All of the issues in both the appeal and the cross appeal can be disposed of by a ruling on the matter of whether the suit was maintainable, plaintiff not having given written notice of the loss 1 and not having filed any proof of loss at any time prior thereto.
(b) While it is true that when, as here, the policy contains no provision making the policy void upon failure of the insured to furnish proof of loss within 60 days after the loss, yet if the proof is not furnished within the 60 .days as called for, a refusal of the insurer to pay after expiration of that time will not operate as a waiver of the proofs.
Newark Fire Ins. Co. v. Reese,
(a) Although Star alleges that it demanded payment of the loss, and that the demand was refused, its attorney, who made the demand, testified that when he made the demand the agent informed him that the demand would have to be referred to the company for its consideration and action, whereupon he told the agent that hе could not await the delay which that would entail inasmuch as he had only five or six days in which to institute suit under the provision of the policy requiring that suit be brought within twelve months after the date of the loss, and that he proceeded with the filing of suit to avoid the bar. Thus, there was a failurе to prove that there had been any denial of the demand by the company. There was an admission in Buffalo’s answer that there had been a demand and denial, but by amendment that was stricken and it was alleged instead that no demand for payment was made on Buffalо until the
(b) Was there “notice in writing” of the loss within the requirement of the policy, or the contemplation of
Code Ann.
§ 56-2427? We think not. The policy provides that “The
insured
shall give immediate written notice
to this company
of any loss. . .” Certainly it cannot be said that this requirement is met when the company gets information in some other manner and from some other source. Suppose there had been a news story of the loss in a newspaper to which the company was a subscriber and which those in charge of its office read. While it might be said to have been “in writing” it could not be said to have been given by the insured or to have been directed to the company. Moreover, even the giving of notice does not dispense with the necessity of making proof of loss
(Styles v. American Home Ins. Co.,
(c) But Star contends that there is sufficient circumstantial evidence concerning the communications between Mr. Hurst, the adjuster for General Eire, and Buffalo to authorize the jury to find that he was acting as Buffalo’s agent in sending the copies of investigative reports, etc., to it and thus, that when proofs of loss for General Fire were delivered to him this sufficiently ■complied with the policy provision requiring notice of the loss to Buffalo, placing a duty on it under Code Ann. § 56-2427 to send to Star forms for making proof of loss, in default of which the proofs were waived.
The trouble with this contention is that when Star prepared and filed with Hurst proofs of loss directed to General Fire it was not and did not purport tо be dealing with him as Buffalo’s
“The rule that a principal is bound to the extent of the authority which he has apparently conferred upon his agent has no reference to a situation in which a person affected by the acts of the agеnt does not deal with the agent in reliance upon the authority which the principal has apparently conferred upon him.”
Piedmont Operating Co. v. Cumming,
(d) Star contends that a waiver should result from the fact that Buffalo received information from General Fire relative to the occurrence of the loss and copies of reports made to General Fire from time to time by its claims investigator and attorney
(e) There is no merit in the contention that Buffalo should have called on Star to make claim against it. Star had been requested by Buffalo’s agent to furnish information relative to the property so that it might be added to the policy for coverage, and Star had rеfused to give the information, saying that it had decided to place the insurance elsewhere. Buffalo might well have concluded that no claim would ever be made against it. Further, insurance is a matter of contract
(North British & Mercantile Ins. Co. v. Tye,
Nor does the fact that plaintiff had lost or misplaced the
Although Star contends that the Buffalo policy was not in its possession, it alleges in its petition that “said policy
was delivered to plaintiff
in consideration of premiums paid by plaintiff to defendant’s agent.” (Emphasis supplied.) If the policy was lost or destroyed it was by Star’s nеgligence and through no fault of Buffalo. Buffalo could, as it apparently did, assume that Star had the policy and was familiar with its provisions. Moreover, it appears from the testimony of Star’s president that as early as January 6, 1964, when he was negotiating a settlement with Gеneral Fire & Casualty he knew that Buffalo had something to do with the insurance coverage on his business property, and that he had made a claim for glass breakage under the very same Buffalo policy and collected the loss on July 3, 1963. His attorney recalled thе discussion on January 6, 1964, relative to the matter of Buffalo possibly having a policy on the damaged property, and that Mr. Starnes (Star’s president) had a search made for the policy. In spite of these circumstances, which should have alerted both Star and its аttorney to the existence of Buffalo’s policy, no effort was made by or on behalf of Star to get any information from the local agent or from Buffalo relative to the policy until September 22, 1964. “Notice sufficient to excite attention and put a party on inquiry shall be notice of everything to which it is afterwards found such inquiry might have led. Ignorance of a fact, due to negligence, shall be equivalent to knowledge. . .”
Code
§ 37-116. “[Plaintiff] knew . . . that he had paid . . . a sum of money representing a premium on a policy of insurance to be obtained on the automobile, and he was thereupon put on inquiry whether there was such a policy, which inquiry and diligence would have disclosed the kind and nature of the contract, . . . and on inquiry of the insurance company whether any claim for loss had been made by the motor company or any assignee thereof, and whether any payment had been made or settlement effected.”
Lloyd v. Milner Motor Co.,
(b) Absent a waiver, the furnishing of the proof of loss as required by the policy is a condition precedent to the accrual of liability on the part of the company and to the institution of suit by the insured.
National Life Ins. Co. v. Jordan,
(c) The refusal of Buffalo to pay the amount claimed for the loss does not estop it from defending on this ground. “[I]t is the well-settled rule in this State that, where notice of loss or injury, or proofs thereof, have not been given or furnished in accordance with provisions of the policy requiring the same as conditions precedent to liability, the company’s
subsequent
absolute refusal to pay because of the non-compliance with such prоvisions, or for some other reason, will not estop the company from setting up as a defense the failure of the insured to make such reports [citations].”
Barkley v. American Nat. Ins. Co.,
We find nothing in this record to authorize a finding of any waiver by Buffalo of the policy provisions, or of anything that would work an estoppel against it to plead and rely upon them as a defense. It is conceded that no proof of loss was ever furnished to the company. In this situation the suit was not maintainable and no verdict against the company could stand, for a condition precedent to a fixing of liability has not been met.
Guarantee &c. Life Ins. Co. v. Norris,
“The conditions set out in the policy contract are an essential part of the consideration for the insurer assuming the risk аnd the insured becomes bound by those conditions by his acceptance of the policy contract. It is no defense for the insured to merely say that he did not read the policy and, therefore, is not subject to the conditions.” Mitchell, Georgia Law on Insurance, 243, § 47-103.
It was error to deny the defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
This disposes of, or renders moot, all other issues raised on the appeal or the cross appeal.
Judgment reversed on the main appeal, with direction that a judgment for the defendant be entered notwithstanding the verdict. Cross appeal dismissed.
Notes
A written notice of the loss is called for in the policy and is contemplated by the terms of
Code Ann.
§ 56-2427, but the furnishing to an adjuster of a written inventory of the contents of the building destroyed by fire has been held to constitute a written notice.
Cotton States Mut. Ins. Co. v. Clark,
114 Ga.
“The statute
[Code Ann.
§ 56-1206] does not prescribe any particular form in which such demand shall be made, nor whether it shall be in writing, or a verbal demand will suffice.”
Hull v. Alabama Gold Life Ins. Co.,
