146 N.W. 588 | S.D. | 1914
Lead Opinion
This action is 'brought to recover on a fire insurance policy. The policy sued upon was issued on the nth day of November, 1910, to one F- J. Hronish, by the defendant company, through its local agent, at Fairfax, insuring, for a period of one year after date, a certain frame building in Fairfax, of which said Hlronish was then the owner. On the 13th day of January, 1911, the insured property was sold, and the policy assigned to one Chas, A. Johnson, who on May 9, 1911, sold said property and assigned said policy to Rudolph R. Hronish, who was the owner thereof until the nth day of October, 1911, when the property insured was totally destroyed by fire. Defendant company having refused to pay the loss, suit was brought upon the policy, in the circuit court in Charles Mix -county, where respondent recovered judgment for the full amount of the policy. Appellant’s motion for a new trial being overruled, it appeals to this court.
Appellant resists payment of the policy on three grounds: First, because of the existence of concurrent insurance upon the insured property at the time of the loss, which had • been issued without the written consent of appellant; second, that the policy had been assigned without the written consent of the insurer indorsed upon -or attached to the policy; and, third, because proof of loss was not made within the time limited by the terms of the policy. In view of the facts disclosed by the record, the latter two grounds seem to possess little or no merit, and, had appellant rested its case upon these grounds alone, we would have no hesitancy in sustaining the judgment; but the first one raises the question of concurrent insurance and is a matter of vital importance in the case.
The facts relative to the concurrent insurance are these: At the time the policy was issued, and up to the time plaintiff acquired his interest in the insured property, there was no other insurance, and the validity of the policy to that date is not questioned;' and what is said in this opinion relates only to policies that were valid when issued and became void, if at all, only because of the happening of some subsequent act or event, rendering them void after they, had been issued. But, when plaintiff acquired his interest, he increased the amount of the insurance. He lived néar Geddes, in Charles Mix county, and went to one F. H. Johnson, an Insurance Agent at Geddes, for ‘his additional insurance. Said Johnson was agent at that place for the defendant company and was also agent for the Fire Association of Philadelphia. On the 20th day of May, 1911, he issued plaintiff a policy for $2,000 in the latter company; but neither he nor any other agent for defendant company indorsed upon the first policy the consent of the defendant to the issuance of the second, as required by the provisions of the first. Plaintiff did not request him to make such indorsement, nor, so far as is disclosed ¡by the record,
Under this assumed state of facts, is the respondent entitled to recover? Tt is claimed by him, that in view of this situation,, the appellant, by its conduct, waived the clause in the policy pro
The present standard form however, and the policy involved in this case does not impose upon the insurer the duty of canceling the policy in order to avail himself of the provisions thereof: “Upon having or obtaining knowledge of the existence of any facts or circumstances which would, according to the terms of the policy, render it void.” And the inference is that, in omitting this clause from the present standard policy, the Legislature intended to relieve -the insurer of this duty and to- allow him to- avail himself of the provisions in the policy without cancelling the same,
The facts in the case of Baumgartel v. Providence Ins. Co., decided by the Court of appeals of New York, 136 N. Y. 547, 32 N. E. 990, are almost identical with those in the case at bar. The owner of the insured property, about a week after the issuance of •the second policy, told the agent, who issued the previous policy and the one sued upon, that he had taken out some additional insurance, when the agent said: “All right, I will attend to it.” Nothing further was said. The policy was never delivered to the agent, and he never indorsed thereon the company’s consent to the
“But it is manifest that that principle has no application to the facts in this case. When t'he defendant’s policy was delivered, neither of the other policies had been issued, but were subsequently obtained. Consequently -the defendant’s policy was valid in its inception. If it became invalid, it was by the act of the plaintiffs in subsequently procuring additional insurance, without obtaining an indorsement upon the the policy of the defendant’s consent. As. the defendant issued to the plaintiffs a .policy which was valid when delivered, the fact that they informed the defendant’s agent of their intention to subsequently procure other insurance was insufficient to justify the courts below in holding that there was a waiver of that condition, or that the defendant was estopped from insisting upon it.” Baumgartel v. Ins. Co., supra; Moore v. Ins. Co., 141 N. Y. 219, 36 N. E. 191; McNierney v. Ins. Co., 48 Hun, (N. Y.) 239.
“The distinction between the knowledge of an existing fact which renders a policy void when delivered and the omission of the insured to give notice of and procure the required consent to a subsequent act, which by its condition's, invalidated it, although
Space forbids a review of all the cases cited by respondent as supporting his contention herein, but they have been examined, and, after consideration by the court, we fail to find support for respondent's contention. Some of the courts agree that an insurance company should be estopped from insisting upon, the provisions of a policy which render it void in its inception, when the company had knowledge, when the policy was issued and the consideration therefore paid, of the existence of the circumstances which render it void. But this rule does not reach the facts in the case at bar, and our attention has not been, called to any case that has gone to the extent of holding, under a statute like ours, that the mere failure to cancel a policy upon receipt of information of circumstances and conditions arising after, the issuance of the policy amounted to a waiver of those conditions on the-part of the company, unless the fact that such waiver had been made had been indorsed upon, or attached to, the policy; and to hold that such knowledge were evidence of a waiver would, in effect, be an attempt to nullify not only the provisions of the policy itself but the provisions of the law under which it is written as well.
It may be observed in closing, that the law does not purport to prohibit insurance companies from waiving certain of the conditions contained in the standard policy, nor to specify what particular agent or officer of the company shall have authority to make such waivers; it does not purport to confer any substantive right upon either of the parties; but what it does do is to establish a rule of evidence making the written memorandum upon or attached to the policy, of a waiver of any of its provisions, the only competent evidence of such waiver. It is a well-known fact, to both the bench and the bar, that, in the trial of causes involving the question of the waiver of conditions in contracts of insurance, the conflict of the testimony for one party with the testimony for the other party is so great that it can be reconciled on no other theory than that the witnesses on one side or the other are guilty of perjury, and it is for the purpose of preventing this abuse that the law was enacted requiring such agreements of waiver to be re-
It necessarily follows that the trial court erred in its ruling upon the question of the waiver, and the judgment and order appealed from must foe reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
concur in the result only, and base their concurrence upon the proposition that notice of the additional insurance cannot be imputed to defendant through the knowledge of the agent Johnson.