51 S.E. 922 | N.C. | 1905
This action was brought by the plaintiffs to recover the amount of a policy of insurance for five hundred dollars, issued to them on 19 December, 1904, and by which the defendant agreed to insure their stock of merchandise from loss by fire. The only defense pleaded was that the plaintiffs had not observed and kept the provisions of what is known in such policies as the "Iron Safe Clause," in that they had not taken an inventory, or kept books as therein directed. The clause in this policy is in the usual form, and requires of the assured: (391) (1) That he shall take a complete itemized inventory of his stock on hand, at least once in each calendar year, and one shall be made within thirty days after the date of the policy, unless such an inventory has already been taken within the twelve calendar months next preceding said date, the policy to become null and void if the inventory is not taken, and the unearned premium to be returned on demand. (2) That he shall keep a set of books, which must clearly and plainly present a complete record of business transacted, including purchases, sales and shipments, for cash and credit, from the date of the inventory, as *317 provided in the first section of the clause, and during the continuance of the policy. (3) That he shall keep such books and inventory securely locked in a fire-proof safe at night, and at all times when his building is not actually open for business, or, failing in this, in some place not exposed to a fire which would destroy the building.
In the event of failure to produce such set of books and the inventory for the inspection of the company, the policy to become void, and such failure to be a perpetual bar to any recovery thereon.
We have reproduced the material portions of the clause, as the decision of the case must turn upon its true construction. The counsel for the defendant, in an able argument, and well prepared brief, maintained that the clause in question is a valid one, as containing a promissory warranty, which if not complied with, will defeat a recovery upon the policy, and a large majority of the courts, it seems, have so held, but we do not deem it necessary to enter upon a discussion of the proposition, or to undertake to decide the same, as the validity of the clause was not seriously contested by counsel for the plaintiffs who presented his case with unusual force and clearness, and distinctly placed the plaintiffs' right to recover upon the ground that by a fair interpretation of the clause, when considered in connection with the facts of the case, they had not, in any particular, violated its provisions. We will (392) therefore assume, for the sake of the argument and without deciding the question, that the clause is valid as a whole, and in each and every part, and proceed to examine the case upon that hypothesis.
The clause first provides for the making of an inventory within thirty days after the date of the policy. It appears in this case that none had been made prior to that time. The fire occurred on 11 January, 1905, just twenty-three days after the policy was issued by the defendant, so that the full time allowed to the plaintiffs for preparing the inventory, had not expired by seven days. So far there was not much, if any, dispute between counsel as to the proper construction of the clause. They did differ widely as to the true intent and meaning of the second section. Counsel for defendant contended that the books are required by that section to be opened and kept from the date of the policy, while counsel for plaintiffs insist that by the explicit terms in which the provision is couched, they are required to be opened and kept only "from the date of the inventory, as provided for in the first section of the clause," and as, by the first section, the assured have the full period of thirty days after the date of the policy to make the inventory, it logically follows that they must have a like period within which to comply with the provision as to keeping a set of books, unless the inventory is sooner taken. It seems to us perfectly clear that in this contention, the plaintiffs' *318
counsel must be right. If the requirement that books shall be kept is to be effective only from the date of the inventory, and it is expressly so stated in the contract of insurance, the plaintiffs could not be in default as to this provision, until either the inventory was actually taken, or until the time for taking it had expired; for, until the happening (393) of the first event, namely, the completion of the inventory, the time had not arrived when they were required to open a set of books, and, until the expiration of thirty days from the date of the policy, it could not be determined when the inventory would be taken, if at all, and consequently the provision as to keeping books was not in force. The most that can be said in behalf of the defendant is that, during the thirty days succeeding the date of the policy, the duty of keeping books was, so to speak, in a state of abeyance or suspension, awaiting the happening of the event upon which it depended. It may well be asked, how could the plaintiffs keep books, showing the transactions in their store from the date of the inventory, until such an inventory had been taken? If the clause in question is ambiguously worded, so that there is any uncertainty as to its right interpretation, or if for any reason there is doubt in our minds concerning its true meaning, we should construe it rather against the defendant, who was its author, than against the plaintiffs, and any such doubt should be resolved in favor of the latter, giving, of course, legal effect to the intention, if it can be ascertained, although it may have been imperfectly or obscurely expressed.Grabbs v. Ins. Co.,
No error.
Cited: Parker v. Ins. Co.,
(395)