124 Ill. App. 491 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1906

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

We are obliged to reverse this judgment and remand this cause, because the record shows that no competent evidence of the amount of the damages went to the jury, and the verdict must therefore have been based on the insufficient ground of a mere guess, or on one of the equally insufficient grounds, of evidence, altogether incompetent for the purpose of establishing the amount of damages, and admissible only for other purposes, or of evidence which was stricken out, or of a misunderstanding of what was actually testified.

Appellee insists that the introduction of the policy and “proofs of loss” (meaning the sworn claim provided for, by the policy and delivered to the insurer by the insured after the fire) made out a pñma facie case of the amount of the loss. To this proposition he cites several cases: Continental Ins. Co. v. Rogers, 119 Ill., 474; Illinois Fire Ins. Co. v. Stanton, 57 Ill., 354; Forehand v. Niagara Ins. Co., 58 Ill. App., 161, and Merchants Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Dunbar, 88 Ill. App., 574; but no one of them furnishes justification for it.

The case of the Continental Ins. Co. v. Rogers was a suit on a life insurance policy for a fixed sum payable on death, and the opinion expressly shows that the plaintiff testified to the death of the assured and expressly states that “the death of the assured” was one of the averments necessary to be made and proved in addition to the “making proofs to the .company.” In the Illinois Fire Ins. Co. v. Stanton, 57 Ill., 354, Me. Justice Scott does indeed say: “The appellee by production of the policy and the proofs of loss made a prima facie case,” but the remark was made merely as bearing on a question of pleading, and is in itself ambiguous. Did the learned judge mean, “by production of the policy and production of the proofs of loss,” (using “proofs of loss” in the sense of the document addressed to the company) ; or did he mean (which is quite as likely) “by production of the policy” and “by the proofs of loss” ? Undoubtedly it was strictly true that by production of the policy and by proving the loss, a prima facie case was made.

In the case cited from the Appellate Court of the Fourth District, Forehand v. Niagara Ins. Co., 58 Ill. App., 161, the statement of the court, “The introduction of the policy, with proof of loss, makes a prima facie case for the plaintiff,” is strictly accurate. “Proof of loss” means evidence of the loss. In the last case cited, Merchants National Ins. Co. v. Dunbar, 88 Ill. App., 574, the court says: “The policy of insurance with proofs of loss was introduced by plaintiffs. This made a prima facie, case.” But it proceeds, “The amount of the recovery does not exceed three-quarters bf the loss, and is not disputed if plaintiffs are entitled to any recovery at all.” The learned judge writing the opinion probably had nothing further from his thoughts than the contradiction of the rule laid down by all the text books on the subject and by many cases of authority, that “the proofs of loss” (meaning by that term the technical and detailed written statements required by the insurer from the insured and provided for by the policy) are in a suit on the policy only admissible as evidence that the requirements of the policy have been met—not of the facts which they state. Our Supreme Court once went farther and held it error to allow them to go to the jury (Lycoming Ins. Co. v. Rubin, 79 Ill., 402), but in a subsequent case (Knickerbocker Ins. Co. v. Gould, 80 Ill., 388, 392) modified the holding, declaring that “The true rule is, that the proofs of loss are proper to show compliance with the terms of the policy, hut are not to he considered in ascertaining the amount of the damages.”

Hor can we agree with appellee’s contention that the affidavit constituting the “proofs of loss” in this case, because admitted without objection to its general competency and materiality, became competent evidence to be considered by the jury, of anything of which it would not have been evidence, if defendant had objected to its being so considered. Whatever admissions against interest it contained would be evidence against plaintiff, like any other preceding sworn statement shown to have been made by him, and this is the purport of the cases cited by plaintiff on this point, but as it was competent and unobjectionable for the plaintiff for one purpose, defendant was not obliged specifically to point out that this ex parte affidavit was not evidence of the self-serving statements therein contained, in order to make the proposition true.

■ Appellee further says that the plaintiff, by testimony in the case, furnished evidence sufficient to- warrant the jury in estimating the damage by the fire to the goods insured as greater than the amount of the policy.

We have carefully examined the testimony with the question involved in view, and are unable to find that which would justify us in so holding. Questions were asked the plaintiff while- on the witness stand several times involving the amount of the damage, but at no time but once, as we read the record, was an answer obtained, and then it was stricken out, so that the jury had no right to consider it and cannot be supposed to have done so. The plaintiff was asked, “What was the value of the property which you say was in this building and which was injured or destroyed by fire ?7’ He replied, “You refer to the property I owned in the building?” Q. “Yes,—which was affected by the fire.” A. “It was about $1,800—the total value.” Then he was asked, “Did you make a statement of the injury and loss by reason of that fire?” A. “I did.” Q. “And what is that amount?” Appellant’s counsel: “I object.” The witness: “In the vicinity of $800—800 and some odd dollars.” The Court: “Objection, sustained.” Appellant’s counsel: “I move to strike out the answer.” The Court: “Motion sustained.” After that, the court sustained objections to questions ¿s to the value of the property left after the fire, on the ground that it would not be direct but inferential evidence of the loss, and then again sustained an objection to a direct question as to the amount and character of the damages to the property that the witness had stated was worth $1,800 before the fire. Then this colloquy occurred:

“ Counsel por Appellee : What happened to this property then, by reason of this fire, if anything? A. Part of it was consumed and part of it was charred and burned and part of it was destroyed by water, which was used to put out the fire, with the frigidity of the atmosphere following.

Q. What was the amount or extent in value of that dam- ■ age to the property ?

Counsel por Appellant: I object.

The Court: You asked him a little while ago, and he said $1,800,—don’t you remember it?

Counsel por Appellee : Yes, I remember that, and if the Court admits that, I am done.

The Court : He told -it and it is there.”

The explanation of this apparent game of cross purposes we cannot give. We do not know why the witness was not allowed to testify either directly the extent and amount of the damage, or indirectly by stating the amount saved from the $1,800 worth of property. But not only from this, but from other testimony of the plaintiff also, it is clear that the property insured was not a total loss. Some of it, he says, was removed into the cellar of his new residence, some of it sent for renovation, and some of it given away. And it is equally clear, despite the inaccurate statement of the court, assented to by the counsel for appellee, that $1,800 was the total sound value of the goods insured and not the “amount or extent of the damage” to those goods. On the cross-examination of the plaintiff the trial judge seemed at one point to be disposed to get from him the information he had declined to let him give on direct examination, but the counsel for appellant disclaiming curiosity on the point, the anticipated statement from the witness dissolved into an unsatisfactory guess as to the value of the property removed from the burning building into the alley, and thus an absolutely essential element of the plaintiff’s case was omitted entirely. For this reason, as we have indicated, the judgment must be reversed and the cause' remanded.

We do not deem it necessary to discuss at length the other errors assigned by appellant.

There was no error in allowing the plaintiff to amend his declaration when he asked leave to do so. As to the necessity of the amendment made, however, under the conditions of the policy in this case, we refer counsel to the opinion of this court in the Concordia Fire Insurance Co. v. Bowen, 121 Ill. App., 35, in which the whole question, with many eases bearing on it, is discussed, and it is held, with relation to a policy with identically the same language as to appraisement as in the case at bar, that the failure, neglect or refusal of the plaintiff to secure an appraisal or award is a matter of defense to be averred and proven by the defendant if it would escape liability.

In the case at bar the lack of an appraisement was set up as a matter of defense, and notice under the general issue may be said to have taken the place of a plea by the defendant. But the theory of the notice was inaccurate in assuming the ascertainment of the amount of the loss by appraisement to be a condition precedent to the maturity of any claim. It contained the implication that the absence of any such appraisement without the fault of the defendant would be fatal, whereas that result would only follow if the failure to secure an appraisement was through the fault of the plaintiff. If such failure was without the fault of the plaintiff, he could still maintain his suit. In this view we .deem the instructions which dealt with this question of appraisement to be without reversible error, and as favorable to appellant as it had a right to demand, and think the court was right in refusing the instruction offered by the appellant, that if without fault of either party, the amount of said loss and damage was not determined by an award of appraisers, it was the duty of the plaintiff to propose the selection of new appraisers after the first appraisers chosen by the parties failed to determine the amount of such loss. That no such duty existed follows logically from the view taken of the condition in Concordia Ins. Co. v. Bowen, supra, and that it does not is, we think, decided in Niagara Fire Ins. Co. v. Bishop, 154 Ill., 9.

In consideration of the disposition which we are somewhat reluctantly obliged to make of this case, it does not become necessary to discuss the instructions which relate to the proofs of loss, the fáilure of the plaintiff to produce original invoices and a certificate of a magistrate,' further than to say that they do not seem to us to state the law inaccurately or to contain reversible error. The proposition of the tenth instruction — that if the defendant examined the plaintiff under oath concerning his claim for a loss under the policy, as required by the terms and conditions of said policy, it, by such examination under oath, waived all right to require of the plaintiff a proof of loss, or any other act to be done by the plaintiff as evidence of such loss and the amount thereof—seems to be set forth as a general rule of the law of insurance by the approved text writers on insurance contracts and the cases by them cited. 4 Joyce on Insurance, sec. 3381; 2 May on Insurance, sec. 466.

The question involved has never been passed on, however, by our Supreme Court, and in view of the express provision of the policy that the company shall not be held to have waived any provision or condition of the policy by any requirement, act or proceeding on its part relating to any examination therein provided for, we cannot approve of the instruction, and must hold it erroneous in this case. The company could undoubtedly waive requirements which it might have insisted on, by not insisting on them, and might in proper case be held to have done so,, as we decided in Concordia Insurance Co. v. Bowen, but under the provision we have last above quoted, it might also, we think, insist on both an examination under oath and the appraisal which the policy gave it a right to require.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. .

Reversed and remanded.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.