50 Ga. App. 75 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
G. Harris filed suit against the Farmers Mutual Fire Insurance Company, of Georgia, on a certain policy issued by it on December 3,1931, covering certain property described therein, which it was claimed was destroyed by fire on December 2, 1932. The petition made substantially the following ease: The defendant company is a mutual fire-insurance company. No premiums are paid by the policy-holders but said company is .operated by assessment of the members of the company of their proportionate part of the losses incurred by other members of the company. The plaintiff became a member of the Houston county division of the defendant company about 1918 or 1919, at which time he insured all his farm property located on two farms. On December 3, 1931, plaintiff entered into a written contract of fire-insurance (the contract sued upon) with the defendant company, insuring the property destroyed, together with other property of plaintiff, in the total sum of $2850, said property being located on a farm designated as the “Sistrunk Place.” The property destroyed and described in the policy was a crib-house valued at $350, which contained farm implements and supplies and which was built by the plaintiff and located on the “Sistrunk Place,” which property was leased by plaintiff, the lease expiring January 1, 1933. The petition further alleged a full compliance on the part of the plaintiff with the terms of the policy, payment of all assessments and lack of notification by the defendant of cancellation of the policy until a few days after the fire. By amendment to meet a special demurrer filed by the defendant, plaintiff attached to his petition a copy of the lease contract between him and Mrs. Wester of the property known as the “Sistrunk Place,” upon which the farm crib and contents destroyed were located. Defendant filed its answer denying liability, and alleged: “Further answering said petition, defendant says that in the summer of 1932, several months
The evidence for the plaintiff shows the issuance of the policy sued upon on December 3, 1931, and the loss of the property by fire on December 2, 1932. The plaintiff denied that he ever received any notice of the meeting of the stockholders on June 8, 1932, and says that he had two policies of insurance issued to him, one on property situated on what was known as the "Hose Place” and the other on the "Sistrunk Place,” the place on which the loss occurred; that representatives of the company called on him some time in July, 1932; "they were appraising and rewriting all of the insurance.” The buildings on the "Hose Place” were inspected by these agents. The plaintiff further testified: "I think the idea was to rewrite all the policies. I don’t remember they told me they were rewriting all the insurance, but they said they were rewriting and reappraising the property. . . They delivered me a new policy for the ‘Hose Place’ some two or three months later.” "I did not own the ‘Sistrunk Place’ and told them my lease was expiring and I did not know whether I would run it again another year or not.” The plaintiff denied that the agents of the company informed him, when they came around revaluing the property on the “Hose Place,” that the “Sistrunk Place” would be left off in
The view that we entertain of some phases of the case makes it unnecessary to refer specifically to some of the grounds of the motion for a new trial. The defendant’s main defense to the suit by the plaintiff on the insurance policy issued by it was that it had been duly cancelled before the alleged loss. We first direct our attention to this point. First, it appears that in September there was issued to the plaintiff a new policy, and that the application for it contained the following clause: “All previous policies cancelled,” and the application was signed by the plaintiff. It appears that the plaintiff operated two farms, one known as the “Hose Place” and the other known as the “Sistrunk Place,” which last-mentioned place he leased from a third person, this being the place upon which the loss occurred. Two separate policies in the-defendant company had theretofore covered the property on each farm. It appears that in the summer of 1932 there was a meeting of the stockholders in the defendant company and that a resolution was passed that all policies then existing in the company should be rewritten. Defendant’s agents visited the plaintiff for this purpose and did reinspect and revalue the property on the “Hose Place,” but plaintiff testified that they said that they would not bother with the “Sistrunk Place” at that time, because that policy had just been rewritten. The application and policy above referred to as received and signed by plaintiff covered only the property on the “Hose Place,” and did not contain any of the property contained in the policy sued on which was situated on the “Sistrunk Place” and insured in another policy. We are of the opinion that under the facts of this case, the clause above cited, which was con
The defendant company further contends that the letter above quoted, which was mailed to the defendant with the application which he signed, was a sufficient notice of cancellation. The same may be said with reference to the letter as has been said above with reference to the clause written in the application for the new policy. The right to cancel a policy of insurance entered into by the insurance company can be exercised only because it is reserved in
We are further of the opinion that under the provisions of the policy with reference to the right of cancellation by either party, notice of cancellation need not necessarily be in writing, that the trial judge properly left it to the jury, under all the facts and circumstances of the case, to say whether actual notice was conveyed
The policy provides that the company shall not be released from any obligation in case of loss or damage because of defective titles to property, but even though the insured is not the rightful or legal owner of the property, then shall the insurance or such part of the same as may not belong to the insured be paid to the proper owner. The insured had an insurable interest, whether as a leaseholder or as a plain tenant. Creech v. Richards, 76 Ga. 36; New Jersey Ins. Co. v. Rowell, 157 Ga. 360 (121 S. E. 414). It is contended by the defendant that the loss of the building, insured for $350 and of that value at the time of the loss, may not be recovered by the plaintiff, but that his recovery is limited to the value of the use of his remaining leasehold interest. The question as to the amount of recovery in a case of this character has never been decided' in Georgia, although it has been suggested in New Jersey Ins. Co. v. Rowell, supra, and Ætna Ins. Co. v. Foster, 43 Ga. App. 658 (159 S. E. 882). It has been held by some states that the lessee could only recover the value of the use of the property for the remainder of the term. See note in 68 A. L. R. 1344. On the other hand, there is authority to the effect that where the insured has an insurable interest he may recover the full value of the property, and especially is this true where the insurer has full knowledge of the extent of insured’s interest. See 68 A. L. R. 1344, cited above; A. & E. Ann. Cases 1913E, 742n. The evidence discloses, without dispute, that the company knew of the character of the interest of the plaintiff when it issued the policy and had known of it for at least eleven years prior thereto. The policy itself expressly waives defects of title. The company knew of the insured’s leasehold interest, which was an insurable interest. We are of the opinion, that the company may not, with full knowledge of the interest being insured, contract to insure and collect assessments on a named amount and then, in the event of loss, contend that insured’s interest is limited to the value of the rental of the leasehold for the remainder .of the term. A different ease might be presented if the policy contained no such provisions and the insurer was ignorant of the character and extent of insured’s interest in the property. In Simmons v. Home Insurance Co., 235 Ill. App. 344, it was said: “In an action by the lessee of buildings
The property in the case at bar was being insured. The company had notice of the interest of the' assured. It has been held
We recognize the principle that an insurance contract is not a wagering contract, but a contract purely of indemnity, but where a company with knowledge of the insured’s interest, as in the present case, elects to insure the property itself, rather than the insured’s leasehold interest therein, and there is no fraud or mistake in the procurement of the policy, it becomes liable to the insured for the value of the property lost, not exceeding the amount for which it is insured. It appears from the evidence in the present case that the barn destroyed was erected by the insured and had been insured in this company for 10 or 12 years, with full knowledge of the character of his interest. In view of the authorities cited and the opinion that we entertain of the matter, the error, if any, in the charge of the court with reference to the barn being a trade fixture, becomes harmless. The amount sued for was $350, value of the barn, and $800, value of its contents. The verdict was for $726.83.
Judgment affirmed.