65 Iowa 308 | Iowa | 1884
The title deeds, under which plaintiff claimed the property described, conveyed lots 7 and 8, block 2, in.Floris, but she and those under whom she claimed had been in actual and uninterrupted possession’ of the property occupied by her when the risk was taken for more than ten years, under a claim of ownership. It was also shown that there is a block 2 in the original plat of the town, and that there are lots in that block which are numbered 7 aud 8. The circuit court, in an instruction to the jury, ruled that plaintiff was entitled to recover, notwithstanding the fact that the property was situated in said addition, if the agent who took the risk knew where it was situated in fact, and intended to insure the building actually occupied by plaintiff, and the goods therein, and was not misled by the description. And, in disposing of a motion by defendant for judgment on the special findings of the jury, that the property owned by the plaintiff was not situated in the original town, but in the addition thereto, the court made substantially the same ruling. This holding is the ground of the first exception argued by counsel for defendant.
The position is, not that the policy is necessarily rendered void by the alleged error in the description of the projierty, but that, as by its terms it covers property entirely different from that intended by the parties to be included in it, there
Plaintiff’s store-building was situated on the lots in Hoisington’s addition, and she desired to obtain insurance upon it, and upon the stock of merchandise which she kept in it. Defendant’s agent went to that particular building, and made an examination of the premises with, the view of insuring the building and the stock of goods in it; and when he issued the policy he had that property in mind, and supposed he was insuring it; and when plaintiff received the policy she understood that it covered that property. It is now assumed by defendant that the policy covers other and entirely different property, and, if this be true, its position that there can be'no recovery in an action at law until there lias been a reformation of the contract is also probably correct. Wood, Ins. § 95; Holmes v. Charlestown Mut. F. Ins. Co., 10 Metc., 211; Ewer v. Washington Ins. Co., 16 Pick., 502. But we think defendant is not warranted in this assumption. Whatever of ambiguity or uncertainty there is in tlie description of the property is created by the words used as descriptive of the lots and block upon which it was situated. In every other respect the description is certain and clear. Considering the description in the application and that in the policy together, and omitting the number of the lots and block, the property described with certainty is the one-story frame store-building in the town of Floris, owned and occupied by plaintiff, and the stock of merchandise kept by her therein. But defendant’s position is that the words “lots 7 and 8, in block 2, in the town of Floris,” are certainly descriptive of property situate in the original plat of the town. But we think this is not true. The addition is as certainly part of the town as is the land covered by the original plat, and lots 7 and 8, in block 2, in the addition, are in the town, as certainly as the lots of corres
Conceding that it was necessary for plaintiff to allege and prove that she was induced to forbear bringing the suit within the six months by the representations and promises of defendant, she was required to allege in the pleading only the ultimate fact. The letters constituted but a portion of the evidence by which the allegation would be proved, and it was wholly unnecessary to set them out in the pleading; but we cannot say that defendant was in any manner prejudiced by the overruling of the motion to strike them out. We will, therefore, not disturb the judgment on this ground.
Plaintiff alleges that immediately after the fire she gave notice of the loss to defendant, and that a few days thereafter it sent its general agent to examine into the loss and adjust the same, and that said agent made an examination into all the circurnstauces of the fire, and that she then gave him full information as to the ownership of the property destroyed, and all matters pertaining to the loss, and gave him an invoice of the goods in the building at the time of the fire, and that the agent then and there waived the provision of the policy which requires written proof of the loss to be made, and promised and agreed that, when she procured from the wholesale dealers with whom she dealt invoices and bills of the goods which she had in the building at the time of the fire, and sent the same to defendant, it would pay the loss.' She also alleges that afterwards, in the month of May, as a matter of precaution, she made out and
There was evidence given on the trial tending to prove the alleged waiver of the provision requiring written proofs of the loss, and it was proved that, on the twenty-third of May, plaintiff prepared and sent to defendant her affidavit, in which some of the matters were shown which, by the provision of the policy, were required to be shown by the proofs of loss, and that defendant’s adjusting agent, on the ninth of July, wrote to plaintiff’s attorneys, and pointed out several particulars wherein he claimed said affidavit was insufficient as a proof of loss. And on the thirteenth of July plaintiff’s attorneys prepared and sent to defendant additional proofs, to Avhich it does not appear that any exception was taken. Defendant contends that “due notice and proof” of the loss were not made until the last proofs were received by it, and that, as the suit was instituted less than sixty days from that date, it was prematurely brought. But the jury found specially that the provision was waived by the adjusting agent who made the examination soon after the occurrence of the fire, and this was on the sixth -of March, so that, if a right of action has accrued at all in plaintiff’s favor, it accrued not later than sixty days from that date. That the provision of the policy requiring written proofs of the loss to be made may be waived, is well settled by the authorities. See Wood, Ins., § § 414, 496; Lycoming Fire Ins. Co. v. Dunmore, 75 Ill., 14; Patterson v. Triumph Ins. Co., 64 Me., 500.
Reversed.