192 Mo. App. 198 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
Suit on a policy of fire insurance for $900 on a stock of undertaker’s goods. The case was tried before the court without a jury. Plaintiff recovered judgment for the amount of the policy and defendant appeals.
Defendant set up that the policy was void because of plaintiff’s fraud in the matter of the issuance thereof and in having the goods insured for that amount.
Defendant claims that it did not know plaintiff was insuring himself; and that good faith required that-he not only disclose this fact but that he also disclose to the company the amount at which he had appraised the stock and the price he had paid therefor; that section 7030, Revised Statutes 1909, forbids the company insuring a stock for more than three-fourths of its value, and that plaintiff, being the agent of the company, was the one upon whom the company relied to determine the value and fix the amount of insurance in accordance with that value as the statute required; and that plaintiff not only failed in his duty aforesaid as an agent, but also violated section 7030 by insuring, for defendant, property at an amount nearly double what he should have insured it at.
Sometime before plaintiff took out the policy, one of defendant’s general agents, who visited and also established agencies, suggested to plaintiff that he
But defendant says the agent insured the property for $900 without telling his principal he had bought it for less or that he had, under oath, appraised it at much less; that section 7030, Revised Statutes 1909, forbids the insurance of property for more than three-fourths of its value, and, as he was the one whose duty it was to act for defendant in seeing that it was not insured for more than three-fourths of its value, he has violated said section and the policy is void on that account.
The evidence tends to show that plaintiff, at the time he talked with the agent above mentioned, showed him the stock, and the latter spent a half day or more looking at it and talking; that he, plaintiff, told him the stock invoiced at seven or eight hundred dollars but that he had bought it for less at administrator’s sale. There was no evidence that it did not invoice at that figure nor that it was not worth $900. Indeed, there was testimony that the stock was, in reality, worth $1000 to $1100. Of course, these facts did not absolve plaintiff from his duty, as an agent, to make a full disclosure of what he did pay and all the facts concerning the stock. Doubtless he should have told just what
But the trouble is that defendant has not done this. It came into court claiming that the policy was void from the beginning; that it never did have any existence in law. And yet it never offered to return the $35.46 it received in premiums thereon nor any part thereof. If th.e policy never created any liability or risk against the defendant, then it was not, and is not, entitled to retain any premiums whatever. Therefore, in holding on to said premiums and making no
The fact that plaintiff may have insured the property for more than three-fourths of its value and thereby became a party to the violation of section 7030, Revised Statutes 1909, does not change the situation. Because defendant, after discovery of the facts showing that this was done, still held on to the premiums. In other words, defendant not only assented to the agent insuring himself, but, after learning that the property was insured for more than the statute allowed, elected to regard the policy as being in force by keeping money which it could hold only on the theory that the policy was valid. By so doing, the defendant assented to the policy not only as to the agent himself being the insured, but also as to the amount of the insurance, which last was, of course, an assent to the violation of said statute. The fact that the agent may be in pari delicto in the violation thereof or indeed may have been the one who brought about that violation, does not relieve defendant. This may be more clearly seen if we take the following illustration: Suppose the defendant, after learning that its agent had insured his own prop
It should be noted that, in this case, plaintiff does not recover $900 merely by force of the last line of section 7030 which says the value of a risk “shall not be questioned.” If he had, it would appear strange that plaintiff could demand the enforcement of the provision of a statute which he had himself violated. But he did not invoke that statute to fix for him the amount of recovery. And here is where the statement hereinbefore made as to there being evidence of the stock being worth $1000 or $1100 seems to be relevant. He offered testimony tending to show that the stock was worth more than what he insured it for. This was not disputed, unless it was by the inferences arising from the amount of his appraisement and from what he paid for it. It is well known that a stock of goods which is not in a going business is often not rated at its full value, nor will it sell at anything like what it is worth as a part of an active and live business when sold at administrator ’s sale. So that there was testimony tending to show that plaintiff’s loss was as much as $900. And we have not the spectacle of a man insuring his property for more than it was worth and recovering the full value of his policy merely becaues a statute (which he himself had violated), says the face of the policy shall fix the amount of the value. We make this statement merely to show that plaintiff did not take such a bold and unconscionable position as to say he was entitled to recover more than his actual loss because the statute precluded an investigation into the question of loss although he himself had been the means of indue
For tbe reasons hereinbefore given, the judgment is affirmed.