192 Mich. 230 | Mich. | 1916
The defendant is a mutual fire insurance company, organized under the laws of the State governing the creation of such mutual corporations, and attached to the policies issued by it is a copy of its charter. Various of the charter provisions which are of importance in this litigation are as follows:
*232 “Sec. 15. Any person may become a member of this company by paying a membership fee of one dollar, together with ten cents on each hundred dollars they insure.”
“Sec. 18. Any member may, upon sale of his property, transfer his policy to the purchaser, by paying a fee of one dollar and obtaining the consent of the president and secretary thereto, which must be indorsed, on said policy.”
“Sec. 20. All applications for insurance must be made to the secretary or his agent, and contain such statements in regard to the risk of the property insured as the board of directors may deem proper to embody in the application.”
The plaintiff owned a small farm in the township of Erie, Monroe county, Mich., and has for a number of years carried a policy in the defendant company covering both his buildings and his personal property. Dennis Knaggs was also a resident of the township of Erie, and owned a farm upon which he for a number of years carried a policy in the defendant company, covering $400 on his buildings and $1,400 on his personal property. Some years previous to the occurrence which gave rise to this litigation, Mr. Knaggs left his farm in Erie township and moved into another township in Monroe county, carrying with him his personal property. He had his policy changed to allow insurance on the building to remain as originally written, and his policy on the personal property to apply in the township where he was then a resident. The plaintiff sold his farm to one Dwyer, and agreed with him to have his insurance policy transferred to Dwyer, as Dwyer desired to take the same amount of insurance upon the personal property that the plaintiff carried. The plaintiff then purchased the Knaggs farm and bargained with Knaggs to have the insurance upon the building on the Knaggs farm transferred to him. On March 12, 1912, the plaintiff and his wife, Knaggs and his wife, and Dwyer went to
“I agreed to assign my policy to him (plaintiff); I was to pay the expense of transferring the policy. * * * Mr. Hilton said he would fix it up and send my policy to me and make a new one for Mr. Leonard; that is what I understood; as soon as possible. About the new policy, I said I would pay for it, all that was coming. * * * I explained to Mr. Hilton my bargain with Mose about paying for the insurance; that I would pay for the new one, and he would make it. That is all I understood.”
On cross-examination he further said:'
“When I sold the property to Leonard I told Mr. Hilton to transfer this policy to him on the house, and he said he would make a new policy and return this to me by mail (meaning Knaggs’ own policy), and he returned it about three days afterward. *. * * I was to pay for Leonard’s new policy. I did — $1, I think.”
Hilton testified that Knaggs did not pay him for insuring Leonard’s property, and that he told Mr. Leonard that he would have to have a new application
Error is alleged because the learned trial judge, in his charge to the jury, said:
‘ “Gentlemen, you are instructed that if you find by a preponderance of the evidence that at the time of the transfer of this real estate from Mr. Knaggs to Mr. and Mrs. Leonard, Mr. Knaggs agreed with Mr. and Mrs. Leonard to transfer to them his insurance on the property, and to that end agreed and arranged with Mr. Hilton, secretary of the company, to transfer the insurance, either by assignment of the old policy or the issuance of a new one, and paid Mr. Hilton for such transfer, and Mr. Hilton then and there, for the company, accepted the money therefor, and further said to them at that time that that was all they had to do, and that Mr. Leonard need not do anything more and need not come back again to get his policy issued, then plaintiff would be entitled to recover.”
Counsel for the defendant contends that section 20 of the charter above set forth requires that a written' application of insurance should be made, and this construction of the charter contended for not having been complied with, the plaintiff cannot have any claim
It may be said that, upon reading section 20, the conclusion is justifiable that by inference, at least, it was the intention of the framers of the charter to require a written application. But it would have been a very simple and easy matter to have said so in words, so as to leave nothing to implication. In our opinion such a provision should be strictly construed against the insurer when it is sought to be taken advantage of to defeat a claim such as is relied upon in the instant case, where the application was made to an authorized agent of the company and was accepted by him, and the required fee whs paid. There being evidence to support these claims and no provisions in the charter expressly forbidding the acceptance of such a parol application, this theory of the case, in our opinion, was properly submitted to the jury, as an oral contract for insurance has been held to be valid and binding. Gristock v. Insurance Co., 84 Mich. 161 (47 N. W. 549).
It was held in Becker v. Insurance Co., 48 Mich. 610 (12 N. W. 874), and in the later case of Kamm & Schellinger Brewing Co. v. Insurance Co., 168 Mich. 606 (184 N. W. 999), that the charter and by-laws of a mutual insurance company are parts of the contract of insurance, and that the officers of the company cannot waive any of the provisions of the charter or the by-laws. Under these authorities, the plaintiff’s counsel concedes that section 18 of the charter, with reference to the .transferring of policies, is binding
It will be noticed on reading the section of the charge above set forth that both of these.theories were submitted to the jury, and it is of course impossible to tell upon which theory the jury determined that the defendant was liable. Under the facts here set forth, the defendant was éntitled to an instructed verdict upon the theory of the assignment of the policy, but as we have intimated, the question of a new contract of insurance was one which it was proper to submit to the'jury.
Being therefore unable to determine whether the jury decided the question of whether or not an oral contract for new insurance was made, we conclude that the error in the judge’s charge must be said to be prejudicial.
The judgment is therefore reversed and a new trial granted.