122 Iowa 355 | Iowa | 1904
No doubt tbe company could bave canceled its entire policy by returning tbe proper proportion of tbe premium received. But neither tbe policy nor tbe la.w author-
While the plaintiff insists that he was dissatisfied, and so declared to the company’s representatives, he nowhere denies entering into such an agreement. He was asked: “Now, you may state to the jury why it was that you signed and verified that agreement if you did not intend to abide by the settlement,” and answered :■ “Why, I wanted to get what I could, and commence action for the balance; that is the size of it. Q. You say you wanted to get what you could, and commence action for the balance ? A. Yes; I thought I was imposed on. I didn’t think they ever gave me any notice of cancellation. Q. Did you make any objection to signing that agreement ? A. I signed it for the amount of two hundred and fifty dollars. Q. Did you say to Mr. Seager that you would not stand by that ? A. I would stand by that as far as the two hundred and fifty dollars is concerned; I didn’t make a settlement in full. Q. You didn’t? Now,
What he intended to do in the way of bringing suit subsequently is not material. A party cannot save himself from the binding 'effect of a compromise by an undisclosed mental reservation that he will get all he can, and sue for the balance. If not satisfied with the amount obtained, he was in the situation of many creditors who compromise their claims. He agreed upon a settlement, the terms of which were embodied in the proof of loss, and the defendant fully complied therewith in its prompt remittance of the amount he agreed to accept. This was the construction given to the evidence by the district court, for the jury was advised in the ninth paragraph of the charge that the paper nominated proof of loss ‘is prima facie evidence that plaintiff settled with defendant, and agreed to accept from it the sum of $250 in full settlement of all his claim for loss against the defendant under the policy in suit.” That this appeared in proof of loss renders it none the less binding. It may be that the insured is not always bound by the statement therein of the amount claimed, as where there has been a mistake, as in Crittenden v. Ins. Co., 85 Iowa, 653, or where the company has refused to pay, as in Corkery v. Ins. Co., 99 Iowa, 382. But in the absence of deceit and fraud, when a distinct proposition has been incorporated in the proofs, and accepted and acted upon by the company, further controversy is foreclosed.
But the court seemed to have been of the opinion that this was obviated in some way by the so-called “nonwaiver”