80 Wis. 393 | Wis. | 1891
The following opinion was filed September 29, 1891:
The garnishee defendant admitted in its answer that it did agree with the London Insurance Association to assume all the risks of the said association within certain limited territory, within which territory the property insured in the policy issued to the judgment debtor, Garrett Oleary, was situated. We may therefore assume that the garnishee would be liable for the loss, providing the insurance association would have been so liable on the facts disclosed in the evidence.
The controlling question in the case is whether there was a forfeiture of the policy by the additional incumbrance
We will take the insured’s own testimony as to the facts relating to the giving of this additional mortgage, and as to the consent of the agent Hyde to the same. He says, in substance, that at the time of issuing the policy “ there was a mortgage on the property held by Mrs. Murphy. I informed the agent of this mortgage, told him that it was for $3,000, and wanted ,Mm to put on the insurance papers Mrs. Murphy’s mortgage claim. After the policy was issued, I gave another mortgage to my brother Thomas Oleary for $1,700. This was given the last of December, 1888, or the first of January, 1889. About a week or two after the giving of this mortgage I saw Hyde about it, and
If there was any consent given to the additional incum-brance by Hyde, or a waiver of the condition relating thereto, it must be found in or predicated upon this testimony, as it is a fair synopsis of what the assured testified took place or was said at the interview between him and the agent. It seems to us there is jlo ground for saying that the agent gave even verbal consent to the additional incumbrance, and that to so hold would be a great perversion of the language used by him. In the first place it should be observed that the insured does not pretend he saw Hyde as to the additional incumbrance until a week or two after he gave the mortgage to his brother. Had he seen the agent before giving the mortgage, and informed him of what he wanted to do, and the agent had said to him he thought it would be all right anyway, but failed for some reason to indorse his consent in writing on the policy, a somewhat different question would be presented. It might then be claimed with more show of reason that the insured was misled by the remark of the agent, and might well suppose that consent was given to the additional incumbrance.
If express consent, or what was equivalent to it, had been given, it would have bound the company, and operated as a waiver of the condition, under our decisions. American Ins. Co. v. Gallatin, 48 Wis. 36; Hankins v. Rockford Ins. Co. 70 Wis. 1; Renier v. Dwelling House Ins. Co. 74 Wis. 89; Lamberton v. Conn, F. Ins. Co. 39 Minn. 129; Morrison
It is quite true that the jury, in answer to the sixth question submitted, found that Hyde did waive the condition in the policy against further incumbrance, by leading Garrett Oleary to believe that giving the $1,700 mortgage was not a breach of' such condition of the policy; but this finding is not supported by the evidence in the case. The judgment should have been in favor of the garnishee, and that it be discharged from all liability in the action.
The attorney of the garnishee has printed thirty or forty pages of the evidence in his brief, for which the clerk will
By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to give judgment in favor of the garnishee.
A motion for a rehearing was denied November 17,1891.