11 Wash. 181 | Wash. | 1895
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought to recover for loss of property covered by an insurance policy issued by the defendant. There was a clause in the policy which provided that no action could be maintained thereon unless commenced within six months from the date of the fire. On account of this provision, and of the fact that suit was not commenced until more than six months from the date of the fire, it is claimed by the appellant that the action cannot be maintained; and upon that claim alone it seeks to have the judgment rendered in the court below reversed.
Upon the trial it appeared from testimony which
It was not made to appear that at any of the interviews prior to the one in the month of March, there had been any definite proposition made to the plaintiff by or on behalf of the company. It did appear
Did these interviews, and the action of the company in relation to the loss, warrant the respondent in believing it was its intention to waive the condition in the policy upon which it now plants itself? The company contends that there were no facts shown by the proofs which would amount to a waiver of the condition, or even tend to show such waiver.
In determining the question thus presented, it must be borne in mind that the insured and the insurer, in cases like the one under consideration, do not stand upon an equal footing. The insurer is always represented by persons of experience in such matters, while the insured is usually a man of much less general information, with little or no knowledge in relation to insurance matters. Such being the relation of the parties, good conscience requires that there should be no attempt to overreach the insured by the insurer. It does not follow that the terms of insurance contracts can be set aside or disregarded. Such contracts, like all others, must be presumed to have been entered into by both parties with their eyes open, and the conditions to which they have assented must be enforced in contracts of this kind the same as in any other. But it does follow, from the relation of the parties to each other, that courts will require the utmost frankness on the part of those representing the insurer in their dealings with the insured. In the case at bar, the conceded facts fail to show that the insured at any time had
There is no proof tending to show that such notification was given prior to the month of March, and this action, instituted early in April, was brought within a reasonable time thereafter. It follows that the company was not in a situation to derive any benefit from the clause of the policy under consideration.
What we have said disposes of the assignment of error founded upon an instruction given to the jury. The undisputed proofs, as hereinbefore interpreted, warranted .the instruction to the jury to the effect that unless they found that there had been a rejection of the claim prior to the date of the interview in Portland, in the month of March, the plaintiff could recover.
The judgment must be affirmed.
Scott and Gordon, JJ., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring).—I concur in the result, but on the ground that, construing all the provisions of the contract together, the statute of limitations had not commenced to run at the time the action was commenced.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).—I see nothing in the record in this case that convinces me that the agent of the insurance company ever said or did anything in regard to the loss in question, which either the respondent or the court had a right to construe as a waiver of any right the company had under its contract as set forth in the policy, and about which there is no dispute. I therefore respectfully dissent.