31 Mo. 546 | Mo. | 1862
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action on a policy of insurance against loss by fire, issued by the defendant to the plaintiff on their starch factory in St. Louis, which was destroyed- by fire. It was provided in the policy that it was made and accepted in reference to the terms and conditions thereto annexed, which were to be used and resorted to, in order to explain the rights and obligations of the parties thereto in all cases not therein otherwise specially provided for. The second condition annexed to the policy was: “ If any person, insuring any building or goods in this company, shall make any misrepresentation or concealment, or if after the expiration of a policy of insurance, and before the renewal thereof, the risk shall be increased by any means whatever within the control of the assured, or if such building or premises shall be occu
1. It is no defence to a recovery in the suit that the plaintiffs, or any of them, either at the. time of obtaining the policy sued on represented the value of the buildings on said premises greater than their real value, or after the loss represented the value of the property insured, or the extent and amount of the loss, greater than it really was, unless the same was done knowingly and wilfully by plaintiffs, and with a fraudulent design. 2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant gave to plaintiffs the notice of their intention to rebuild the premises destroyed by fire, given in evidence by plaintiffs, and at the time of giving said notice the defendant knew that no watchman had been kept upon said premises from the time of the issuing of said policy to the time of the happening of the loss, then the jury may infer that the defendant waived their right to interpose that fact as a defence to the right of plaintiffs to recover under the policy, and the burden of proof is on the defendant to satisfy the jury that at the time of giving such notice the defendant was ignorant of
To the giving of which instructions the defendant by its counsel objected, and the objection being overruled, defendant at the time duly excepted, and the instructions were given.
“If the jury find from the evidence that the plaintiffs, in person, or by their agent, Wm. Bersche, in that behalf, at the time of the application for insurance upon the premises in question, represented to the defendant, its officers or agents, that the plaintiffs then had and would continue to keep a watchman upon the said premises, and that the said policy issued in this case to plaintiffs by defendant was issued upon the said representation, and that said representation had a material influence upon the minds of the agents of defendant in inducing them as such agents to take the said risk, and that the said risk would not have been taken by the defendant, its officers or agents, if the said representation had not been made ; then if the jury find that the plaintiffs did not keep a watchman upon the said premises at the time of and after the issuing of said policy, the jury will find for the defendant.
The defendant asked these instructions, which the court refused to give:
1. If the offer of defendants to rebuild was made within twenty days after notice and proofs of loss were delivered by plaintiffs, then the plaintiffs can not recover in this action. 2. If the offer of defendant to rebuild was not made within twenty days after notice and proofs of loss were delivered to defendant by the plaintiffs, but if the plaintiffs assented to said offer to rebuild, then the plaintiffs can not recover. 3. If it does not appear from the evidence when the proofs of loss were delivered, then the jury are to find whether the defendant’s offer to rebuild was accepted by the plaintiffs; and if the said offer to rebuild was not accepted, then the offer to rebuild is not a waiver of any defence in this action upon the question of representation; and if the said offer to rebuild was accepted by the plaintiffs, then the plaintiffs can not recover in this action. 4. If the jury believe from the evidence that either of the plaintiffs, or Wm. Bersche, as
At the hearing in this court, the defendant (appellant) formally withdrew any objection to the first instruction given for the plaintiffs, and no question was made upon the first three of the instructions refused the defendant, and they appear to have been very properly refused.
The other instructions — that is, the last three given for the plaintiffs, the one given for the defendant, and the fourth refused the defendant — all refer to the representation alleged to have been made, and its materiality and the breach of it, and the alleged waiver of it by the election of the defendant to rebuild. Under the instructions given, if the jury had found that the alleged representation was made, and that it was so material that if it had not been made the risk would not have been taken, or a higher rate of premium would have been charged; and that no watchman was kept, (of which there is no question ;) and that, at the time of making the election to rebuild, the defendant had no knowledge of the fact that no watchman was kept, they must have found a verdict for the defendant. The jury, however, found a
Misrepresentation is therefore put by the contract upon the same footing with all other things which may happen to increase the risk, and the courts have frequently held that such defences may be waived. There is no reason why contracts of insurance, whether made by natural persons or artificial corporations, should be construed differently from other contracts. After the destruction by fire of the plaintiffs’ factory, surely the defendant might have paid the amount of the insurance if it had chosen so to do ; much more could it waive a single ground of defence to the plaintiffs’ claim. The question recurs, did the election to rebuild and the notice of that election given the plaintiffs, operate as a waiver of the defence of misrepresentation ? Bearing in mind that the
The instructions left it to the jury to infer from the evidence stated that a waiver was made; and if it has so inferred, no objection is perceived to the inference.
the judgment is affirmed.