Ellis ex rel. Mynton v. Agricultural Insurance

Opbkioy by

Porter, J.,

This, happily, is an unusual case. The husband insured the property of his wife against fire. This was followed soon after by a conflagration. The wife was away from home, and the husband was the sole occupant of the house at the time. On the return of the wife, she was, as she testified, convinced that her husband had set fire to the premises. This belief was based on the fact that so many of her household goods had been removed and saved, and on a remark he had made to her a few months preceding, which had awakened her suspicions. Notwithstanding these facts, she furnished a sworn proof of loss to the Insurance Co. in which she says nothing of her belief that the fire was due to the incendiary act of her husband ; in which she includes a number of articles as destroyed which she in fact knew to have been saved; in which she in-*266eluded articles which she in fact never owned, and in which she failed to include a. list of the incumbrances on the property as required by'the policy. She follows this up on the trial of her husband for arson, and on the first trial of the suit against the Insurance Co. with testimony of a like tenor.

Subsequently, she became stricken in conscience as to her untruthful statements, and went to the district attorney and confessed her perjury. A new trial was ordered, ^and on the trial now under review, she testifies to the falsity of her affidavits and former testimony, and that she knew they were false when made and given.

The policy in this case contains these provisions: “This entire policy shall be void if the insured has concealed or misrepresented in writing or otherwise, any material fact or circumstance concerning this insurance or the subject thereof, or if the interest of the insured dn the property be not truly stated herein; or in ease of any fraud or* false swearing by the insured touching any matter relating to this insurance or the subject thereof whether before or after the loss.”

Under these provisions, and in view of the facts above stated, the court below submitted the case to the jury. We cannot see how this can be sustained. Insurance companies are entitled to the enforcement of the provisions of their policies. If these provisions are violated, especially in respect to matters referred to the conscience of the insured, it is the duty of the court to see that the violations are followed by the proper forfeiture of right.

The plaintiff’s conduct has not been such as to entitle her to have the cause submitted to a jury upon the question of honest intention. Whatever might have been the character and conduct of her husband, her own course cannot be justified to the extent of permitting a recovery in this action. This is not the case of a mistake of statement in the proof of loss unwittingly or ignorantly made. Such mistakes are open to correction. Here the sworn misstatements are made and repeated on the witness stand, with knowledge that they are untrue. The guilty knowledge determines the fraudulent intent. While her repentance may be a salve to conscience, it cannot revivify a claim against the Insurance Co. which her former acts had deprived of life. The testimony in the cause *267warrants the severest condemnation of the conduct of the husband, but he is not the plaintiff in this case. While the plaintiff’s conduct may have been determined by fear of her husband to an extent to appeal to sympathy, she cannot thereby be exonerated from the results of. her wrongful acts, committed and repeated, nor can it be found to be a good reason for compelling an insurance company to pay that which bears the impress of a fraudulent claim.

The clause above quoted not only vitiates the policy, “ in case of any fraud,” but also in case of “ false swearing by the insured touching any matter relating to this insurance or the subject thereof, whether before or after the loss.” Here the insured confesses on oath to previous false swearing, and that it was knowingly committed. The fact of false swearing is thus proven, and where perjury is thus knowingly committed, the question cannot be submitted to the jury whether the intent was to defraud. The intent is demonstrated not only by the acts of the insured but by her admissions.

The authorities cited by the appellee do not conflict with this conclusion. They sustain the propositions that proofs of loss in which honest mistakes have been made are open to explanation, as in Lebanon, etc., Co. v. Kepler, 106 Pa. 28, where an insured was permitted to recover upon a higher valuation than that contained in the proofs of loss. The case is ruled by Claflin v. Ins. Co., 110 U. S. 76, where under a clause similar to that in this case, it was held that a forfeiture of the policy ensued upon false swearing, even though the latter did not operate as a fraud on the company.

We therefore put the reversal of the case upon the ground of the false swearing of the insured contained in the proofs of loss, and in the suit to recover the insurance. The other propositions raised need not be discussed. We are of opinion that the learned judge erred in not directing a verdict for the defendant.

The ninth assignment is therefore sustained, and the judgment reversed.