110 Ga. 129 | Ga. | 1900
Wickham sued the Continental Insurance Company upon a policy of fire insurance, and recovered a judgment. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and it excepted.
Mr. Joyce in his work on Insurance thus states the rule: “If the insurer denies liability under the policy and refuses to pay the amount of loss claimed, the provision that no suit can be brought upon the policy until a certain time after loss or after proofs are furnished is thereby waived, and the right of action upon the policy accrues immediately upon such refusal.” í Joyce, Ins. §3211. In 13 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. (2d ed.) 374,, 375, after the general rule is stated to be, that the loss is not payable until the expiration of the time allowed by the policy after proofs for investigation and preparation, and that until that period.has run the loss is not “due and payable,” and no action can be maintained, it is further stated: “In many cases, however, either 'by reason of facts amounting to waiver of this
It was earnestly insisted by counsel in the present case that, as a denial of liability on a promissory note would not cause the same to mature before the time fixed in the contract, upon principle a denial of liability upon a contract of insurance would not cause the same to mature before the time fixed in a stipulation of the character under consideration. A complete answer to this contention is contained in the opinion of Mr. Justice Brewer (now Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States) in the case of Cobb v. Insurance Company, cited supra. He uses this language: “Counsel seeks to parallel this with the pase of a promissory note, and asks if, in case the company had given a note payable in si-xty days, an action thereon in thirty days would not have been premature, even though the company, subsequently to the execution of the note, denied all liability thereon. The parallel is not good. The latter is wholly a unilateral contract, with rights and liabilities fixed and determined, and without anything for adjustment, and without occasion for act or waiver by either party. To change the liability requires a new promise, not a denial or waiver.
It was contended by counsel for plaintiff in error, that as section 2108 of the Civil Code provided that an absolute refusal by the insurer to pay was a waiver of the notice and preliminary proofs which the contract called for, no other result than this would flow from such absolute refusal, the provision of the code being exhaustive of the subject. In order to maintain this contention it must appear from the terms of the law that it was the intention of the lawmaking body that its declaration should be exhaustive. It is hardly to be presumed that the legislature, in adopting those provisions in the code relating to the law of insurance, intended that what is therein contained should be exhaustive of the law on that subject. What is there said is controlling so far as it goes, but a rule deducible from the general principles of the law of insurance, not necessarily in con
The next question to be considered is whether the record shows that there was an absolute refusal to pay or a denial of liability by oñe who was at the time of the refusal or denial in such a position that his statements would bind the company, that is to say, by one who was the authorized agent of the company. It appears from the record that the insured had a conversation over the telephone with a man named Pelton, who was the adjuster for the defendant company. In reference to this conversation the plaintiff testified as follows: “I told him I received his letter that morning, where they had figured the loss $798.66, awarded me that. He says, you don’t understand it. I did not award you any $79S.66, that’s simply the figures of the umpire and the adjuster. I said, well, sir, how much are you going to give me ? He said, I am not going to give you anything. I said, I will simply have to find a way to make you do it, and I slammed up the ’phone. I did not want to have any further conversation with him.” The record shows that Pelton was adjuster and special agent for the defendant; that his business was to adjust losses under its policies; and that he went to Savannah for the purpose of adjusting the loss which the plaintiff sustained. From these facts it would seem to be clear that it was the duty of Pelton to determine what was the liability of the company growing out of the fire, and to ascertain in accordance with the terms of the policy the amount to he paid thereon. If he had authority to fix the amount of liability, then he had authority to declare that there was no liability, and the
The charge as a whole fairly submitted to the jury the issues raised by the pleadings. The portions alleged to be erroneous, read in the light of the entire charge and of the evidence, were free from substantial error. The evidence authorized the verdict, and no error has been brought to our attention which in our opinion required the granting of a new trial.
Judgment on main bill of exceptions affirmed; cross-bill dismissed.