the demurrers to the petition, the motion for a judgment notwithstanding the-verdict, or the motion for new trial as amended.
Judgment affirmed.
