131 P. 691 | Okla. | 1913
W. J. Grace was the insured. The plaintiff was one of his creditors. Grace's stock of merchandise was totally destroyed by fire. A day of two after the fire Grace assigned his claim against the insurance company to the plaintiff as collateral security. The plaintiff sued and recovered judgment.
The first error assigned is that the court erred in giving the following instruction:
"The jury is instructed that the failure of the insured to produce the books and inventories as required by the policy of fire insurance means a failure to produce them if they are in existence when they are called for, or if they have not beenlost or destroyed by the fault, negligence, or design of theinsured. If the insured has made a reasonable effort to produce the required books and inventories, and has failed through no fault of his own, such substantial compliance will be sufficient, and if the jury believe that the books and inventories, if you find that such were kept, have been lostwithout the culpable negligence *215 or wrongful or fraudulent act or design of the insured or hisassignee, the jury is instructed that the loss and consequent failure to produce the same will not invalidate the policy, notwithstanding the provision that the failure to produce the same shall render the policy null and void, where the insuredand the assignee have used such care on the occasion as aprudent man acting in good faith would exercise." (Italics ours.)
One of the defenses was that the insured had not kept and produced his inventories and books as required by the terms of the policy; the iron-safe and inventory clauses being the customary ones in insurance policies. The plaintiff's excuse for failure to produce was that the books had been lost after the fire without fault or negligence on his part. The iron-safe and inventory clauses are promissory warranties, and an unjustifiable breach of them prevents a recovery. Shawnee FireIns. Co. v. Thompson Rowell,
The next assignment of error relates to the admission of the testimony of Mrs. Grace, the wife of the insured, over the objection that she was an incompetent witness. The testimony was admitted upon the theory that in the matters about which she was testifying she was acting as agent of her husband, and therefore was within the terms of section 5842, Comp. Laws 1909, which provides that:
"The following persons shall be incompetent to testify:
* * * (3) Husband and wife, for or against each other, except concerning transactions in which one acted as the agent *217 of the other, or when they are joint parties and have a joint interest in the action; but in no case shall either be permitted to testify concerning any communication made by one to the other during the marriage, whether called while that relation subsisted, or afterwards. * * *"
The substance of Mrs. Grace's testimony was that she assisted in taking the inventory; that her husband called off the articles, and price, and she took them down in a book; that she took care of the book, keeping it at her residence and having charge of it until after the fire; that this and the other books were kept by her on the dresser at night, and were there when the store was burned; that after the fire she gave the books to Mr. Butts, the agent of the plaintiff; that at the time he was there her husband was in bed sick; that she delivered the books to Mr. Butts by Mr. Grace's direction, all three being present at the time. It is true that her husband is not the plaintiff in this case, but the testimony shows that the assignment is to the plaintiff as collateral security, and that the surplus after the payment of the plaintiff's debt is for the benefit of the husband. The verdict is for more than the plaintiff's debt, and therefore the husband is interested in the result of the action, and under these facts his wife cannot testify unless she could testify if he were the plaintiff himself. In re Valentine,
It is next urged that the court erred in giving an instruction advising the jury that husband and wife are incompetent to testify except under the circumstances stated in the statute, and *218
that in this case, while Mrs. Grace's testimony had been admitted, the jury should exclude every part of it, if any, except in the cases where she was acting as the agent of her husband. This instruction shifted the court's responsibility to the jury and was improper. It is the duty of the court to pass upon the admissibility of evidence, and where the testimony of the wife is objected to on the ground of incompetency, and it is sought to introduce it because she comes within the exception, the court should determine this question. Cairns v.Mooney,
The witness Butts, the agent of the plaintiff, testified that Mr. Archinault offered to give him $500 not to make proof of loss, the effect of which would have been to pay the plaintiff but defeat a recovery on the policy for the benefit of Grace. This offer, if made, was equivalent to an offer of a bribe and manifestly would be of material weight with the jury. The testimony tended to disclose that Mr. Archinault was secretary of the company; in fact, his name appears as secretary upon the *219 policy sued on. But it is argued that it must be shown that he was authorized by the defendant to make this proposition before the testimony was admissible. If he was the secretary of the company, and if he was in charge of the adjustment of the loss, and if he made a corrupt proposition, we do not think it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove that he was authorized by the defendant to make this corrupt proposition. It requires no argument to show that practically that would be an impossible thing to do.
The judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.