This appeal arises out of a dispute over the amount of insurance policy coverage provided for inventory. The insurer maintains the extent of coverage is limited by a reporting provision in the policy. However, the trial court ruled in favor of the insured, awarding the face amount of the policy. We reverse.
Midwest Office Technology, Inc. (Midwest) purchased a business protection insurance policy from the American Alliance Insurance Company (American) covering losses of inventory up to $600,000. Because its inventory fluctuated, Midwest selected a policy that provided variable coverage corresponding to the amount of inventory Midwest reported. Although the policy had a stated limit, the premiums were determined from the average inventory which the insured was required to report on a monthly basis. If a report was delinquent at the time of a loss, the coverage was limited to the amount listed in the last report filed prior to the loss.
After purchasing the policy, Midwest made inventory reports occasionally, but less often than the monthly requirement. It had not filed its monthly report when a fire destroyed Midwest’s inventory. The loss was valued at over $600,000. Midwest sought the entire policy limits of $600,000. American, relying on its policy provision, paid only $478,619.00, the amount of inventory claimed by Midwest in its most recent report prior to the fire.
Midwest filed the present breach of contract action, claiming damages for the difference between the policy limit and the amount American had actually paid on the loss. In a bench trial, the parties stipulated to the facts and agreed that the outcome of this case turns only on questions of law. The trial court concluded that Midwest’s breach of the monthly reporting requirement neither increased the risk nor contributed to the loss incurred. Therefore, the court determined the recovery *557 should not be limited by its breach. This legal conclusion is the sole issue before us on appeal.
Midwest maintains the trial court ruling is correct, citing Iowa Code section 515.101 (1985) and
Commercial Standard Insurance Co. v. Haley,
American contends that the authorities cited only apply to breaches of policy provisions which result in a forfeiture of the policy. It insists that the reporting requirement merely sets the coverage amount, rather than serving as a forfeiture provision that voids the entire policy or portions thereof.
The clause in dispute provides:
At the time of any loss, if the insured has failed to file with the Company reports of values as above required, this policy, subject otherwise to all its terms and conditions, shall cover only at the locations and for not more than the amounts included in the last report of values filed prior to the loss_
(Emphasis added.)
Midwest first contends that section 515.-101 invalidates the limitation of coverage clause. This section states:
Any condition or stipulation in an application, policy, or contract of insurance, making the policy void before the loss occurs, shall not prevent recovery thereon by the insured, if it shall be shown by the plaintiff that the failure to observe such provision or the violation thereof did not contribute to the loss.
The trial court found section 515.101 inapplicable to the reporting clause. The disputed clause does not abrogate the policy. It only sets the limits of coverage. We agree that the reporting clause simply does not fall within the section’s terms of a “condition ... making the policy void.”
This conclusion is consistent with our previous statement that this statute becomes operative only when the breach of contract by the insured would void the insurance policy.
See Carr v. Iowa Mut. Tornado Ins. Ass’n,
In ruling against American, the trial court relied upon language found in
Commercial Standard,
which stated, “the rule is that breach of a condition must be shown to have contributed to the loss or in fact make the risk more hazardous.”
Commercial Standard,
In
Commercial Standard,
the federal court was interpreting Iowa law. In adopting the quoted rule, the federal court cited and relied upon three Iowa cases.
Id.
at 24-25. Each of these cases relies upon Iowa Code section 1743 (Supp.1913), the predecessor to section 515.101, as authority for this rule.
E.D. Baird & Son v. Kaskaskia Live Stock Ins. Co.,
Other jurisdictions have addressed the issue of whether a breach of the value reporting clause causes forfeiture or merely sets limits of coverage. These cases have evolved from the insureds’ claims of waiver and estoppel. Estoppel is a defense to a forfeiture of a policy, but does not extend coverage.
Northern Assurance Co. v. Stan-Ann Oil Co.,
Additionally, other jurisdictions interpreting clauses similar or identical to this one have concluded they are clear and unambiguous on their faces, requiring the policy language be given full effect.
Quality Foods, Inc. v. United States Fire Ins. Co.,
[T]he honesty clause states in plain language that Travelers’ liability is limited by values reported for the premises where the loss occurs when compared to actual values at that location.... Kwal breached this condition and, under the unambiguous terms of the contract, it is limited to partial recovery of its loss.
This was not a case of forfeiture of a premium for a risk never assumed, but is a limitation on the amount of coverage as *559 a result of the insured’s volitional and unilateral action of under-reporting. It chose not to report as required, and the coverage was distributed as the policy forewarned it would be.
Kwal,
We have also considered Midwest’s suggestion that the policy clause should be held invalid on public policy grounds citing
Lakeside Plywood & Building Materials, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
In summary, we believe that neither section 515.101 nor Commercial Standard provides aid to Midwest. The rule announced in Commercial Standard applies only to policy conditions that would completely avoid coverage. The rule was directly derived from the predecessor to section 515.101 that speaks to “making the policy void.” When the value reporting clause is breached, liability is not avoided, but merely limited. Value reporting clauses are standard in the insurance industry and have been often construed by litigation. The applicable case law uniformly supports our position.
The policy unambiguously provides that the insured’s coverage is limited to the amount of inventory reported on the last report filed prior to any loss. The trial court erred when it concluded to the contrary.
REVERSED.
