69 F. 71 | 8th Cir. | 1895
Lead Opinion
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of tlie court.
“The first question is whether the defendant company is estopped from setting up the clause in question by notice to itself of the prior insurance at the time the policy was issued. * * * The same question was decided in Greene v. Insurance Co., 11 R. I. 434, where it was held that a mistake in a policy, limiting the amount of insurance, after due notice to the company of a larger amount, might be shown in evidence by way of estoppel. The ground of the decision was that it would be a kind of fraud for the insurers to insist upon a forfeiture for which they were more blamable than the insured. It would be taking advantage of one’s own wrong. We see no reason to question that 'decision, and, following it, we must hold the first replication to be good. * * The fourth replication.raises the question, of greater difficulty, whether the fact that the plaintiff informed the agent of the defendant company, who procured the insurance, of the existence of other insurance, is a sufficient answer to the plea setting up the clause of the policy as to other insurance, and alleging the breach of it. Upon this point we think the tendency and weight of modern decisions are in favor of the plaintiff. * * * There is much room for doubt, therefore, whether public policy requires the adoption of a rule which treats a contract of insurance differently from any other contract in writing. But, however this may be, we recognize the tendency of decision in favor of the insured, and, if this were a new question in this state, we might feel compelled to yield to the weight of authority.”
Tbe early doctrine on this subject bas been so generally denied and repudiated by tbe courts of tbe country, state and federal, that it bas come to be regarded as overruled and obsolete. Among tbe decisions of tbe supreme court of tbe United States wbicb effectually dissipate tbe doctrine of Carpenter v. Insurance Co., supra, attention may be called to tbe cases of Insurance Co. v. Wilkinson, 13
“According to the views expressed by this court in Insurance Oo. v. Wilkinson, 13 Wall. 222, and other more recent cases, the defendant was concluded by the act of its agent. The reference to collateral insurance in other companies is subject to the same consideration. The insurance was being applied for through this very agent who. wrote the answers, and who knew the whole facts, and between whom and the general agent they had been referred to in their correspondence. The defense on this ground is utterly destitute of equitable consideration.”
The cases in this court to the same effect are Insurance Co. v. Snowden, 7 C. C. A. 267, 58 Fed. 342; Insurance Co. v. Robison, 7 C. C. A. 444, 58 Fed. 723; Assurance Soc. v. Winning, 58 Fed. 541, 7 C. C. A. 359, 19 U. S. App. 173.
The rule deducible from the great weight of modern authority is that if, before or after the policy is issued, the agent has notice of the amount of insurance which the insured is carrying or intends to carry on the property insured, and makes no objection thereto, the company will be estopped from claiming a forfeiture, after there is a loss, upon the ground that such prior or subsequent insurance, of which its ageut had notice in fact, was not indorsed in writing on the policy. When notified that other insurance has been or will be obtained, it is open to the agent, if the policy has not been issued, to .decline the risk, or, if it has been issued, to cancel the policy. The company cannot after such notice accept and retain the premium, and when a loss occurs avoid the policy because its agent had not indorsed thereon the company’s consent; to the prior or subsequent insurance of which he had notice. It is contended that consent to other insurance cannot be proved by oral evidence— First, because the policy provides that it shall be in writing indorsed on the policy; and, second, because it would violate the rule against the reception of oral evidence to contradict or vary a written instrument. But; it has been authoritatively decided that a contract of insurance is not within the statute of frauds, and may be by parol. Commercial Ins. Co. v. Union Mutual Ins. Co., 19 How. 318; Insurance Co. v. Shaw, 94 U. S. 574; Henning v. Insurance Co., 2 Dill. 26, Fed Cas. No. 6,366. And if it can be made by parol, it may be varied by parol. Parties to contracts cannot disable themselves from making any contract allowed by law in any mode the law allows contracts to be made. A written contract may be changed by parol, and a parol one changed by a writing, despite any provision in the contract to the eon trary.
“A written bargain is of no higher legal degree than a parol one. Either may vary or discharge the other, and there can he no more force in an agreement in writing not to agree by parol than in a parol .agreement not; to agree in writing. Every such agreement is ended by the new one which contradicts it. Insurance Co. v. Earle, 33 Mich. 153. Set', to the same effect, Insurance Co. v. McCrea, 8 Lea, 513; Insurance Co. v. Norton, 96 U. S. 234; Pechner v. Insurance Co., 65 N. Y. 195; Insurance Co. v. Wilkinson, 13 Wall. 222.”
In Insurance Co. v. Norton, supra, the policy contained a condition that, unless otherwise expressly agreed in writing, it should be
“But a party always has tlie option to waive a condition or stipulation in his own favor. * * * And whether it did exercise such option or not-AA'as a fact provable by parol evidence as Avell as by writing, for the obvious reason that it could be done ,■without writing.”
Nor can parties by their contracts debar themselves of the right to prove their cause of action or defense by any species of evidence which the law declares to be competent and legal. The application of this doctrine is not always invoked in the interest of the insured. It is applied for the protection of the insurer as well. In Emerigon ■on Insurance (Meredith’s translation, pp. 607, 608) it is said:
“The agreement that the insurer shall abide by the affirmation of the assured on the subject of the disaster is unlawful, for no one may be a AVitness, and still less the sole witness, in his oaatdl case. But agreement to abide by the attestation of the captain is valid, saving the right to produce proof to the ■contrary.”
Parol evidence that the company had knowledge of and consented to other insurance is not introduced to contradict or A'ary the written conditions.
It is every day practice to receive parol evidence to establish or overthrow written instruments, or to show that some claim based thereon has been waived by the party claiming under it, or that he has so acted towards the other party that he is estopped from setting up the claim. In all such cases the existence of the contract is neither denied nor its terms sought to be varied by parol. The condition in this policy is admitted, but the insured says the insurance company, by delivering the policy and receiAdng the premium thereon with notice of the other insurance then existing or thereafter to be obtained, thereby gave its consent to such other insurance, and asserted the'validity of the policy, and it cannot be heard after the loss to say that the policy is Aroid. “This act,” says the New York court of appeals, “may be called a waiver, or may be treated as an estoppel.” Pitney v. Insurance Co., 65 N. Y. 6.
The company cannot play fast and loose. It cannot issue a policy which is valid for the purpose of receiving the premiums, but invalid when it comes to pay a loss. In May on Insurance (section 497) the rule is stated thus:
*77 “To deliver a policy with full knowledge of facts upon which its validity may be disputed, and then to insist upon these facts as ground of avoidance, is to attempt a fraud. This the courts will neither aid nor presume; and, when (he alternative is to find this, or to find that, in accordance with honesty and fair dealing, there was an intent to waive the known ground of avoidance, they will choose the latter.”
In the case of Carrugi y. Insurance Co., 40 Ga. 135, a policy contained a condition similar to those in the policies in suit. The lower court charged the jury:
“That, if Carrugi had the agent’s verbal consent to insure his property in other companies, that subsequent insurance did not work a forfeiture, although no notice of this additional insurance was given to the agent after it was made.”
The supreme court affirmed the soundness of this instruction, saying:
“Consent to prior or subsequent insurance is within that scope [of the agent’s authority], as the every-day practice of the country proves; and if an agent does in fact so consent, and the insured in good faith acts upon it, we think it is fraud upon the insured for the company to set up that they had stipulated the consent to be in writing.”
The injunction of the law is upon every man not to perpetrate fraud. If, notwithstanding this injunction of the law, he seeks to use any stipulation in a contract in a manner that will absolve him from an honest obligation, and enable him to perpetrate a fraud upon an innocent party whom he has misled by his fraudulent conduct, a court of justice will not lend its assistance to effectuate the fraud, but will hold him estopped to make such an unconscionable usecof the contract. It is not in the power of an insurance company to abolish the law of estoppel or of waiver, or exempt itself from its operation, by any provision or condition that it can insert in its policies. The chief office of estoppel or of waiver is to prevent the consummation of fraud, and, when the facts bring the case within the well-settled rules on this subject, no stipulation of the contract can be used to stay its operation. Public policy and sound morality forbid that any stipulation in a contract shall, either in terms or by construction, have the effect to preclude a party who has been deceived and defrauded by the other party to the contract from setting up such fraud by way of estoppel or waiver, or as a defense, as may be indicated by the rules of law applicable to the case. Bridger v. Goldsmith (N. Y. App.) 38 N. E. 458; Fashion Co. v. Skinner, 64 Hun, 293, 19 N. Y. Supp. 62; Hofflin v. Moss (at the present term), 14 C. C. A. 459, 67 Fed. 440.
It is next said that it was the duty of the insured to examine the policies at the time the agent delivered them, and see that he had made the required indorsement in relation to other insurance, and that, not having done so, they are conclusively bound by the condition. The law imposed no absolute duty on the insured to see what indorsement the agent had put on the policy in relation to other insurance. The insured had done their duty in the premises. They had imparted to the agent the requisite information to enable him io make the proper indorsement It was his duty to make it in conformity to the information given him, and the insured had a right
“We cannot say that the law, in anticipation of a fraud upon the part of a company, imposed any absolute duty upon Kister to read his policy when he received it, although it would certainly have been an act of prudence on his part to do so. Insurance Oo. v. Bruner, 23 Pa. St. 50; Insurance Co. v. Wilkinson, 13 Wall. 222. One thing is certain, however, the company cannot repudiate the fraud of its agent, and thus escape the obligations of a contract consummated therebj’’, merely because Kister accepted in good faith the act of the agent without examination.”
In the case of Insurance Co. v. Steiger, 26 Ill. App. 228, the same question arose, and the court said:
“Plaintiff’s testimony that defendants’ agent called on him, and solicited a renewal, and asked how much insurance he already had; that he said he did not know, but referred the agent to two other agencies in the city for information; that a few days later he found on his desk the policy in, suit, and that, supposing it to be properly drawn, he placed it in his safe without examination,—supports a finding for the plaintiff on the defense of other insurance not allowed by the policy.”
It would serve no useful purpose, and protract this opinion to an unjustifiable length, to cite all the cases pro and con on the question of waiver of such conditions. The cases are collected in May, Ins. §§ 369, 370; Brown, Par. Ev. § 48; Carpenter v. Insurance Co., 2 Am. Lead. Cas. p. 911. Of the very many cases supporting the conclusions reached we content ourselves with referring to the following: Insurance Co. v. Mathews, 8 Lea, 499; Pechner v. Insurance Co., 65 N. Y. 195; Short v. Insurance Co., 90 N. Y. 16; Havens v. Insurance Co., 111 Ind. 90, 12 N. E. 137; Insurance Co. v. Lyons, 38 Tex. 253; Morrison v. Insurance Co., 69 Tex. 353, 6 S. W. 605; Bennett v. Insurance Co., 70 Iowa, 600, 31 N. W. 948; Fishbeck v. Insurance Co., 54 Cal. 422; West Coast Lumber Co. v. State Inv. & Ins. Co. (Gal.) 33 Pac. 260; Insurance Go. v. Earle, 33 Mich. 143; Insurance Co. v. Luttrell, 89 Ill. 314; Viele v. Insurance Co., 26 Iowa, 9, and note.
A statement and examination of the exceptions to the ruling of the court in admitting and rejecting evidence is not necessary, as none of them is of any general importance. They have all been carefully considered, and we are satisfied they are without merit. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). Does the statement of the insured that he intends to increase his insurance to a fixed amount,
The policies in suit expressly allowed the existence of $27,500 of insurance concurrent with each of them. The amount of concurrent insurance which the insured had when these policies were issued, including the four policies issued at that time, did not exceed $27,500, and the policies were valid in their inception. The insured subsequently increased their insurance concurrent with each of these policies to $34,800, so that their total insurance was $38,300; but they never notified the companies or their agent of this increase until after the fire. There is no charge in the pleading, and no proof in the record, that the insured were induced not to read these policies or to enter into the contracts they evidence by any misrepresentation, deceit, or fraud of the companies or their agent. The entire plea on this subject that the insured make is:
“Those plaintiffs allego and show to the court that they contracted with the agent of the defendant, authorized by defendants so to contract, for said insurance, under a statement and agreement made at the time, and concurrent with said contract and a part thereof, that the total insurance, including the policy issued by defendant, upon the property insured of the plaintiffs, should amount in the aggregate to the sum of forty thousand dollars, and that the policy of the defendant to be issued to the plaintiffs should contain an agreement for such additional and concurrent insurance as that the policy to be Issued by the defendant would amount in the aggregate to forty thousand dollars, and that thereafter, and upon receipt of said policy, the plaintiffs, rely-*80 trig upon said contract and agreement so made as aforesaid, received and accepted said policy from trie defendant upon trie belief that said agreement had been fully carried out, and that said policy permitted concurrent and additional insurance so as aforesaid agreed upon, and, so relying upon such contract'and agreement, trie plaintiffs wholly failed and neglected to read said policy until after trie occurrence of trie fire which destroyed the property covered thereby. That, by reason thereof and of trie .facts aforesaid, the defendant ought not now to be permitted to assert as a defense in this action the facts set forth in trie fourth defense contained in said answer, for it is estopped to deny its liabilities on trie grounds and for trie reasons therein stated.”
If this plea is good, any party to a written contract may rely upon the oral statements made in the preliminary negotiations to it, fail to read his contract, and the previous oral negotiations will always prevail over the written agreement.
The proof is weaker than the plea. It is that the agent of the companies applied to the insured for the privilege of writing insurance upon their stock; that, in answer to a question by the agent, one of the insured said that they were going to carry $10,000 insurance; and that, after the latter had indulged in a conversation with an- ■ other agent at another place, he went to the office of the agent of these companies, and told him that he would let him carry $10,000 on their stock. The provision which contained the consent of the companies to the $27,500 other insurance was written upon slips attached to the policies. Some days after the preliminary conversation just referred to, the policies were delivered to one of the insured. He testified:
“I looked at trie face of the policies, and saw trie amount, and put them in trie safe. Q. What do you mean by trie face of trie policies? A. Trie written portion. Q. On trie inside or outside? A. On the outside. Q. When did you for trie first time ever learn that these policies limited trie concurrent insurance to twenty-seven thousand five hundred? A.-I think it was a day or so -after trie fire.”
, There is no doubt that there are cases where one party to a writ- . ten-contract has been so imposed upon by the fraudulent representa-tions of its contents, or by some artifice or' deceit of the other party, •.which prevents him from reading it, that he may be-excused for ignorance of its contents. But I cannot subscribe to the proposition that-a mere statement or agreement as to the terms of the proposed contract, made in the preliminary oral negotiations which result in the subsequent written contract, will excuse either party from reading the contract when it is delivered, or will reverse the settled rule that the written contract must prevail over the preliminary negotiations. It is the duty of every party to a contract to read it and to know its contents when he has an opportunity to examine it before he accepts it, and in the absence of fraud, concealment, or misrepresentation as to its contents he must be conclusively presumed to have knowledge of them. Contracts for insurance furnish no exception to this rule. Morrison v. Insurance Co., 69 Tex. 353, 359, 6 S. W. 605; Quinlan v. Insurance Co., 133 N. Y. 356, 365, 31 N. E, 31; Wilcox v. Insurance Co. (Wis.) 55 N. W. 188; Fuller v. Insurance Co., 36 Wis. 599, 604; Herbst v. Lowe, 65 Wis. 321, 26 N. W. 751, 751; Hankins v. Insurance Co., 70 Wis. 1, 2, 35 N. W. 34; Herndon v. Triple Alliance, 45 Mo. App. 426, 432; Palmer v. Insurance Co., 31
It: is conceded that there is much reason and authority for the rule that where, at the time of the issue of a policy, concurrent insurance exists, to an amount in excess of the amount allowed by the policy, and that fact is known to the agent when he issues it, and also where, after the issue of the policy, the concurrent insurance is increased above the amount: permitted, and notice of that fact is given to the agent, and, by his verbal agreement to indorse the permission, or by like action, he leads the insured to believe that the company consents to the increase, the company is estopped to enforce the provision that the policy is A'oid for lack of its consent, or will be held to have waiA'ed the provision. There is reason and justice in this rule. It is founded on the proposition that it is a fraud for an insurance agent to issue a policy that he knows to be void in its inception. This rule, however, is radically different from the proposition that when, in the parol negotiations preliminary to a written contract, one party announces his intention to do an act
“The plaintiff further avers that it was expressly agreed and understood that said plaintiff was to have permission, to take out an additional insurance of one thousand dollars on said building in any other company, and at any other time she desired, and said company agreed to insert said condition in said policy, which it wholly failed to do. And plaintiff says that, relying upon said promise, and in pursuance of said contract and agreement, she had effected an insurance on said building in the sum of one thousand dollars in the*83 Phoenix Insurance Company of Brooklyn, New York, as permitted by the express agreement aforesaid.”
None of these cases appear to me to support the proposition on which the decision of this case must rest, and the case last cited expressly disaffirms it.
The evidence in this case does not support the plea that an agreement was made in the previous oral negotiations that a provision should be inserted in the policy allowing $37,500 concurrent insurance. It goes no further than to prove that one of the insured stated that he intended to take out $40,000 of insurance in all. Even if there had been such an agreement, it could not prevail over the written contract.
In Insurance Co. v. Lyman, 15 Wall. 064, 069, Mr. Justice Miller, in delivering the opinion of the supreme court, said:
“Undoubtedly, a valid verbal contract Cor insurance may be made, and when it is relied on, and is unembarrassed by any written contract for the same insurance, it can be proved, and become the foundation of a recovery, as in all other cases where contracts may be made either by parol or in writing. But it is also true that when there is a written contract of insurance it must have the same effect, as the adopted mode of expressing what tlie contract is, that it has in other classes of contracts and must have the same effect, of excluding parol testimony in its application to it, that other written instruments have. * * >s We think it equally clear that, the terms of tlie contract having been reduced to writing, signed by one party, and accepted by the other at tlie time the premium of insurance was paid, neither party can abandon that instrument as of no value in ascertaining what the contract was, and resort to the verbal negotiations which were preliminary to its execution, for that purpose.”
In Thompson v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S. 252, 259, the policy pro-tided that it should be void on the nonpayment of the note taken for the premium, and the supreme court held that a idea that a parol agreement was made at the lime of the giving and accepting of the note and policy that the policy should not become void for the nonpayment of the note, but should only be voidable at the election of the company, was bad. Mr. Justice Bradley, in delivering the opinion of the court, said:
“An insurance company may waive a' forfeiture, or may agree not to enforce a forfeiture; but a parol agreement, made at the time of issuing a policy, contradicting the terms of the policy itself, like any other parol agreement inconsistent with a written instrument made.contemporary therewith, is void, and cannot be set np to contradict the writing.”
In Insurance Co. v. Mowry, 90 U. S. 544, 547, the policy provided that it should be void and wholly forfeited if the premiums were not punctually paid. The agent who procured the policy agreed with the insured that the company should give notice 'when the premiums fell due, but this agreement was not contained in the policy. The; company failed to give the notice, and the insured failed to pa.y the premium. The agreement of the agent before the policy issued was claimed to he an estoppel of the company against insisting upon the forfeiture of the policy. Mr. Justice Field, in delivering the opinion of the court, said;
“All previous verbal arrangements were merged in the written agreement. The understanding of the parties as to tlie amount of the insurance, the conditions upon which it should be payable, and the premium to be paid, was*84 there expressed, for the very purpose of avoiding any controversy or question respecting them. * * * An estoppel cannot arise from a promise as to future action with respect to a right to he acquired upon an agreement not yet made. * « * qipe doctrine has no place for application when the statement relates to rights depending upon contracts yet to he made, to which the person complaining is to he a party. He has it in his power in such cases to guard in advance against any consequences of a subsequent change of intention and conduct by the person with whom he is dealing. For compliance with arrangements respecting future transactions, parties must provide by stipulations in their agreements when reduced to writing. The doctrine, carried to the extent for which the assured contends in this case, would subvert the salutary rule that tlie written contract must prevail over previous verbal arrangements, and open the door to all the evils which that rule vms intended to prevent. White v. Ashton, 51 N. X. 280; Bigelow, Estop. 437, 441; White v. Walker, 31 Ill. 422; Eaxton v. Faxon, 2S Mich. 159.”
I concur in the views expressed in these opinions of the supreme court. I think that they are applicable to this case, and that the judgment should be reversed.