42 Minn. 291 | Minn. | 1890
This is an action upon a policy of insurance, issued by the defendant to the plaintiff, for the total sum of $2,000. The contention is only as to the proportion of the loss for which the defendant is liable. The following statement will present in brief the facts upon which our decision is sought by this appeal from an order overruling a demurrer to the answer: Prior to the issuing of the policy the plaintiff, making his application for insurance, presented to the defendant a printed schedule of the property desired to be insured, this schedule containing more than 20 separate classes of property, each class or item commencing with the word “on;” and opposite each of these classes was written in figures a specific sum of money. These sums ranged from $500 to $39,000, and were added at the bottom, the aggregate being $90,000. The first and second of these classes, with the annexed amounts, are here given in brief, and will serve to show how the whole schedule was made up, all the others being in like form:
On stone building marked “A” on plan .... $10,000
On stone building marked “B” on plan - - - 5,000
Following this schedule was a description, in printed form, of the location of the property; also a clause expressing a privilege “to make other insurance, without notice until required;” and a further paragraph, with blank spaces, in which the defendant wrote the words and figures which we will distinguish by italics. When so filled out, it read as follows: “It is understood and agreed that the Minneapolis Mutual Fire Insurance Company, of Minneapolis, Minn,, covers, under their policy No. 12,674, to which this specification is attached
Whatever may have been the full purpose or intention involved in affixing specific sums to the several items of property insured, all of which sums aggregated $90,000, the effect of the clause in the agreement that the defendant “covers under this policy * * * l-45th part of each of the above-named sums, amounting in the aggregate to two thousand dollars,” is to apportion the total insurance of two thousand dollars to these separate divisions of the property, so that one forty-fifth of the sums annexed to these divisions, respectively, shall be taken as the insurance of this company. Making the arithmetical computation thus indicated, and inserting the one forty-fifth of “each of the above-named sums” in place of those sums, and following the language of the policy, it would express the agreement of the defendant to “insure Sellers Hoffman against loss or damage by fire to the amount of two thousand dollars.
“On stone building marked ‘ A ’ on plan - - - - $222.22
“On stone building marked‘B’on plan ... 111.11”
Under the clause declaring that the defendant should not be liable for a greater proportion of any loss than the sum insured by this policy bears to the whole sum of the insurance, this company became liable for one-thirtieth of the loss upon each one of the specified classes of property, up to the extent of .the sums apportioned to such classes, respectively, by the terms of this policy,— that is, its proportion of the loss is as $2,000 is to $60,000, the whole sum of the insurance; and, thus computed, the liability of the defendant would amount to the sum claimed in the complaint, $1,-700. The contention of the defendant that the amounts set opposite the several classes of property in the schedule, and aggregating $90,-000, was, in effect, an agreement that a total insurance of that amount should be maintained upon the property, and that its liability should be only in the proportion of $2,000 to $90,000, cannot be sustained. No such agreement is expressed, and there is no sufficient ground for a legal implication to that effect. Indeed, it is more reasonable to say that the policy leaves it wholly to the option of the assured to determine what amount of other insurance he would carry. “Privilege to make other insurance without notice” is given. This would certainly allow the assured to take out more than $90,000' of insurance, and that is inconsistent with the theory of the defendant that the agreement contemplates the specific sum of $90,000 as the total amount of the insurance. Our conclusion that the defendant is liable to the extent of one-thirtieth of the loss is in accordance with the decisions in Illinois Mut. Ins. Co. v. Hoffman, in the appellate court of Illinois, reported in 22 Chic. Leg. News, 84, and in Hoffman, v. Mfrs. Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 38 Fed. Rep. 487, both of which cases were actions by this same plaintiff to recover for this same Iobs, and upon policies like that now before us.
Order reversed.