59 P. 1092 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought in the district court of Reno county upon a policy of insurance for $1000, issued on February 11, 1896, by the plaintiff in error to one Christian Hess, covering his dwelling-
The only defense to the action urged in this court is that the policy was made void by the act of Hess in procuring, on April 4, 1896, without the consent of the defendant below, additional insurance on the property in the Phenix Insurance Company, of Brooklyn. The policy sued upon and that issued by the Phenix Insurance Company each provided, in substance, that if the assured should, without the written permission of the insurer indorsed on the policy, then have or thereafter make or procure any other contract of insurance, whether valid or not, covering the same property, the policy should be void. The insurance written by the Phenix company was procured by the wife of Christian Hess, without his knowledge or consent, during his absence in Oklahoma, and he did not learn of the transaction until after the loss by fire had occurred. Thereafter he assigned both policies to defendant in error, which effected a compromise of the claim against the Phenix company, the latter paying the sum of $350, for which the defendant in error gave Hess credit, he being indebted to it in a much larger sum. In his proofs of loss Hess stated the foregoing facts concerning the additional insurance. It is contended by the plaintiff in error that, in receiving the benefits of the insurance procured by his wife, Hess adopted and ratified her act in the premises, with the result that the policy sued upon was rendered void. The contention is sound, and is supported by the following cases : McElvy v.
“One may become bound by a contract which another, without authority, has assumed to make in his name, by knowingly accepting its benefits, or by failing to repudiate it within a reasonable time after he is fully informed of the act.”
In McKelvy v. Insurance Co., supra, the additional insurance was taken out by the wife of the assured without his knowledge or consent and he did not learn of it until after the loss. He failed clearly to disclose the fact of the additional insurance when making his first proof of loss but did so in. the second proof, some five months after the fire, and then repudiated the later insurance. The court held that the insured, on, learning of the second insurance, should have promptly repudiated it, and having failed so to do, he had ratified the same and it constituted other insurance, avoiding the policy sued upon. In DeFoe v. Johnston Insurance Co., supra, the assured collected money upon the second policy, which, without his knowledge or consent, had been procured by his father. Referring to the proper course of the assured upon discovery of the additional insurance, the court said :
“His course in such a case would be clear. Immediately on discovering it he could repudiate the act and decline any benefit under it. In the case before us the plaintiff chose to at once ratify and adopt the assurance made, as is alleged, by his father- in his name. He received large sums of money under it. . The act of the agent is assumed as the act of*806 the principal from the beginning. It is considered as wholly done with his assent, and as he is willing to receive the benefit, he must take all the legal consequences.”
In the case of Hughes v. Ins. Co. of North America, supra, to overcome the defense that the policy sued upon was avoided by additional insurance taken out in violation of its provisions, it was shown that one Hynes, who was the agent of Hughes for the purpose of renting and looking after the insured property, and who had no authority to procure insurance thereon, had taken out the additional insurance without the knowledge of his principal, who did not learn of such fact until after the loss occurred. Shortly after the fire Plughes made a settlement with the company from which Hynes had procured the policy, receiving a considerable sum in satisfaction of his claim under the policy. The court said :
“Here, then, was a ratification by Hughes of the act of Hynes in procuring this additional policy of insurance ; and this ratification related back to the date of the issuing of the ' policy, and Hughes became bound by the effects thereof, and by the results flowing therefrom, as much as if he had himself procured the policy of insurance. The acceptance by a principal of the fruits of an unauthorized contract made by his agent, with full knowledge of all the facts, is a ratification of such agent’s contract.”
It was contended by counsel for Hughes that the second policy, which was written by the Phoenix Insurance Company, never was in force as valid insurance, because in violation of the terms of the second policy itself, and that by the provisions of the policy in suit.he was prohibited from procuring other valid insurance only. The court held that the provision in question did not render the policy void, but made it
“The courts decline to adopt any such jugglery. To permit Hughes to say that the Phcenix Insurance Company’s policy never had any validity is to permit him to take advantage of his own wrong. The courts will interpret and enforce the contracts as made and understood by them, when such contracts were entered into upon a valuable consideration and without fraud or mistake.”
The following cases hold that a provision like the one in question concerning additional insurance, “whether valid or not,” renders the policy voidable at the option of the insurer: Sugg v. Insurance Co., 98 N. C. 143, 3 S. E. 752; The Phenix Insurance Co. v. Lamar, 106 Ind. 513, 7 N. E. 241; Funke v. Minnesota Farmers’ Mut. Fire Ins. Ass’n, 29 Minn. 347, 13 N. W. 164; Home Fire Ins. Co. v. Wood, 50 Neb. 381, 69 N. W. 941; Keyser v. Insurance Co., 66 Mich. 664, 33 N. W. 756; Zinck v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 60 Iowa, 266, 14 N. W. 792.
The only decision cited by the defendant in error in opposition to the foregoing decisions is Dwelling House Ins. Co. v. Garner, 56 Ill. App. 199, wherein it was held that knowledge obtained after the loss, even where it was enforced by a successful attempt to enforce the other insurance, is no breach of the condition ; for the object of the prohibition (against other
The objection to the doctrine just stated is that it disregards the contract between the insurer and the insured, as was pointed out by the court in Hughes v. Ins. Co. of North America, supra: “Provisions in policies of insurance providing that the policies shall be void if other insurance be taken out without the consent of the insurer are valid. (2 May, Ins. § 364.) And subsequent insurance, taken out without the consent of the insurer, either expressed or implied, avoids the policy.” (Assurance Co. v. Norwood, 57 Kan. 615, 47 Pac. 529.)
There is another question to be considered. V/hen the policy sued upon was issued, Hess gave his promissory note for the premium thereon and the note matured after the loss occurred and before this action was commenced. In its answer the company set up this note “by way of counter-claim,” demanding judgment thereon, and the journal entry of judgment shows that the court found due the plaintiff from the defendant the sum of $1028.30, “after the deduction of the amount due on the note mentioned in the policy of insurance sued upon and given by C. Hess, which deduction is voluntarily made by the plaintiff.” The policy provided as follows : “In case of loss prior to the maturity of any note given as consideration, the company may deduct said note in settlement.” ’The defendant in error contends that by thus pleading the insurance company waived the defense that its policy was avoided by the additional insurance. This conten
Where the premium had been paid in cash, it was held that the assured could not, after forfeiture by reason of additional insurance contrary to the terms of the policy, recover any part of such premium under a clause of the policy providing for the return of unearned premiums upon cancelation of the policy. (Colby v. The Cedar Rapids Ins. Co., 66 Iowa, 577, 24 N. W. 54.)
In this view the premium represented by the note of Christian Hess was earned, and the right of action on the note was complete when the answer herein was filed; but that right of action was not against the plaintiff below, it was against Hess, who is not a party in this case. The “counter-claim” therefore had no proper place in the pleadings and no relevancy to the real issues before the trial court. The motion to dismiss the proceedings in error is overruled.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.