delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of assumpsit brought by Celeste Buysse against the appellant insurance company on a policy of insurance to recover for damages to an automobile occasioned by fire. A trial resulted in a judgment for plaintiff for $883. The cause is here on appeal.
N. W. Johnson, agent for the company, solicited the insurance and examined the car before the policy for $1,000 was issued by him. The policy contained the customary forfeiture provisions relative to incumbrances, sole and unconditional ownership of the property, false or fraudulent statements, and breaches of warranty. The property insured is described in the policy as a 1919 model, 34B, Oakland 5-passenger sedan; Serial No. 9833; Motor No. 79540; price list $1,825; purchased new and not mortgaged.
The declaration, besides containing the usual averments, charged that the agent who wrote the policy was at such time informed by plaintiff of the lien of a chattel mortgage on said automobile and that by reason thereof the said policy provision against incumbrances was waived. The declaration also averred that proofs of loss were waived, by promises to pay the insurance, and by a subsequent denial of all liability on account of the existence of said chattel mortgage.
A plea of the general issue with notice of special defenses was filed. The defenses thus presented were (1) that plaintiff warranted the automobile to be new, when in fact it was a second-hand or used car and that the representation was material to the risk; (2) that the automobile was incumbered by chattel mortgage, and (3) that no proofs of loss were submitted. Two other defenses were also presented by the notice but as they have not been mentioned in the briefs and argument we will deem them to have been abandoned.
Appellant’s agent examined the car before the policy was issued and put his own insurable value on it. The proof showed beyond doubt, that the car was of greater value than the amount for which it was insured. Tinder the undisputed evidence in this case, it can be said as a matter of law that there was no breach of warranty arising out of any statement made by appellee concerning the year the automobile was manufactured. (Mazeika v. Automobile Underwriters of America,
As to the first matter of defense, it is admitted that on August 11, 1922, the automobile was under the lien of a chattel mortgage dated June 20, 1922, for $475.11 due to Elmer L. and Bay C. Mizer; that the indebtedness secured by this mortgage was paid in full August 15, 1922; and that the fire which occasioned the damage occurred September 1, 1922. There was evidence which tended to show that the said agent, who solicited and wrote the insurance, was fully informed by appellee of the existence of the mortgage lien and that he stated there was no use to mention it in the application or policy because it was to be paid off in a few days. Johnson denied having any such information and also denied that he made any such statement as was attributed to him. Whether or not there was a waiver of the provision against incumbrances was a controverted question of fact for the jury.
No proofs of loss were furnished the company within 60 days after the fire as required by the policy, and it is claimed that this condition of the policy was waived, first, by the statement of the agent Johnson made a • few days after the fire that he would get the money for her and that she need not notify or write to the company; second, by the offer of G-. D. Phillips, an adjuster of the company, to settle the claim; and third, by the company’s basing its denial of all liability on the existence of the mortgage lien and not upon the failure of appellee to furnish proofs of loss.
As a general proposition an agent who merely solicits insurance has no power to waive a provision of a policy requiring proofs of loss. (American Central Ins. Co. v. Birds B. & L. Ass’n,
While, under the evidence here presented, we hold as a matter of law that the appellant’s offer to compromise and its denial of all liability did not constitute waivers of proofs of loss, nevertheless, we do not mean to express any view in regard to the weight of the oral testimony offered by appellee, to the effect that appellant through its agents, prior to October 31, 1922, denied all liability because of the said mortgage. Such evidence was admissible as tending to prove a waiver.
Under our view of the case appellant had the right to interpose as a defense both the alleged violation of the mortgage provision of the policy and the failure of the insured to furnish proofs of loss. However, the trial court virtually eliminated one of these defenses by giving an instruction, known as plaintiff’s modified instruction No. 2, in which the jury was told, in substance, that if it believed from the evidence that the agent of the insurance company, when he solicited and wrote the insurance, knew of the chattel mortgage and advised appellee that it need not be mentioned in the application or policy, then the mortgage provision of the policy was waived by the company and the verdict of the jury should be for the plaintiff. It will be seen that this instruction directs a verdict and wholly ignores the defense based on the failure of appellee to furnish proofs of loss. The jury was instructed that if the company’s agent knew of the existence of the mortgage at the time the policy was issued, it should find for the plaintiff without regard to whether the provision for furnishing proofs of loss had been waived or not. This instruction deprived the appellant of a substantial defense and was of course prejudicial to it.
Because of the likelihood of this case being tried again, it is necessary for us to express our view upon certain questions involving the admissibility of evidence. There is no doubt that evidence tending to prove the value of the car at the time it was damaged by fire is admissible. Under the terms of the policy the company was only liable for such loss and damage as was occasioned by the fire. It appears from the evidence that the automobile was almost wholly destroyed and that the only value remaining was its junk value.
Appellant offered in evidence a book entitled “National Used Car Market Report,” also “Branham’s Table Reference Book.” We are somewhat in doubt as to whether the offer of the books was intended to prove price or to show that appellee misrepresented to the company the year in which the car was made. But whatever may have been the purpose, we see no error in the ruling of the court in excluding them.
We believe the testimony of Mrs. Buysse regarding her conversation with Johnson on the morning after the fire was properly admitted. There 'is testimony in the case tending to show that Johnson actively participated in the efforts made to adjust the loss and that he not only acted as an agent in procuring the insurance, but that he engaged in an attempt to adjust the loss with the knowledge and consent of the company. He accompanied Phillips, the adjuster, to see Mrs. Buysse and urged her to accept $600 in settlement of her claim and according to her testimony, he finally offered her an additional 10-dollar bill to sign a release. Johnson admitted his participation in the efforts to settle the claim but denied he made the offer of $10. However, such denial does not affect the situation when it comes to determining the admissibility of appellee’s version of his statements.
Because of the errors herein pointed out this cause is reversed and remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
