137 Mo. App. 380 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
(after stating the facts). — The policy specified no particular place where, or person to whom the proof of loss should he delivered, but merely said proof should be rendered to the company in sixty days after the fire. Hence when the proof of loss was executed by Powell and left with Campbell on May 2d, it was received by the company in the meaning of the policy. [McCullough v. Insurance Co., 113 Mo. 606, 614.] The right of the insured to be paid the stipulated indemnity did not accrue until sixty days after the notice, ascertainment, estimate and satisfactory proof of the loss thereunder (i. e. the policy) had been received by the company. If an insurance company is dissatisfied with the proof of a loss furnished by the insured, he must be notified of the company’s objection and afforded an opportunity to make corrections, if enough is left of the period in which proof is to be furnished for notice to be given. [Probst v. Insurance Co., 64 Mo. App. 408; DeLand v. Id., 68 Mo. App. 277.] The company will not be heard to say the proof was unsatisfactory if it omits to inform the insured of defects so he may cure them; and especially is it precluded when its empowered agent adjusts the loss, makes out and approves the proof and assures the insured in the most positive terms the adjustment is ended and his loss will be paid at once, as happened in the instance at bar. [McCullough v. Insurance Co., 113 Mo. loc. cit. 615.] Defendant never advised the Fullerton-Powell Company the proof prepared by Lowe and approved by Campbell, was unsatisfactory. Instead of doing this defendant pursued a course outside its rights under the contract. It first demanded the privilege of inventorying the stock in the yard, an act not authorized in the policy; next asked Campbell to get an exact statement from the insured of the quantity, grades and kinds of lumber on hand when the fire happened; a request which, if Campbell preferred it, was not a demand for an examination according to the policy (Dougherty v. Ins. Co., 67 Mo. App. 526) and, moreover,
The judgment is affirmed.