95 Va. 751 | Va. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is-the sequel of the case of Goode & Co. v. Georgia Home Ins. Co., reported in 92 Va. 392, and comes before us upon a writ of error to the judgment of the Circuit Court rendered upon a demurrer to the evidence.
The policy of insurance was issued to W. B. Goode &s Co.,, and the suit was instituted in the name of W. B. Goode and A, M. Wright, partners, trading under the firm name of W. R
The damages laid in the declaration were $2,000. The verdict and judgment were for $1,660, with interest thereon.from July 19, 1891, making the aggregate amount of the recovery at the time of the judgment $2,174, which was in excess of the damages claimed in the declaration. This was not error. Greater damages cannot be recovered than are declared for and laid in the conclusion of the declaration, but the restriction is confined to the amount of damages — the principal of the recovery, andt does not affect the interest that may be. allowed thereon by the jury. Cahill v. Pintoney, 4 Mun. 371.
It was also objected that satisfactory proofs of loss were not furnished as required by the terms of the policy.
The fire occurred on the night of April 16, 1891. The general agents of the company were notified on the next day of the loss, and in response to the notice, the company’s special agent and adjuster R. P. Spencer, came and fully investigated the matter. The insured exhibited to him the inventory that had recently been taken of the stock of goods, amounting to $3,-527.05, their books, and all evidences then in their possession. They also informed him of a deed of trust on the goods, which, was given by Wl B. Goode to secure the sum of $390 to Isaac R. Hewman, and told him of the conversation had with the soliciting agent in regard to the lien at the time that he took the
Where there is any valid objection to a proof of loss, it should be communicated to the insured within a reasonable time, or the objection will be deemed to have been waived. There was much delay in doing so in the present case. Hor was the proof of loss justly obnoxious to the objections made to it on the part of the company. In it were stated the names of the parties insured. The name of the company in which they had other insurance, the amount thereof, the date and term of the policy, and rate of premium, together with the endorsements on the policy, were also stated. More than this could not well have been given in the space set apart for this purpose in the blank form for proof of loss furnished to them by the company. Certainly, a copy of the policy, with its innumerable stipulations, forfeitures and provisions could not have been inserted; and, moreover, the form did not call for it. It is true that the specific question as to the occupancy of the building was not ex
It appeared in evidence that the original invoices were destroyed, but, on demand of the company the insured went to work and after diligent effort obtained duplicate invoices as far as it was practicable to do so; and when they had obtained them, they wrote and so informed the company. It made no reply and took no notice of their letter. They then placed their case in the hands of attorneys, who, in an urgent letter, courted a further investigation by the company of the claim, if not satisfied of its validity and courteously asked that they should at least be informed of the intention of the company as to its payment. Their communication was also allowed to go unanswered. The conduct of the company was a waiver of any right to require the insured to do more in regard to the invoices than they had done.
The real defence to the claim of the plaintiffs was founded upon an encumbrance subsisting on the property at the time of the insurance, which, it was alleged, was not disclosed to the company.
In the application for insurance in reply to the question: “Is the property mortgaged?” the answer “Ho” was given. There was in fact the deed of trust thereon executed by "W". B. Goode to secure a debt of $390 to Isaac B. Hewman, which has been already adverted to. It was contended that the answer was a warranty that the property was free from encumbrance, and, being untrue, avoided the policy.
Upon the former appeal, the important question was whether Robert E. Harris, who solicited the insurance, was such an agent as that his knowledge was imputable to the company. The question was decided in the affirmative, and evidence of what passed between the insured and the agent in regard to the lien at the time that the application for the insurance was filled up and signed was held to be admissible.
It was contended by the insured that the existence of the lien having been fully made known to the soliciting agent, and his knowledge being imputable to the company, it was estopped to interpose the fact of the encumbrance as a defence against its liability upon the policy. ‘ Authorities to sustain the proposition are abundant. Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Ward, 95 Va. 231; Farmers & Mechanics Benev. Fire Ass. v. Williams, 95 Va. 248; Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Kinnier, 28 Graft. 88; Manhattan Fire Ins. Co. v. Weill & Ullman, Id. 389; Southern Mutual Ins. Co. v. Yates, Id. 585; Carpenter v. Germania Ins. Co., 135 N; Y. 298; Forward v. C. Ins. Co., 142 N. Y. 382; Planters Ins. Co. v. Myers, 55 Miss. 479; I Wood on Ins., sec. 90, and Ostrander on Fire Insurance (2d ed.), secs. 350 and 356.
In Lynchburg Fire Ins. Co. v. West, 76 Va. 575, the insured testified that he informed the agent who negotiated the insurance that he had no title to' the land, but only a title bond, and had paid no part of the purchase money; that the agent told
In that case the vendor’s lien for the whole of the purchase money encumbered the title. Upon the explanation of the agent that because the money was not due it was no encumbrance, the applicant wrote in the application that there was no encumbrance. This court held that the admission of evidence to show this was proper as tending to prove an equitable estoppel. It follows that if the evidence established the fact, the company was estopped from relying on the untruthfulness of .the answer as a ground of forfeiture of the policy.
In this case, there was a deed of trust on the stock of goods for $390. The agent, when the application was being filled up, was informed of the lien, but stated that the amount was too small to be noted, and under the influence of his explanation and superior knowledge, and at his dictation, it was stated in the application that there was no encumbrance. This fact being proved, it equally created an estoppel in this case, and the company could not rely on the existence of the deed of trust as a ground of forfeiture.
The principle contented for by the defendants in error was distinctly enunciated by Judge Staples in discussing and approving the instructions given in Southern Mutual Ins. Co. v. Yates, supra.
While it was contended for the plaintiff in error that the agent had no power to waive any condition of the policy or ground of forfeiture, it was not pretended that there was any
The case at bar is easily distinguishable from Fletcher’s case. There the assured had only to read the printed lines of the application signed by him to see and learn that “it stipulated that the rights of the company could in no respect be affected by his verbal statements or by those of its agents, unless the same were reduced to writing and forwarded with his application to the home office.” It was his duty to read the application which he signed, and he was chargeable with notice of what it contained. But in this case, the printed application contains no limitation upon the powers of the agent. The insured, in its absence, had the right to presume that the powers of the agent were commensurate with the business entrusted to his care, and to look to and rely upon him as the full and complete representative of the „ company in all that was said or done in making the contract. And knowledge of facts communicated to him by the insured was binding on the company, unless special limitations upon his powers were known to the insured, or plainly appeared from the nature of his employment. The record fails to disclose that any limitations upon the powers of the agent were brought home t6 the insured, either in the application or otherwise.
“Note: There was a mortgage given by ~W. P. Goode individually to the amount of three hundred and ninety dollars, which fact was made known to the agent when filling up our application, and his, the agent’s, instructions, were not to make any note of it, as he said it was too small to make any difference.”
The company, as hereinbefore stated, objected to the proof of loss because of certain alleged defects, and required new proof of loss to be made. It moreover required the original invoices or certified duplicates to be furnished, but made no allusion whatever to the existence of the lien, nor claimed that there was any ground of forfeiture of the policy.
It was only upon the theory that the policy was valid that the company had any right to demand a further proof of loss, or to require the invoices to be furnished. If it intended to claim that the policy was void because the deed of trust was not disclosed in the application, it ought to have so stated, and not required the insured to deliver new or additional proofs of loss, and to furnish invoices of the goods destroyed. It will be presumed from these circumstances that the company elected to waive the forfeiture. “A party cannot occupy inconsistent grounds or positions; and, where he has an election between inconsistent courses of action, he will be confined to that which he first adopts. Any decisive act of the party, done with knowledge of his rights and of the facts, determines his election and works an estoppel.” Bigelow on Estoppel (3d ed.), 562; Webster v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 36 Wis. 57; and 2 Wood on Insurance, see. 526.
In the case at bar the defendant company had full knowledge of the lien of the deed of trust, both through its adjuster, It. P. Spencer, and from the proof of loss, when it demanded further proof and required the invoices to be furnished. If it was not estopped to declare the policy void by reason of the knowledge of the soliciting agent of the lien when he took the application, it had the right, after acquiring actual and full knowledge of the lien, either to declare the policy to be void in consequence of the lien not being disclosed in the application, or to treat it as valid and require the insured to furnish new proof of loss, and the original or properly certified duplicate invoices of the goods that were destroyed. It chose the latter course, and put the insured to the trouble and expense of procuring the duplicate invoices. By this decisive act, done with full knowledge of the lien, and of its rights, if not previously estopped to insist on a forfeiture of the policy, it thereby waived the right to do so.
The policy insured the plaintiffs to the amount of $1,660, $1,625 thereof being on the stock of goods, and $35 on store
The judgment of the Circuit Court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.