58 Kan. 531 | Kan. | 1897
L. H. Westerman and H. Rammelsberg were the owners of a policy of insurance, issued by the plaintiff in error, on their mill building and machinery and millers’ stock. Westerman sold his interest in the insured property, and assigned his interest in the policy, to Rammelsberg. The terms of the insurance contract provided for notice to the Company of transfers of the property, and the ratification by it of assignments of the policy. As a condition to giving its assent to the assignment in question, the plaintiff in error required Rammelsberg to make a new application for the insurance. This he agreed to do. The secretary of the Company wrote the application, copying the old one verbatim, except that the answer to the question: “Do you agree to keep a watchman on the premises at all times when not in operation? ” was written “yes.” instead of “no,” as in the old instrument. There is a conflict of testimony as to whether the secretary presented this new application to the insured in person, and told him that it was in all particulars a copy of the old one, or whether he sent it to him by mail, without calling his attention to the change. It was signed by him without reading, as he testified, and was returned to the secretary, whereupon the Company’s assent to the assignment was given. The insured property was subsequently burned, at a time when the mill was not in operation and when there was no watchman on the premises. Suit was brought for the recovery of the loss. The Company defended upon the ground of failure to comply with the agreement, in the application, to keep a watchman on the premises. For reply,
The only claim of error necessary to be noticed is based upon an instruction given to the jury. The plaintiff having alleged that his signature to the changed form of application was fraudulently procured, the court instructed that the burden was upon him “to satisfy the jury, by a preponderance of evidence, that any answer to any question in such application was procured by fraud.” This statement of law was repeated in a different form in another part of the instructions, and, elsewhere, the court explained the quantum of evidence necessary to discharge the burden, in the following language: “You are instructed that the preponderance in any case need only be slight, so that you are enabled to say, there is a little more evidence upon one side than upon the other.” The question for determination is, whether a jury should be instructed as matter of law that a bare preponderance, a slight overbalancing, of evidence, is sufficient to justify the cancellation or rejection of a written instrument between parties, upon the ground that one of them had been fraudulently 'entrapped into its execution.
In all civil actions, the party asserting the affirmative of an issue is entitled to prevail upon the production by him of a preponderance of evidence ; but, in
The application for insurance in this case constitutes part of the insurance contract. It is the instrument solely of the insured, in the sense that its execution is solely his act. The cases cited by defendant in error, which hold that representations in applications for insurance written by the Company’s agents do not estop the insured, are apart from the question for consideration. That question does not
The refusal of the court to give part of a certain instruction is criticized by plaintiff in error, but, we think, without good grounds.
For error in instructing the jury that the written application for insurance could be impeached by slightly stronger evidence than that adduced in its support, the case is reversed and a new trial ordered.