106 Mo. App. 673 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
Lead Opinion
This is an action on a policy of fire insurance issued by defendant to plaintiff on September 20, 1901, covering a retail stock of merchandise in the sum of six hundred dollars with an additional one hundred dollars on store fixtures and furniture. The policy in suit contained what is known as the “Inventory and Iron-Safe Clause.” The plaintiffs admit that they did not keep the safe required by the terms of the policy and relied on an alleged agreement with the agent of the insurance company made before the policy was issued and delivered that, it was not nec
The court at the instance of plaintiffs instructed the jury as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that at the time of and prior to creating (issuing) the policy of insurance in suit, defendant’s agent talked the terms of the policy over with plaintiffs and then gave plaintiffs to understand that the iron-safe clause, requiring a full set of books to be kept would be omitted from said policy, or waived the terms of said clauses, and that upon the faith of such understanding with defendant’s agent, plaintiffs accepted' said policy, then such understanding and agreement amounted to a waiver by defendant, to demand that plaintiffs keep an iron safe in their store for keeping books and invoices, and also a waiver of the clause requiring plaintiffs to keep a full set of books. ’ ’
This instruction is a clear violation of one of the plainest and most beneficial rules óf the law, viz: That all prior and contemporaneous agreements are included in the written agreement. The plaintiffs seek to uphold said instruction on the authority of the following cases: Mining & Smelting Co. v. Ins. Co., 62 Mo. App. 293; Parsons v. Fire Ins. Co., 132 Mo. 583. The former
Plaintiffs seek to further sustain said judgment on the ground that they substantially complied with the terms of the policy. That is to say, that the two ledgers, the hank pass hook, the first inventory and proof of the
The court also committed error in permitting plaintiffs to prove the footings of the destroyed inventories and in admitting such footings as evidence, as the contract required that the inventories should be kept in an iron safe in the building or a,t some other place where they would not be destroyed by fire in case the storehouse should be burned. The clause in question was for the purpose of enabling defendant to properly adjust plaintiffs’ loss in case of fire and was therefore a reasonable precaution, beneficial alike to both the insured and the insurer. The necessity for preservation of the inventories was therefore of the first importance. The defendant had the right under the terms of the policy to the production of the inventories and not secondary evidence of their contents. To prove the contents of such a paper aliunde would in most instances be impossible.
The plaintiffs having failed to keep the books and preserve their inventories, as required by the terms of the policy, they are not entitled to recover. Cause reversed.
Rehearing
It having been made to appear to the court that there was insurance on fixtures for $100 which was not contested on the appeal, it is ordered that the opinion he modified and the cause remanded with directions to the circuit court to enter up judgment in favor of respondent for that amount. Otherwise, the opinion to stand unaffected. Costs of appeal to be taxed against respondent.