93 Va. 553 | Va. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Rockingham county in favor of the defendant, upon a demurrer to evidence, and the facts and circumstances out of which the suit arose may be stated as follows:
The plaintiff in error owned a farm in Rockingham county, with a dwelling house thereon, which he agreed to sell to H. M. Bell in 1890 for $11,280, with the privilege to Bell to turn over his purchase to the Grottoes Company, upon its paying $4,000 in cash, and the residue on time. The property was turned over by Bell to The Grottoes Company upon the terms named. In addition to the specific security of a vendor’s lien reserved on the property, Cochran required that the dwelling should be insured for his benefit, which was done by Bell and the Grottoes Company in the London Assurance Corporation, the defendant in error; and the policy for $2,000 contained the provision that the loss, if any, was to be payable to Cochran, as his interest might appear. On the 3rd day of February, 1893, at which time there was fiue to Cochran eight or nine thousand dollars of the purchase money, the dwelling insured was entirely destroyed by fire. Cochran promptly notified the defendant company of the fire, and of his claim of indemnity under the policy. The defendant company, with promptness also, sent its adjuster to examine the premises, see the parties interested, and ascertain the character and extent of Cochran’s interest in the insurance money. This adjuster, J. Tyler Jackson, visited the premises on February 20, 1893, saw Mr. Rumple, the President of The Grottoes Company, and tried to get him to sign the proofs of loss, but he declined to do so until Bell had signed. Jackson then went to the house of Cochran, and spent the night of February 21st, and on the 22d of February, 1893, obtained the signature of Bell to the proofs of loss, and sent them again to Rumple for his signature, with the request
“New York, January 22, 1894.
“ J. Tyler Jackson, Esq., Adjuster, Charlottesville, Va.
“ Dear Sir,—“ Claim—EL M. Bell and The Grottoes Company.
“We have yours of the 19th. In the circumstance we consider that so far at least as Bell and the Grottoes Company are concerned, they ought not to expect any waiver of our
“ Yours truly,
“ C. L. Case, Manager.
J. F. J.”
On the next day, January 23, Jackson enclosed a copy of the letter from Case, Manager, with a letter of his own to Cochran, and this letter of Jackson’s is as follows:
“ Charlottesville, Va., Jan’y 23, 1894.
“1Í P. M.
“ Col. J. C. Cochran, Folly Mills, Va.
“ My Dear Sir,—Above is exact copy of letter just received from London Assurance Corporation, and is, I think, extremely liberal. It also shows that you have to deal with a first-class, straightforward company, which seems anxious only for a settlement. They, like you, appear fretted at the way in which the Grottoes Company have acted. They are, however, wrong as regards Major Bell, and their coupling his name with the Grottoes Company must be an oversight of clerk who wrote the letter, as they know that he has signed the papers. Please give proofs of loss your early attention, and return them to me as soon as you find you can do nothing with them, or can get receivers to sign them.
“ Very truly yours, &c.,
“ J. Tyler Jackson, Adjuster.”
“ Arista Hoge. W. B. McChesney.
“In return. Received February 2,1894.
“ Office of London Assurance Corporation.
“Hoge & McChesney, Atlas Insurance Agency.
“ Staunton, Va., January 30, 1894.
“ Dear Sir,—I return proof of loss signed by Bell and Receivers of the Grottoes Company.
“ The waiver of limit as to myself will not be satisfactory to the other parties.
“ Please send before Friday evening to Hoge & McChesney, Staunton, Va., or telegraph the same at my expense, a waiver of section twelve of policy for a reasonable time so the company can adjust loss, as I do not want to docket a. suit, as the company does not seem to be at any fault.
“Yours respectfully,
“J. C. Cochran.”
The Receivers instead of signing the proofs of loss, as instructed, attached thereto the following:
“ Referring to the foregoing affidavit of H. M. Bell of February 22, 1893, touching the loss on the buildings insured by the policy in said affidavit mentioned and described, the undersigned, J. W. Rumple and J. W. Blackburn, Receivers of the Grottoes Company, hereby declare that, the best of their information and belief, the facts and circumstances relating to the loss referred to in said affidavit; and they hereby consent and agree that the loss on said property as it has been, or may be adjusted, shall be paid by the insurance corporation, the said London Assurance Corporation of London, England, to James C. Cochran, payment to whom by*558 said Insurance Corporation shall be a sufficient acquittance for the amount of said loss so far as the Grottoes Company is concerned. But it is distinctly understood and provided that nothing herein stated or agreed to is in anywise to affect the relative and respective rights of said Cochran, H. M. Bell and the Grottoes Company amongst themselves in respect to the property insured or to the insurance money.
“ Given under our hands this 30th day of January, 1894.
“ J. W. Rumple,
“ John W. Blackburn,
“ Receivers of the Grottoes Company.
“ State of Virginia, county of Augusta, to-wit:
“ Subscribed and sworn to by J. W. Rumple, one of the Receivers of the Grottoes Company, this 30th day of January, in the year 1893, before me, the undersigned.
“ Fitzhugh Elder, Notary Public.”
Upon the receipt of the letter of Cochran enclosing the proofs of loss on January 30, 1894, Jackson wrote to Cochran a letter the substance of which is that he, as adjuster, had much less right than an agent in regard to the conditions of a policy; that an agent has no authority whatever to waive any of the printed conditions, or even his own written conditions after they have been written, forwarded to the company, and accepted; “therefore, that, as an adjuster, I have no authority whatever to waive any of the conditions (printed or otherwise) of a policy of the London Assurance Corporation, my only connection (and all that ever existed) with them being that of an adjuster.” After quoting from the manuscript addition to the printed proofs of loss signed by the Receivers of the Grottoes Company, thafi'part which states the conditions upon which the Receivers signed, Jackson then* says: “The last five words (or to the insurance
On February 2, 1894, the day before the twelve month’s limit stipulated for in the twelfth section of the policy expired, Cochran instituted suit on the policy in the Circuit Court of Rockingham county, to which the defendant company pleaded in abatement the provision in the policy which gave the company sixty days within which to pay the loss from the time that the proofs of loss were received at the company’s office in New York, and that sixty days had not elapsed since the proofs of loss were received by the company; whereupon the plaintiff, Cochran, suffered a non-suit, and after sixty days from the final delivery of the proofs of loss to Jackson, and on the 23d of April, 1894, brought this action, to which the defendant company filed its special plea that the action had not been brought within twelve months from the date of the loss, February 3,1893, as stipulated for in the twelfth section of the policy, and also pleaded the general issue. Upon the issues joined on the special plea and non-assumpsit, a trial was had which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount of the policy, $2,000, but on motion of the defendant company the. Circuit Court set it aside and awarded a new trial. At a second trial, after the evidence of both plaintiff and defendant had been submitted to the jury, the defendant company demurred to the plaintiff’s evidence, in which the plaintiff joined, and the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for $2,000, with interest from April
From what has been stated, it will be observed that section twelve of the policy sued on stipulates that, unless suit is brought on the policy within twelve months next after the loss occurs, the lapse of time shall be taken and deemed as conclusive evidence against the validity of the claim, any statute of limitations to the contrary notwithstanding; and much of the argument of counsel has been spent in the discussion of the rights of the parties to contract for a limitation on the rights of the insured to bring his action to recover the loss, in contravention of the statute of limitations, and whether or not the twelve month’s limitation began to run from the date of the fire February 3, 1893, or from the date that the cause of action accrued, that is, from the expiration of the sixty days next after the proofs of loss were completed and received by the defendant company. But in the view we- take of the case, if these be open questions in Virginia, they are not necessary to be considered here; nor is it necessary to review the several bills of exceptions taken by the plaintiff in error at the two trials. A decision of the case turns, we think, upon whether or not the extension granted by the defendant company to the plaintiff in error, as contained in the letter of Case, Manager, of January 22,1894, and communicated to plaintiff in error by Jackson, adjuster, January 23, 1894, was in force when the suit was brought. According to the plain meaning of the language employed in the letter of January 22, the plaintiff in error was to have from February 3rd to May 3rd, 1894, “within which to bring suit.” It is contended, however, for the defendant company, that Cochran did not accept the extension, as shown by his instituting his suit of February 2, 1894, which was withdrawn, his letter to Jackson of Jan
Plaintiff in error testified that, when he received the letter giving him the extension of ninety days, he filed it away, and rested easy, but afterwards when he furnished the proofs of loss, and the Insurance Company refused to pay, he determined to bring the suit of February 2, 1894, and wrote Jackson the letter of January 30, 1894. He further states positively that he accepted the ninety days’ extension, and relied on it. There is nothing inconsistent with this statement, unless it be the letter to Jackson of January 30,1894, and the institution of the suit of February 2, 1894. In the letter he does not say that the extension was not satisfactory to him, but that it would not be satisfactory to the other parties.
A person is presumed to accept that which is beneficial to him, and it is certain that an extension of time within which to institute the suit was, under the circumstances surrounding the plaintiff in error, a benefit to him. It is true that, in the letter of January 30, he asked for a waiver of the 12th section of the policy, and it may be that the jury would have been justified in inferring from that letter a rejection of the extension of time unless it was made to embrace the Grottoes Company and H. M. Bell; but it may also be fairly inferred from that letter that, although the ninety days’ extension was satisfactory to Cochran, and he relied upon it, a complete waiver of the 12th section was asked for, and
We do not see enough in the acts of Cochran, or in his letter of January 30, 1894, to justify the conclusion that he did not accept .the benefit of the ninety days’ extension, and rely on it. This being so, the ninety days’ extension had the effect of making the period within which this suit might be brought fifteen months from the date of the loss, instead of twelve, as written in the policy.
How then does the case stand? As has already been pointed out, the. letter of Case, Manager, of January 22, 1894, after saying “ under the circumstances we consider that so far as Bell and the Grottoes Company are concerned, they ought not to expect any waiver,” &c., and, after attributing all causes of delay to thesé parties, concludes: “And consequently, as far as Col. Cochran is concerned, we are willing to extend the time within which to bring suit for three months from the 3rd proximo, in the hopes that some arrangement towards a settlement may be come to before the expiration of that time.” This is communicated at once by Jackson, without a suggestion of a qualification or a condition, and with the request that he return the- proofs of loss, whether the signatures of the receivers of the Grottoes Company are gotten or not. The proofs were sent on January 30, 1894, with- the signatures of the receivers attached at the foot of the., paper by which they gave ample and complete -authority.
Doubtless the Circuit Court sustained the demurrer to ■evidence on the ground that the ninety days’ extension was not in force when this suit was brought. In this view we
Reversed.