236 Mass. 430 | Mass. | 1920
The question in the first case is whether there was any evidence which entitles the plaintiff to go to the jury. It is alleged in substance that the defendants verbally agreed to procure and deliver a valid policy of insurance against fire upon automobiles from time to time owned by the plaintiff in his busi
The second question is whether the action on the policy can
The plaintiff contends that the words "automobiles owned by the assured and held by him for sale” are ambiguous and open to explanation, and that the understanding of the parties as to the character of the property actually covered or to be covered should have been passed upon by the jury. We perceive no ambiguity. The words are to receive their ordinary meaning; nor can the automobiles be classified thereunder as comprising “new cars, second hand cars, and junk cars,” some of which it was mutually understood the plaintiff did not intend to insure. Hatch v. United States Casualty Co. 197 Mass. 101, 104. Follins v. Hill, 229 Mass. 321. The preliminary conversations between the plaintiff and the general agents before he ordered the policy, and conversations after it issued and before the fire, as well as conversations following the fire were also rightly excluded. The policy is a complete instrument. It cannot be varied or modified by prior negotiations as narrated by the plaintiff, Odiorne v. New England Mutual Marine Ins. Co. 101 Mass. 551, 553; DeFriest v. Bradley, 192 Mass. 346, 352, or overcome by invoking the aid of the doctrines of waiver and estoppel based on his interviews at any time
We now- come to the terms of the contract as shown by the policy and the rider. The policy is a “running policy,” under which upon the record the specific property to be insured is to be ascertained subsequent to December 15, 1915. Hartshorn v. Shoe & Leather Dealers’ Ins. Co. 15 Gray, 240. And from that date to the time of the fire the plaintiff received and sold about one hundred and nine automobiles of which about fifty were reported for insurance during the years 1916 and 1917. By clause six of the rider, “All risks attaching hereunder are to be reported to this Company as soon as known to the assured but no risk to be binding unless so reported and accepted, and for which a certificate is issued, signed by a duly authorized agent of the Company. This certificate is hereby made a part of this Policy. . . .” The company never having prepared nor provided a form of certificate, the judge correctly held that the lists of automobiles the plaintiff gave to the general agents, who approved them, the jury might find were a form of certificate which had been recognized by the company as sufficient. The “risks” nevertheless “attaching hereunder” were automobiles “owned by the assured and held by him for sale” during the period between the time when he acquired title and the date when he made delivery to a purchaser, or ceased to have them in his possession. While the delay varied, ranging from fifteen days to seventeen weeks, the plaintiff admitted that of the nineteen automobiles damaged by the fire at least thirteen had not been reported “as soon as known” to him. The language of the rider previously quoted is to be read with the fifth clause. It embraces all automobiles whether kept in the plaintiff’s storehouse or in his garage, and there being no evidence •from which compliance with these precedent conditions could
It follows that the exceptions in each case must be overruled, and it is
So ordered.