99 Mo. 50 | Mo. | 1889
This suit is based upon two policies of insurance issued by the defendant to plaintiffs, who are partners in a mercantile business at Salisbury, in this state. One policy is in the sum of twenty-eight hundred dollars, upon a stock of merchandise, and the other in the sum of three hundred dollars, upon two one-story frame buildings. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs upon both policies.
The policies are alike, and it is stated on the face of each that the damage by fire is to be paid in sixty .days after the loss shall have been ascertained, in accordance with the conditions of the policy, the sixth pemg that
The defendant resists payment on these grounds only : First, a failure to give any notice of the loss; second, a failure to furnish proofs of loss within the thirty days. As to the latter, the plaintiffs plead waiver.
1. The fire occurred on December 3, 1885, at about one o’clock a. m. The policy, it will be seen, requires the assured to give immediate notice of the loss. On the next day after the fire, one of the plaintiffs went to Mr. Shotwell, who negotiated the insurance, and was the defendant’s local agent at Salisbury, and requested him to notify the company of the loss. Mr. Shotwell then told the plaintiff he had already notified the company. The evidence shows that Shotwell had written a letter to the company giving full notice and information of the loss under the two policies. The letter does not on its face profess to be given for, or in behalf of, the plaintiffs, and the contention of defendant is that it is no notice given by the assured.
It was held in Stimpson v. Insurance Co., 47 Me. 386, that a notice of loss given by the local agent at the request of the assured was sufficient, though the local agent, in his letter to the company, did not disclose the fact that it was written at the request of the assured. A written notice of the loss from the local agent, given from information communicated to him by the assured, was held to be a sufficient notice to the company in
2. The defendant makes the point that its agents had no power to waive any of the stipulations in the policy, and relies upon one of the conditions which is in these words:
“7. No agent has any power to waive any condition of this contract.”
A full copy of the policy is not preserved in the record, but it seems this is one of the several conditions stated in the body of the policy. It has no reference to the stipulation printed on the back, to the effect that the proof of loss must be furnished to the company within thirty days. The words “any condition of the contract” have reference to those stipulations which are a part of, and necessary to give validity to, the contract of insurance, and not to those matters which are to be performed after there has been a loss, such as giving notice, and furnishing a verified account of the loss. ,It was said in Rokes v. Amazon Ins. Co., 51 Md. 512: “In regard to the clause in the policy that provides ‘no waiver of modification of any of the terms or conditions of this policy shall be made in any event,’ it is sufficient to say that it refers to those cqnditions and provisions of the policy, which enter into and form a part of the contract of insurance, and are essential tc make it a binding contract between the parties, and
3. The proof of the loss on the goods was made out and verified on the second of January, 1886, but the additional certificate of the officer nearest the place of the fire, required by the policy, was not procured until the fourth, and on that day the proof was transmitted to defendant, and received by it on the fifth, some two days after the expiration of the thirty days. The proof on the three-hundred dollar policy was not served on defendant until the first day of February, 1886, nearly a month after the stipulated time. There were four other policies issued by other companies on the stock of goods, and statements, made by at least one of two adjusting agents were put in evidence ; but it did not appear that this agent had any authority to represent defendant, and these statements were excluded by an instruction. The plaintiffs testified that after these adjusting agents left they commenced to make out proofs of loss, that Mr. Shotwell, the defendant’s local agent, told them to hold on and not send the proofs yet, that an agent would be up from the home office and settle the business. Mr. Shotwell says it is possible he may have made such a statement, that he can’t say he was expecting an agent up from St. Louis.
An arbitration was held between plaintiffs and the four other companies at the office of defendant in St. Louis, which began on the twenty-fourth of January, 1886, and lasted for a week or ten days. Both plaintiffs testified that they asked Mr. Rorick, who was the defendant’s general adjusting agent, if he was going into the arbitration, and that he said : “No, I want to see you after the arbitration, to settle that loss with you.”
The fact is undisputed that defendant did not return or offer to return these proofs; they were turned over to Mr. Rorick, and no objection was made, because not furnished within thirty days.' This objection was made known for the first time by the answer filed in this case, five months after the fire.
On this evidence, the court for the plaintiffs instructed, that if defendant received the proofs of loss and held and retained them, and never notified plaintiff of any objection thereto, and “that the conduct of the defendant acting by its officers and agents, with respect to said loss, and the adjustment and settlement thereof, was such as to show a waiver as to the time of making and furnishing said proofs of loss, then the plaintiffs are not precluded from recovering as to either count of said petition, on the ground that said proofs or loss were not received by the defendant company within thirty days after the happening of said fire.”
The court, at the request of the defendant, gave the following instruction;
The objection that the evidence did not justify the court in submitting the question of waiver to the .jury is not well taken. The company’s local agent directed a delay in furnishing the proofs of loss. The company not only received and kept the proofs, but at no time, before filing the answer in this case, made any objection because out of time.' The evidence tends to show that the defendant’s adjuster gave plaintiffs to understand that he would settle the loss, and for that reason would not go into the arbitration; and when the last proof was furnished the assistant secretary said it was no use to serve the proof on defendant, assigning as a reason that the company knew all about the fire, and not even intimating that the proof was out of time. True it is the adjuster says he told plaintiffs they had forfeited their rights, but he does not pretend to say that he assigned' any reason why they had forfeited their rights. Besides this it was for the jury to say who gave a correct version of the conversation. A waiver of the strict terms of the contract may be shown by the acts and conduct of the officers of the company, and receiving
It is not necessary to examine minutely those cases where it is held that receiving and keeping proofs of loss, without objection, is, as a matter of law, a waiver of the objection that they were furnished out of time. Nor do we say this case comes within that class of cases, but we do say the evidence justifies the finding of the jury that defendant intended to and did waive and forego strict compliance with the terms of the policy, as to the time in which the account of the loss was to be furnished. It is difficult to see how the jury could have reached any other conclusion.
An objection is made to plaintiffs’ instruction, on the ground tliat it does not sufficiently define what will constitute a waiver, but it will be seen that instruction and the one given at the request of the defendant are not in conflict, and both taken together present the law favorably for the defendant.
The judgment is affirmed.