193 Mo. App. 543 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1916
This is an action upon a fire insurance policy wherein plaintiff claims the
“$2500 on two-story frame dwelling bouse.
“$1000 on household and kitchen furniture and furnishings of all kinds belonging to assured, or members of bis family, all while contained in tbe above described dwelling house and summer kitchen.
“$150 on shingle roof frame building and its additions occupied as a private barn.
“$200 on vehicles while contained in above described dwelling barn and additions.
“$75 on smokehouse.
“$75 on provisions and produce therein.”
Tbe application for tbe policy signed by tbe plaintiff stated that be was tbe owner in fee simple of said property. On December 25, 1914, tbe fire occurred, totally destroying tbe dwelling bouse and its contents except about fifty dollars’ worth of household goods, smokehouse and its contents. Tbe contents of tbe dwelling bouse plaintiff testified was
“Q. So at the time of the fire your household goods and furniture, household, stores, wearing apparel and ornaments of person belonging to you were worth $50? A. That is what I figured them, that is what I figured they would bring if they were sold.” In his schedule filed in the .bankruptcy court, and sworn to on December 13, 1913, he stated that his interest in the acre of land was at that time worth $750. At the time the application for the insurance was signed by the plaintiff, when the policy was issued and at the trial the plaintiff owned only an undivided half interest in the land upon which the buildings were located. He had previous to the application deeded the other .half to his wife. He testified and alleged in his answer that the agent for the defendant prepared the application; that he, the plaintiff, told the agent that his wife had a conditional' deed to a one-half interest; that she owned a half interest; that the agent asked if they were living together and the plaintiff told him they were and that the agent said “that is alright, her property is the same as yours — he wrote the application and I gave him the money.” The plaintiff signed the application without reading it. ' The agent of the defendant was a witness and denied this testimony of the plaintiff.
At the close of the testimony the defendant requested and was refused an instruction directing a verdict in its behalf. For the plaintiff the court instructed the jury (No. 1) that if the finding was for the plaintiff and he was allowed any damages they should be for “the amount expressed in policy for which said property was insured and which was destroyed by fire less the value of any and all property saved and not destroyed by fire, in a sum not to
Instruction No. • 2, given in behalf of the plaintiff, told the jury if they found from the evidence that the plaintiff had performed all of the duties required of him by said policy, detailing said conditions, they should find for the plaintiff, provided they found that the defendant waived the condition in the policy that it should be void if the plaintiff was not the sole, unconditional and .absolute owner of the property insured as set out in other instructions.
Instruction No. 3, given for the plaintiff, was based upon the theory of waiver and in substance told the jury if the agent wrote the' application; that the plaintiff made the statements to him at that time to which we have stated the plaintiff testified; that the plaintiff relied upon said agent writing the answers correctly and did not thereafter read over the application; that the plaintiff paid the premium provided for in the policy and the defendant retained and had not handed back the same to the plaintiff, that then the defendant has waived the statement in the policy and the answer in the application that the plaintiff was the sole and absolute owner of the property, and that the defendant could not defeat the action on that defense.
In behalf of defendant the court instructed the jury that the burden of proving waiver rested upon plaintiff and also that if the defendant had reasonable cause to believe and did believe that it had a good defense to all or any part of plaintiff’s claim then no penalty or attorney’s fee should be assessed against it.
At the very outset we are met with the insistence in behalf of the defendant that the plaintiff should not, as a matter of public policy, be allowed to insure the undivided one-half interest in the property owned by his wife and collect the insurance thereon and that no waiver or conduct on the part of the defendant could legalize such insurance. We concede that proposition to be true and we have held that a party cannot collect insurance upon property in which he has no insurable interest. [Wisecup v. The American Ins. Co. of Newark, 186 Mo. App. 310, 172 S. W. 73, and Rutherford v. Sample, 186 Mo. App. 469, 171 S. W. 578.]
The defendant also contends that as the defendant was able to do so but did not read the application that, therefore, he is bound by its contents, citing the opinions of this' court in Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. American Zinc, Lead and Smeltering Co., 169 Mo. App. 550, 563, 154 S. W. 827, which lays down no
Beginning with Combs v. Hannibal Savings & Insurance Co., 43 Mo. 148, 150 and 151, there is a long array of opinions of the Supreme Court and of the Courts of Appeal holding that where the agent of the insurance company incorrectly fills out an application from facts given him by an applicant who can read and the insured signs the application without reading it, after being given to understand that it was properly filled out, relying upon the statement of the insurance agent, that the defendant is estopped from showing any breach of warranty, as to such incorrectly filled in matter, if such application was prepared by its agent with full knowledge of the facts. [Parsons v. The Knoxwell Fire Ins. Co., 132 Mo. 583, 588 and 589, 34 S. W. 476; Rissler v. American Central Ins. Co., 150 Mo. 366, 376, 51 S. W. 755; Thomas v. Hartford Ins. Co., 20 Mo. App. 150, 156; Shortliff v. Modern Woodmen of America, 100 Mo. App. 138, 149, 73 S. W. 326, et seq., and Floyd v. Modern Woodmen of America, 166 Mo. App. 166, 168, 148 S. W. 178.]
If the facts are as plaintiff testified concerning the application he told the defendant’s agent the truth concerning his title and if the agent wrongly interpreted the facts and incorrectly filled out the application the defendant cannot now be heard to say that the policy is void on account of the present alleged misrepresentation of title. We uphold the contention of the defendant that the plaintiff could not insure the interest of his wife in the property but in so holding we do not necessarily conclude that
In the first place plaintiff’s Instruction No. 1, is erroneous in that it does not permit' the jury to assess the damages by determining the depreciation, if any, in the property insured. The “valued policy” provision of section 7020 is, by the latter part of section 7021, limited to insurance of real property, but section 7030, Revised Statutes 1909, applies to personal property in the same way. [Spickard v. Fire Association, 164 Mo. App. 1, 4, 146 S. W. 808; Weston v. American Ins. Co., 191 Mo. App. 282, 284, 177 S. W. 792.] The instruction should have been so framed that the jury could have considered the testimony as to what defendant stated the value of the real property to be when he filed his schedule in bankruptcy, almost one year after the policy
Appellant also calls attention to this instruction as being defective because it does not submit separately the questions of loss and depreciation as applied to each group of property in the way mention
We are also of the opinion that in view of the facts and circumstances in this case that the jury should not have been authorized to assess any penalty or attorney’s fee, because it is shown in this case that the plaintiff: has been contending for and undertaking to collect far in excess of what, according to his own testimony, he is entitled to recover and it was not the intention and purpose of section 7068, Revised Statutes 1909 (as amended Laws 1011, page 282) to penalize an insurance company for resisting a claim, a material part of which it has good reason to believe is not due the plaintiff. [Weston v. American Ins. Co., 191 Mo. App. 282, 285, 177 S. W. 792; Patterson v. American Ins. Co., 174 Mo. App. 37, 44, 160 S. W. 59; Kahn v. London Assurance Corporation, 187 Mo. App. 216, 219, 173 S. W. 695.] At the time the plaintiff submitted his proof of .loss, which was about two months after the fire and after he had discussed the matter with defendant’s agent, he claimed the full $1000 for household, kitchen furniture, etc. At that time evidently the defendant was aware of the sworn statements made by the plaintiff in his schedules filed in bankruptcy and from that they had good reason to believe that the value of the personal property lost in the fire did not exceed $50 and that there had
The instructions which were given by the trial judge and which were evidently modifications of instructions requested by the defendant should not upon a re-trial, if objected to by the plaintiff, be given because neither of them, for the reasons heretofore stated, properly declare the law.
The judgment is reversed and the' cause remanded. 1