54 Neb. 740 | Neb. | 1898
From the pleadings in this case we ascertain the material facts thereof to be: In August, 1894, one Penner held an insurance policy issued by the Home Fire Insurance Company, hereinafter called the home company, agreeing to indemnify him for any loss that certain property described in the policy might sustain by reason of fire, lightning, or tornado prior to a specified date. This policy contained a provision that if Penner should thereafter procure any other insurance on the insured property without the knowledge and consent of the home company its contract of insurance should be void. Subsequently Penner, without the knowledge and consent of the home company, procured the Farmers Mutual
At the time the Penner policy was issued section 42, chapter 48, Compiled. Statutes 1897, was in force and that section provides that any insurance company transacting business in this state “shall cancel any policy of insurance hereafter issued or renewed, at any time, by request of the party insured, or his legal representative, and shall return to the said party, or his representative as aforesaid, the net amount of premium received by the company, after deducting the actual compensation of the agent or solicitor for- securing the issue of said policy, and also deducting the customary short-rate premium for the expired time of the full term for which said policy was issued or renewed, anything in the policy to the contrary notwithstanding.” This statute was as much a part of the Penner policy as if it had been actually written or incorporated therein. The farmers company, by taking an assignment from
But the home company had the right, upon ascertaining that Penner had procured additional insurance upon the property which it had insured, to treat that policy as void because of Penner’s violation of its provisions, and when it ascertained that Penner had procured additional insurance, it did exercise its right to consider the contract of insurance with Penner at an end; but Penner’s violation of his insurance contract did not invest him with a right of action against the home company to recover the premium which he had paid the company therefor, or any part of that premium. The contract of insurance did not provide that if the insurer declared it to be at an end because of Penner’s violation of its provisions in procuring additional insurance on the insured property without the consent of the home company that it would repay Penner the unearned premium; nor is this the meaning of the statute constructively incorporated into and made a part of the policy.
Affirmed.