10 W. Va. 560 | W. Va. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On June 27, 1874, L. W. Levy, brought an action of assampsit, in the circuit court of Kanawha county against the Peabody Insurance Company, on a policy of insurance dated March 18, 1873, whereby the defendant .insured against fire for one year from that date, to the amount of $1,800, his stock of ladies and gentlemen’s furnishing goods, notions, fancy goods, and such other-goods as are usually kept in a ladies’ and gentlemen’s furnishing goods store, in a certain building in Charles-'
There has been considerable diversity of opinion on the proper mode of bringing into the pleadings on the part of the plaintiff, of a waiver of the defendant of any of his rights, and what is the effect on the admissibility in evidence of a waiver where the plaintiff has wholly failed to plead such waiver. The strict rule of common law pleading permitted, if it did not absolutely require the plaintiff, in his pleading, to allege that a defense of the defendant had been waived and how it had been waived and the English courts still hold that unless the plaintiff, in his pleading, has alleged such waiver specially, it cannot be proven on the trial. But the iveight of American' authorities are the other way; thus: “If the plaintiff, in his declaration (as in this case), allege that he has, on his part, performed all the conditions of a policy of insurance, and has violated none of its provisions, he must be regarded as meaning such as have not been waived. Such as have been waived are, in effect, as if they had never been inserted in the contract.” This is the language of Judge Moncure, in delivering the opinion of the court in West Rockingham Mutual Fire Insurance Company v. Sheets & Co., 26 Gratt., 874, and he adds: “I think the American authorities, or a decided preponderance of them, show that to be a correct rule with us, while the English rule appears to be different. See 4 Rob. Pr., 443, and 2 Smith's Leading Cases; Wallace’s Notes, p. 74, and cases cited; see, also, Ketchum v. Protection Insurance Company, 1 Allen (New Brunswick Reports), and Lycoming County Mutual Insurance Company v. Schel-
This was made out in duplicate; one taken to Wheeling, and the other left with witness.
The plaintiff testified that his losses by the fire were between $1,900 and $2,300. Rodgers asked him to invoice goods lost; he did so, but Rodgers was not satisfied. With the aid of a young man, he invoiced them again, but not being yet satisfied, Rodgers and Winans invoiced them. Rodgers gave Moore and Egans some of his damaged goods, which had been invoiced as lost. They took his store books and kept them a day or so and brought them back with the policy, on which was endorsed $457.09 3-25. Similar endorsements were made on the other policies, in all over $1,400. Bishop and Winans told him to go to a notaryjand swear to proof of
Judgment AffieMed.