45 Mo. 84 | Mo. | 1869
delivered the opinion o£ the court.
This was a suit upon a policy of insurance issued by defendant to the assignor of plaintiffs, containing among other things a condition that the insured, if requested, should exhibit to the insurer, upon the adjustment of the loss, his books of account, invoices, etc. The policy covered the contents of a flouring mill in Perry county, occupied and run by one Schaff, the insured, consisting of flour, grain, etc., and the following are among the issues made by the pleadings.
The petition, after its description of the contract of insurance, sets forth the loss, with averments, that-it did not happen from any of the causes excepted in the policy; that said Schaff duly fulfilled all the conditions of said policy of insurance on his part, and gave the defendant due notice, and furnished proof of the fire and loss, etc. The answer denied the extent of the loss, and alleged that it was the result of the gross carelessness and negligence of the insured ; denied the fulfillment of the conditions of the policy; denied proper notice and exhibition of the proofs, and, among other things, set up the provision of the policy that the insured, if required, should produce their books of account, etc., for examination, and averred that they “were expressly required by the defendant to produce to him their books of account, which they neglected and refused to do. ” The reply put in issue all the defendant’s allegations except the one concerning the requirement and neglect to produce the books of account, of which nothing was said.
The defendant claims that this omission admitted, by not traversing, the truth of the allegation, and that he should have judgment upon it; while the plaintiffs, on the other hand, insist that it was included in the general averment of performance of conditions precedent, and that defendant’s allegation in
Is the obligation, then, to produce the books such a condition precedent as, under a system of pleadings that would require such conditions and their performance to be set out in detail1, should be included in them ? If included, it must be proved; and is the plaintiff called upon to make any proof in regard to it until the defendant has first set up and proved the demand for the books and their refusal ? This is clearly a matter of defense. The defendant, in actions of this kind, may not desire to see the books; and if he so desires he will call for them, and, if dissatisfied with their non-production, he will set it up as a defense. Until then the plaintiff has nothing to do with the question; he only avers the performance of the conditions he is called upon to prove, and is not bound, nor will he be permitted, to anticipate and disprove the defense. This condition is not, then, included in the general allegation of performance, and can only be brought into the record by the defendant; and if he does not tender an issue upon it, it is outside of the case. Defendant having alleged the demand and refusal or neglect, the plaintiffs clearly should deny one or the other, or give some excuse for not complying with the demand. I can conceive of no other way in which the facts of the case can be put in issue. The matter involved in that issue is very important in developing the actual loss, and should be fairly met both by the pleadings and evidence.
In the trial below, against the protest of defendant, evidence was offered and instructions were given to the jury upon the verbal claim that plaintiffs were excused from the production of their books when demanded; that the defendant had waived their production. The record show's no denial of defendant’s answer in regard to the books, and least of all is any waiver set up. All this evidence and this instruction were outside the record, and were clearly erroneous.
The plaintiffs claim that this allegation in regard to the books ■was not new matter, not matter of confession and avoidance. But the answer certainly admits the insurance and loss, and claims a non-liability in consequence of a refusal to produce the-
Among the errors complained of is the refusal of the court to give the following instruction for the defendants: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the fire mentioned in the plaintiffs’ petition was caused by or resulted from the gross carelessness or other gross misconduct of the insured, the plaintiffs can not recover, and the verdict should be for the defendant.”
It is not necessary, in this case, to consider the multitude of decisions upon this subject, and to follow the changes of the law to its present comparatively settled condition. The record is a long one, and I have examined it carefully, and I find no evidence tending to prove such gross carelessness or negligence as, of itself, would excuse the payment of the loss. “Gross” is a very strong word, and is sometimes treated as amounting to fraud, when it would clearly furnish a defense. An instruction using the term should not be given without some explanation of its import, and especially without some testimony upon which to found it. There was testimony tending to prove that the miller was absent the night of the fire; that the mill was in charge of the insured; that he had been intoxicated during the day; and that it was run at an unusual rate of speed. Also, something indefinite was said about weakness in the machinery in the garret, and that the smut-mill, in which the fire originated, needed cleaning. If the law were now held that negligence in the assured or his servants would discharge the liability of the insurer, it would have been erroneous to refuse proper instructions upon the sub
The holding of the court, however, upon the question of pleading, its permission to give evidence upon a matter material to the defendant’s liability, without any reply to their allegation in regard to it, was a substantial error.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial, with leave to amend.