50 Md. 180 | Md. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The principal questions in this case are, whether the requirements of the eighth clause or condition of the policy of insurance sued on have been waived, or whether they have been complied with by the insured.
The policy provides that the insured should, forthwith after loss sustained, give notice thereof in writing to the secretary of the company, and, as soon thereafter as possible, deliver a particular account of the loss or damage sustained, under oath, declaring such account to he true and just, &c. This is required by the sixth clause or condition of the policy. In addition to this requirement, the policy contains, as its eighth clause or condition, the following stipulation:—
“And whenever required, the insured or person claiming shall produce and exhibit the hooks of account, hills of purchase, or duplicates thereof, and other vouchers, to the insurers or their specially authorized agent, in support of the claim, and permit extracts and copies thereof to he made; and also exhibit to any person or persons named by this company, and permit to he examined by them, any property damaged on which any loss-is claimed; and shall also, if required, submit to an examination or examinations, under oath, by the agent or attorney of this company, and answer all questions touching his, her or their knowledge of anything relating to such loss or damage, and subscribe and make oath to such examination, the same being reduced to writing. And until such proofs, examinations, declarations, certificates and exhibits are produced, and permitted by the claimant, when required as above, the loss shall not he payable.”
The fire causing the loss occurred about the 20th of October, 1876, and the notice and preliminary proofs of
This letter was offered in evidence by the insured to show waiver; and the Court instructed the jury, that if they found such letter to have been written and sent to the plaintiff by the agent of the company, then there was a waiver on the part of the company of any further preliminary proof of loss than had before that time been presented to the company. In thus instructing the jury we think there was error.
It must be borne in mind that the whole dispute or controversy between the parties was, and had been from the commencement, in regard to the amount of the claim made by the insured. The company, according to the insured’s own testimony, had offered to pay a less sum than that claimed by him, but which he refused. In view of these facts, what meaning was conveyed by the letter of the agent, which informed the attorney of the insured that the company would contest the payment of the claim, in its then exaggerated form, under the terms and conditions of the policy? Clearly, none other than that the company still adhered to and would persist in its refusal to pay the claim because it was excessive in amount, and that the terms and conditions of the policy would be relied on as a protection against what was regarded as an exaggerated demand. If the letter had put the refusal to pay upon other and distinct grounds, or if it had been silent as to the grounds of refusal, but simply denied liability for the loss, without intimating that there was a defect, and in what particular, in the preliminary proofs furnished, then it might well have been insisted, according to the authorities, that there had been a waiver of all further preliminary proof; for otherwise the insured would have been liable to be taken by surprise. But here the letter in evidence pointedly directs attention to the ground of refusal,
The construction of this eighth clause or condition, and the duty of the insured thereunder, on the requirement of the company, are correctly stated in the first prayer of the company, which was rejected by the Court below. The insured was not only hound to produce and exhibit to the company or its agent, upon being required so to do, the bills of purchase, if within his power or control, but, if they were destroyed, as he himself proved, he was hound to produce duplicates thereof, if it was possible for him so to do. And it was no excuse for his failure to produce such duplicates that they were not in his possession or at his command at the time of the demand made; if they could have been had by application to those who could have furnished them, he was bound to procure and exhibit them as required. Compliance with this condition, if required by the company, was indispensable to the insured’s right of action, and there is no answer to
But while we are of opinion that the defendant’s first prayer embodies the correct interpretation of the eighth condition of the policy, the last clause of that prayer, which asserts that there was no evidence before the jury legally sufficient to show compliance by the plaintiff with the terms of the condition, or to excuse his non-compliance therewith, and therefore he was not entitled to recover, justified the Court in refusing the prayer as offered. We think there were some circumstances, before the jury reflecting upon the question of the inability of the plaintiff to gratify the demand for duplicates of his bills of purchase; and that being the case, the prayer should not have sought to withdraw that question from the jury.
The judgment will be reversed and a new trial ordered.
Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded.