190 A. 131 | N.H. | 1937
The provision of the standard form of fire insurance policy quoted above which requires that a signed and sworn statement or proof of loss be filed with the insurer forthwith after a fire is in conflict with P.L., c. 276, s. 9, and compliance therewith is not essential to the maintenance of a suit upon the policy. Levi v. Insurance Co.,
The question remains, however, as to whether or not the plaintiffs insanity, if proved, would excuse him from giving the notice required by section 9 of chapter 276 of the Public Laws.
On the issue of the plaintiff's insanity one of the doctors from the staff of the state hospital testified that in his opinion the plaintiff was insane when admitted to that institution, that thereafter his condition gradually improved, and that upon his discharge "he was normal enough to get around and look after his own business." He also testified that this change was "a gradual process," that it was "a matter of relativity," and that there was no precise time during *418 his stay at the hospital when it could be said that "he went from an insane condition to a condition that you might ordinarily term normal." In addition, one of the doctors who committed the plaintiff to the state hospital testified to the effect that when he saw the plaintiff between one and two o'clock in the morning after the fire he was disheveled in appearance, that "his eyes were bloodshot as if he had been crying," and that he was in a "highly nervous state." This doctor also testified that the plaintiff's condition then was the same as it was during the evening of April 6, when he was committed to the hospital. The foregoing evidence is clearly sufficient to warrant the conclusion that the plaintiff was mentally unbalanced from a time almost immediately after the fire on April 4 until August 16, 1935.
It appears in the record that on April 9, 1935, the plaintiff wrote a letter to a friend requesting assistance in obtaining an early discharge from the hospital, and from this the defendants argue that if he could write this letter it could not be found that insanity was the cause of his failure to write to the defendants' agent giving him notice of the loss. This argument is without merit because the doctor from the staff of the state hospital, referred to above, testified that the plaintiff, owing to his mental condition, "was very dependent on us to arrange his outside affairs," and that his condition was such that it probably would not have occurred to him to write to the defendants regarding his loss. He also testified that, although there was not necessarily anything irrational or indicative of insanity in the letter which he did write, "That doesn't mean anything." Insanity, to be causal, may consist in a condition which renders it impossible to write at all, but it does not of necessity have to consist in such a condition. It is no less causal if it obliterates the need for writing from the mind.
The defendants' additional argument to the effect that because of the absence of evidence of organic nervous disease, the plaintiff, in contemplation of law, must be regarded as sane, is also without merit. Dennett v. Dennett,
Chapter 276 of the Public Laws is not a penal statute. It derives operative force from the fact that, by virtue of section 25, as well as by express stipulation in the policies here in suit, it is included in and forms a part of both contracts of insurance. Gleason v. Insurance Co.,
With the exception of Alabama and New York the courts of this country, in so far as they have passed upon the matter, appear to be unanimous in holding that causal insanity on the part of an insured renders it impossible for him to comply with the condition precedent of notice. In Johnson v. Insurance Co.,
The case of Kilgore v. Association,
In our opinion the majority rule is more in harmony with the general policy of the law of contracts which protects insane persons from the results of their incapacity and we have no hesitation in applying it in the construction of the statute.
It follows that the defendants' motions for nonsuits were improperly granted.
New trial.
BRANCH, J. did not sit: PAGE, J., was absent: the others concurred.