209 N.W. 325 | Minn. | 1926
On July 23, 1924, the plaintiff sustained a fire loss of $405 on his farm property. He had an effective policy in the defendant company unless forfeited by nonpayment of an assessment due June 5, 1924; and the fact of forfeiture depends upon whether a notice of assessment had been mailed him by the company 30 days prior thereto. It is conceded, if we understand counsel, that under the by-laws the mailing of the notice was the one requisite, the receipt immaterial, and that if the notice was mailed forfeiture resulted from nonpayment, wherein Clark v. Rochester F.M.F. Ins. Co.
The secretary of the insurance company, who lived a short distance out of Spring Valley, testifies that he mailed the notice. There were some 2,700 sent. It took him some little while to arrange them. The work was done methodically and was checked. His testimony is positive that the notice to the plaintiff was deposited in the Spring Valley post office. He has no recollection of the particular notice. He speaks from the general course of business. He says there could not have been a mistake. He had been secretary of the company for 25 years, and the evidence suggests that he was efficient and painstaking.
The plaintiff received his mail by rural delivery from Racine, a post office some 10 miles from Spring Valley. His testimony is positive that he did not receive the notice. A jury could infer that if it had been mailed it would have been received. Such is the likely result, though mail does go astray sometimes. The plaintiff, like the secretary of the defendant, was an interested witness. This was a factor in weighing the evidence of each. Kingsland Land Co. v. Newman,
Order affirmed.