58 So. 549 | Ala. | 1912
Day brought this action, as trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of AY. C. Harmon, against the Home Insurance Company on a policy insuring a stock of merchandise against loss by fire. Defense was interposed in the way of a plea setting up a breach of the covenant contained in the “iron-safe clause” of the policy. The covenant will be stated by the reporter. The plea was that the covenant had been broken in this: “That the insured had not taken a complete itemized inventory of stock on hand within 12 calendar months prior to the date of the policy, and failed to take such inventory 30 days after the issuance, of said policy.” Confessing this plea, plaintiff sought to avoid its effect in several special replications which put fonvard the propositions, to state them generally in the language of appellant's brief, that where a merchant who has been in business for less than 12 months keeps a part of his stock of goods in a warehouse, distant from the store in which, he does business, the goods remaining unpacked and in the boxes in which they have been received from jobbers, and being removed from time to time as needed to replenish the active, stock on his shelves, the iron-safe clause in a policy of insurance on the stock in the. warehouse does not require that an inventory be kept, or, if it does, the requirement, is substantially met when the insured keeps all original invoices and a detailed account of all sales.
Several of the special replications set up a waiver of the alleged breach of the iron-safe clause in that defendant, after knowledge that the insured had not taken an inventory as required by the iron-safe clause of the policy, recognized and treated the policy as binding and entered into negotiations with plaintiff, as receiver in bankruptcy of the estate of the insured, for an adjustment of the loss, in consequence of which negotiations the said receiver incurred much trouble and expense. Defendant’s special rejoinder as amended brought forward a nonwaiver agreement entered into between the insured and the insurer after the loss and in view of a proposed investigation of the fire and a determination of the amount of the loss. The point taken against the rejoinder is that, after proceedings in bankruptcy have been commenced, the bankrupt can do nothing in derogation of the interests of the estate. If, at the time the nonwaiver agreement was entered into — that is, at a time between the commencement of the bankruptcy proceedings and the appointment of a receiver — the power to make such agreement resided anywhere, it was with the parties to this suit. The amendment rejoinder makes the receiver, plaintiff here, as effectually a party as if he had joined in the paper writing which witnessed the agreement as between the insurer and the insured bankrupt. There was no necessity that the agreement should be reduced to writing.
On the first decision of this case it was held that demurrers to plaintiff’s several special replications had. been properly sustained. On rehearing the other members of the court are of opinion that the demurrer to> special replication C should have been overruled. They put their conclusion on the averment of the replication, that, at the time of the transfer of the policy, defendant’s agent had notice of the fact that no inventory would be kept. This they hold amounted to a modification of the original policy-contract effective to elimi