184 Iowa 747 | Iowa | 1918
Bartholomew v. Merchants’ Ins. Co., 25 Iowa 507, seems to be the only case that appears to be dealing with the exact question before us. It is therein held that meeting the defense of misrepresentation in the application by showing that the agent was informed of the truth, is an avoidance by plaintiff, “by way of estoppel consisting of the acts of the company and its agents;” and Rowley v. Empire Ins. Co., 36 N. Y. 550, is cited. The main case continues that the defendant must set up the misrepresentation and prove it, and that, thereupon, the statute allows the plaintiff to meet such defense by “denial or avoidance, as the case may require.” In the case at bar, the denial by operation of law, upon which appellees rely, merely denies that the application contains anything that is not true. It stands admitted that it did. If this is to be met, it must be an avoidance, and not a denial — and no avoidance is pleaded. We are unable to agree with the contention of the appellee that 19 Cyc. 923, and 40 Cyc. 254, dispense with the necessity for such pleading. The utmost that this authority declares is that such estoppel may be pleaded by the plaintiff in the first instance; and it is further said the plaintiff ’ cannot, either generally or specifically, allege per
This testimony should not have,' been received, in the state of the pleadings.
III. It is complained of Instruction 5 that, while the court did tell the jury that, on proof by the defendant of a material concealment or misrepresentation, the policy would be avoided, there was a failure to instruct the jury as to what was a material concealment or misrepresentation. An inspection of the instruction in'question shows that the jury was told what would be such concealment or misrepresentation; for it is told that, if the plaintiffs concealed from the agent that the premises were mortgaged to the lumber company, or that a judgment and decree of foreclosure was had upon the mortgage, or that the lumber company had procured a policy of $1,000, these would constitute a material concealment or misrepresentation.
“ 'Concealment is the designed and intentional withholding of any fact material to the risk, which the assured in honesty and good faith ought to communicate.’ So that a concealment involves not only the materiality of the fact withheld, and which ought to have been communicated, but also the design and intention of the insured in withholding it. * * * It was not for the court to say, as matter of law, * * * that the insured had intentionally and fraudulently withheld them.”
It is true there is testimony that, long after the insurance had been effected, there was an admission by plaintiff Collins, and possibly his wife, that there was no mortgage such as the one held by the Bradford Lumber Company. But manifestly, that gives no support to the claim that the existence of the lumber company mortgage was
For reasons already stated, we attach no importance to the testimony of Collins that, while both he and the agent of the defendant were drunk, and almost so drunk as not to know what they were doing, Collins, in effect, told the agent that there was a mortgage to the lumber company, and that he wanted the policy fixed accordingly.
While the existence of the mortgages and of the foreclosure and of the taking of additional insurance may, in a proper case, avoid a policy, this does not establish it was error to submit to this jury whether the existence and doing of these things had been fraudulently concealed.
V. Instruction 5% defines “conceal” or “concealment” to mean the intentional withholding of any fact material to the risk, which the assured, in honesty and good faith, ought to communicate. It is excepted to on the ground that it was misleading, because the facts were not in dispute, and that, therefore, the question of whether there had been a concealment was one of law for the court, and should not have been submitted to the jury at all. It is further urged against the instruction that it is an improper definition, and that the jury, assuming the question was for them, should, instead, have been told that concealment was the suppression of any material fact within the knowledge of the plaintiff that defendant was not presumed to know, and had no means of knowing.
We can see no substantial difference between an in
VI. Defendant asked directed verdict because, inter alia, neither of the plaintiffs was the absolute and unqualified owner of the insured property.
We shall soon come to deal with the fact that, when the insurance was effected, a mortgage lien upon the insured property had been foreclosed, and said property sold by sheriff’s sale. Whatever the effect of that may be, it did not change that Delia is the sole owner of the property. Green
But all incumbrance was made by those of whom plaintiff purchased, and before such purchase. Hence, it was not created by appellees, nor could they control its .creating.
Now, it is true it is proved that the foreclosure and sheriff’s sale of part of the insured property made the risk more hazardous, and it i¿ the law of the case that the insurance is not separable; and if the policy is void as to part, it is as to all. But the difficulty is that, ^though the hazard was increased by “legal proceeding,” those proceedings worked no change in either “the interest, title, possession, or use of the subject of insurance.” Neither of these were affected by mortgage, judgment of foreclosure, or sheriff’s sale. They could not be affected until sheriff’s deed issued, and defendant makes no claim based upon such issuance, if there was one. ' Indeed, it alleges no more than that “the equity of redemption had almost expired.”
For the error pointed out in the first paragraph of this opinion, the cause must be — Reversed and remanded.