after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The conditions of the policy in suit clearly and unequivocally manifest the intention and agreement of the parties to the contract of insurance that any difference arising between them as to the amount of loss or damage of the property insured shall be submitted,’ at the request in writing of either party, to.the appraisal of competent and impartial persons, to be chosen as therein provided, whose award shall be conclusive as to the amount of such loss or damage only, and shall not determine the question of the liability of the company; that the company shall have the right to take the whole or any part of the property at its appraised value so ascertained ; and that until such an appraisal shall have been permitted, and *255 such an award obtained, the loss shall not be payable, and no action shall lie against the company. The ■ appraisal, when requested in writing by either party, is distinctly made a condition precedent to the payment of any loss, and to the maintenance of any action.
Such a stipulation, not ousting the'jurisdiction of the courts, but leaving the general question of liability to be judicially determined, and simply providing a reasonable method of estimating and ascertaining the amount of the loss, is'unquestionably valid, according to the uniform current of authority in England and in this country.
Scott
v.
Avery,
5 H. L. Cas. 811;
Viney
v.
Bignold,
20 Q. B. D. 172;
Delaware & Hudson Canal
v.
Pennsylvania Coal Co.,
Upon the evidence in this case, the question whether the defendant had duly requested, and the plaintiff had unreasonably refused, to submit to such an appraisal and award as the policy called for, did not depend in any degree, (as in
Uhrig v. Williamsburg Ins. Co.,
*256 That correspondence clearly shoWs that the defendant explicitly and repeatedly in writing requested that the amount of the loss or damage should be submitted to appraisers in accordance with the terms of the policy; and that the plaintiff as often peremptorily refused to do this, unless the defendant would consent, in advance, to define the legal powers and duties of the appraisers, (which the defendant was under no obligation to do,) and that the plaintiff throughout, against the constant protest of the defendant, asserted, and at last exercised, a right to sell the property before the completion óf an award according to the policy, thereby depriving the defendant of the right, reserved to it by the policy, of taking the property at its appraised value, when ascertained in accordance with the conditions of the policy.
The court therefore rightly instructed the jury that the defendant had requested in writing, and the plaintiff had declined, the appraisal provided for in the policy, and that the plaintiff, therefore, could not maintain this action.
If the plaintiff had joined in the appointment-of appraisers, and they had acted unlawfully, or had not acted at all, a different question would have been presented.
Judgment affirmed.
