63 Mo. App. 85 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
This is an action on a policy of fire insurance; The case, on the record now before us, is not different from that which was presented when it was here on a former appeal, as may be seen by reference to 56 Mo. App. 579; therefore, no other statement of the case need be made than there appears.
When the cause was here on the former appeal, the judgment, which was for the defendant, was reversed and the cause remanded. Since then there has been a retrial in the court below, which resulted in judgment for plaintiffs and from which defendant has appealed. A careful analysis and comparison of the points and authorities presented by the defendant’s brief in this case, will show that, with the exception of the additional cumulative authorities hereinafter noticed, there is little, if anything, presented for our consideration, beyond that which was. presented, by its brief on the former appeal.
In deciding the ease on the former appeal, speaking through Mr. Justice Gtll, we then said: “Notwithstanding there, is serious conflict in the decided cases, a large preponderance of authority will be found in favor of the proposition that, even though the policy may require the assent to further insurance, to be evidenced by writing, and though there shall be further
We are not prepared to lend our sanction to the defendant’s animadversion on the reasoning of the court in Lambertin v. Insurance Co., 39 Minn. 129, which was approvingly quoted by us in the course of the opinion on the former appeal. The rule in that case was not changed until the adoption of the law of this state providing for a standard form of policy. Anderson v. Ins. Co., 60 N. W. Rep. 1095. The Lambertin case has been cited with approval in Insurance Co. v. Parsons, 47 Minn. 352; Insurance Co. v. Gray, 43 Kan. 497; Ins. Co. v. Munger, 49 Kan. 178; Farwin v. Ins. Co., 85 Cal. 246; Reiner v. Ins. Co., 74 Wis. 89; and extensively quoted in 2 Beach on Insurance, sections 787, 788. It but reasserted the rule previously announced in Insurance Co. v. Earl, 33 Mich. 153; Insurance Co. v. McCrea, 8 Lea. 513; Insurance Co. v. Norton, 96 U. S. 234. In view of this, we think it will hardly do to say that the reasoning in the Lambertin case is unsound and entitled to no consideration.
In this connection, it may not be improper to briefly notice the cases now referred to by defendant for the first time. Kirkham v. Insurance Co., 57 N. W. Rep. 953, an Iowa case, was one where the policy provided that “no officer, agent or employee of this com
Insurance Go. v. Gibbons, 43 Kan. 15, was where the restriction in the policy was in terms the same as that in the first of the above referred to Iowa cases. The case is, therefore, not in point here. Clevenger v. Insurance Co., 2 Dakota, 114, was where the policy provided- that no forfeiture thereunder should be waived, unless the waiver should be in writing, signed by the president or secretary of the company. It is thus seen that this case likewise is not in point. Assurance Co. v. Williams, 21 S. W. Rep. 370, the restrictive clause of the policy was the same as that in this case. It was held that the clause put the insured upon notice, that the agent had no authority to waive a condition of the policy, except in writing attached to the policy, and the insured would therefore have no right to rely upon any waiver not made in that manner, unless it could
In Smith v. Insurance Co., 60 Vermont, 682, it i» stated, that, “one condition of the policy is that no-officer, agent, or representative of the company should be held to have waived any of the conditions of the policy, unless such waiver was indorsed on the policy. This provision was a valid one, and binding upon the parties, and effect should be given to it. While defendant could give its oral consent to a waiver of the statement, no officer, agent, or representative could consent, unless the consent was indorsed on the policy.” Since the corporation could speak in no other way than through its officers, agents and representatives, it is too difficult for us to understand how it could give its oral consent to a waiver, while its officers, agents and representatives, through whom alone it could speak, could not, while acting for it in their representative capacity, indicate their consent to a waiver, unless such consent was indorsed on the policy. If the corporation gave its oral consent to the waiver, it was expressed through some officer, agent, or representative, for it could not be done in any other way. It is absurd to say that the corporation could give its oral consent, and that its officers, agents and representa
These cases, with the single exception of that from Iowa already noticed, do not .reinforce or supplement those previously relied on by defendant. Even if the tendency of all of them were to support the principle contended for, yet they would establish no more than the truth of the remark made in our former opinion, to the effect that, “there is a serious conflict in the decided cases.” We do not doubt that a clause in a policy of insurance, providing that a particular class of officers or agents, or particular officer or agent, shall not have power to enter into any subsequent agreement to alter, change, or modify any of the conditions of such policy, except in the mode and manner therein specified; or that only certain designated officers, or agents, should have power, under any circumstances, to do any act or enter into any agreement, whereby performance of any condition of the policy may be waived, altered or abrogated, would be valid and efficacious. Where there is an express stipulation of this kind inserted in the policy, there can be no waiver of any condition of the policy, by any officer, or agent, or in any manner or mode, other than that specially provided in the stipulation. As illustrative of this principle, the following cases in this state are in point; Barnes v. Ins. Co., 30 Mo. App. App. 539; Mensing v. Ins. Co., 36 Mo. App. 602.
The cases just cited must not be confounded with the class which hold that though there be a stipulation in the policy providing that, if other insurance be taken without the written consent of the insurer indorsed on the policy, that avoids the policy; yet, if such other insurance- be taken and notice thereof given to the
But the question here is, as in Lambertin v. Ins. Co., supra, whether a clause in the policy providing that no officer, agent, or other representative of the insurer shall have power to waive any condition of the policy, or be held to have waived the same, unless the waiver be written upon or attached to the policy, is valid. This prohibitory clause extends to every officer, agent, or .representative of the corporation. In its scope and breadth it includes president, directors, and other officers of the corporation. By its very terms, no officer, agent or representative of the company is excepted out of its operation. A corporation can not express its will, or in any act whatever, except through the instrumentality of its officers and agents. To tie the hands of these, is to tie those of the corporation. It is elementary law that a corporation, having legal capacity to enter into a contract, respecting any subject-matter, and which does so, can not disable or incapacitate itself by stipulation in the contract to subsequently waive any of the conditions, or to enter into any agreement for the modification or abrogation of any of the conditions, unless in writing. A written agreement is of no higher legal degree than a parol one. Either may vary or discharge the other, and there can be no more
The reasoning of the adjudged cases referred to in plaintiff’s brief along these lines, it seems to us, is unanswerable. Under the restrictive clause in question, not even the president and board of directors have power to waive any condition of the policy, except in writing. Even though the insured had notified them that he had taken out additional insurance in another- company, they were powerless under the restriction to orally consent to such additional insurance, or to waive the condition requiring such consent to be in writing. ■ It appears to us that both upon principle and authority a restriction in a policy which is so general in its scope and application as this must be held invalid and inefficacious.
As to the New York cases cited by defendant, it is sufficient to say that there a standard form of policy, analogous to that here, has been provided by statute, which statute there has the same effect as our statute of frauds. But here a valid contract of insurance may be made by parol, and so it follows, of course, that a valid modification of such contract may be subsequently made by parol. Baile v. Ins. Co., 73 Mo. 371.
There is nothing in Shoup v. Ins. Co., 51 Mo. App. 286, at variance with what was ruled in our former opinion. The policy there provided that the insurer should not be bound by any act or statement made to “any agent” unless inserted in the application, which formed the basis of the contract. The’ case is in no way analogous to this. The clause just referred to is wholly dissimilar to that containing the restriction in
The restrictive clause in this case being inefficacious, the policy must be read and construed as if it had never been therein inserted; consequently the agent of the defendant, who was clothed with the general power to solicit and consummate contracts of insurance within his territory, stood in the stead of the defendant, and represented its whole power to give validity to contracts, which he was authorized to execute and deliver, and to waive conditions precedent to liability, by oral agreement, including the condition as to the mode of waiver of such conditions precedent.
The defendant further objects that the assured failed to perform their covenant to keep a set of books, showing a record of the business transacted by them, including all purchases both for cash and credit. The court gave for plaintiff an instruction telling the jury that the insured, under the policy, were required to keep such books only as constituted a record which a person of ordinary intelligence, accustomed to accounts, could understand. And for defendant it gave three instructions, which, in substance, informed the jury that if the insured failed to keep a book record, or a set of books showing all the business transacted by them, including all purchases from the time of the issue of the policy up to the • fire, together with the last inventory of a stock, their verdict should be for the defendant. It sufficiently appears that the insured kept books of account in their business, but .as these are not to be found in the record, we are not able to say, as a matter of law, whether or not they were such books as were required by the provisions of the policy. Whether they were so in fact, was submitted, under the evidence and unexceptionable instructions, to the jury, whose finding is conclusive on us.