115 Va. 631 | Va. | 1913
delivered th'e opinion of the court.
This suit was brought by Harriot S. Turner to recover of the plaintiff in 'error $1,000, the amount of an insurance policy against loss by fire issued by it upon certain real estate owned by the plaintiff.
Two defenses were made by the defendant company: (1) That the plaintiff failed to pay an assessment ordered by the board of directors, which was due December 31, 1910, and that after that date, under the terms of the policy, it was suspended and had no force or effect at the date of the loss; (2) that contrary to the plaintiff’s statement and representation in her application for the insurance there was, at the time of such application, a lien on the property created by the plaintiff.
There was a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff which we are asked to review.
The defendant is a mutual fire insurance company, organized under a charter granted by the State of Virginia. Acts 1897-8, page 17. The application for the policy sued on contains the following covenant: “That this application and the policy to be issued, embracing the property above
The sixth by-law provides: “In the event of default in the payment of any assessment which may at any time be made on the premium notes given to and held by this company on or before December 31st of each year-, as to the annual assessment . . . then the policy of such delinquent member shall be suspended and be not binding on the said company until payment of such assessment or assessments shall be made”; and further provides: ‘But payment of such delinquent assessment or assessments shall in
This by-law is enacted in pursuance of the express authority to that effect contained in section 12 of the act of incorporation. Section 11 of the charter provides that the board of directors “shall, before the commencement of each fiscal year, at such time as it deems proper, make an approximate estimate of the amount of money.which said company is likely to need during the next fiscal year . . . and how much of said premium note or bond will probably be required to discharge all said liabilities, losses, claims and demands, and shall call on the insured to pay the same by such time as may be specified in the order or by-laws.....Each member shall be notified of the rate of assessment, payment of which is called for, and the time in which it is required to be made, at least thirty days before the final or last day of payment. Mailing such notice to the post-office address given by the member in the application for insurance (and in case of change of the same, such address as the member shall, in writing, furnish the secretary) shall in all cases be sufficient notice to such member.”
The application of the insured contains the stipulation and agreement that all the answers to the questions therein propounded shall be construed as material in all cases.
The record shows that on October 7, 1907, George E. Pilaster, acting on behalf of his mother-in-law, the plaintiff in this suit, made application in writing' to the defendant company for insurance to the amount of $1,000 on a certain tenant house situated on her farm in Clarke county. The policy was issued in the name of the plaintiff, Harriot S. Turner, and a premium note for $200 was
In her application for insurance, the plaintiff stated, in answer to a question, that her post-office addi’ess was “Bluexixont, Virginia.” This information for the guidaxxee of the company was acted upon, and each of the three notices of assessmexit that the company was called upon to give the plaintiff was sent to that address. The record shows that the plaintiff had a home at Bluemont, Virginia,
Upon these facts bearing on the giving of the notice by mail, as permitted by the charter, the circuit court, over the objection of the defendant, gave instruction No. 1 for the plaintiff, as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant had, before November, 1910, sent its notices of assessment by postal card, or in such
We are of opinion that this instruction is erroneous and should not have been given. It ignores the contract between the parties, which was, that “mailing such notice to the post-office address given by the member in the application for insurance (and in case of change of the same, such address as the member shall in writing furnish the secretary) shall in all cases be sufficient notice to such member.” Charter, section 11.
It is not pretended that the plaintiff ever intimated to the company, in writing or otherwise, that she had changed
The facts do not justify the suggestion of this instruction—that the jury might consider whether the defendant had waived its contract rights by some previous habit of the company to send out notices by postal card, or that the company had changed its rule with respect to mailing notices by postal card. The contract by which the parties are bound contains no provision obligating the company to send these notices by postal card, or in any other designated way. The evidence does not show any rule of the company on the subject, nor does it establish any custom with respect to the method. So far as the plaintiff is concerned, she had only received two notices prior to the one in question, which was wholly insufficient to justify her
The converse of the propositions contained in instruction No. 1 for the plaintiff is contained in the following instructions asked for by the defendant, which the court refused to give :
“L. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, at the time of her application for the policy in litigation, either by herself or through her agent, gave as her post-office address Bluemont, Virginia, and that she has not since, by written notice to said company, directed a change to be made in such address; and if they further believe from the evidence that on or before the 30th day of November, 1910, a notice setting forth the rate of assessment fixed by the board of directors to meet the expenses of the company for the year 1911, and the time by which the assessment was to be paid, was put in an envelope addressed to the plaintiff*640 at Bluemont, Virginia, and deposited in the post-office at Waterford, Virginia, the place of the home office of the defendant company, for transmission to the plaintiff, duly stamped, and that the plaintiff did not prior to the occurrence of the fire by Avhich the building insured was destroyed pay to the defendant said assessment, then they shall find for the defendant; the court instructing the jury that it is immaterial whether or not said notice was actually received by the plaintiff or not.
“M. The court instructs the jury that, mailing such form of notice of assessment as has been proven to have been used by the defendant company in this case, in giving its members notices of the assessment for the year 1911, enclosed in an unsealed envelope, Avith a one-cent postage stamp attached, constitutes a sufficient mailing of such notice, if the jury further believe from the evidence that such notice Av'as addressed to the plaintiff at the post-office address furnished to the company in accordance with its by-laws and regulations at least thirty days before the said, assessment became payable.
“N. The court instructs the jury that in the application of the assured for membership in the defendant company, which is the foundation of the policy sued on in this case, the post-office address of the assured is given by her as Bluemont; and the court further instructs the jury that there is no evidence in this case tending to shoAV. that said post-office address Avas subsequently changed by means of notice in writing to the defendant company; and if the jury believe from the 'evidence that the board of directors of the defendant company fixed the assessment on its members for the year 1911, and that the by-laws of the company prescribed that the same should be paid on or before December 31, 1910; and that on or before the 30th day of November, 1910, the defendant company caused printed notice of the rate of said assessment and the time*641 fixed for payment of the same to be deposited in the post-office at Waterford, Virginia, addressed to the plaintiff at Bluemont, with sufficient postage thereon to pay for its transmission to Bluemont, Virginia, and that the said plaintiff failed to pay the said assessment prior to the date of the destruction of the insured building, they will find for the defendant, the court instructing the jury for the purpose of this case that it is immaterial whether the said plaintiff ever actually received said notice or not.”
Without further comment, it is sufficient to say that these three instructions asked for by the defendant correctly state the law of the case presented by the record, and should have been given.
The action of the circuit court in giving instruction No. 3, asked for by the plaintiff, is assigned as error. That instruction is as follows:
“No. 3. The jury are instructed that if the plaintiff had paid off and discharged the deed of trust on the property in October, 1909, and that thereafter the policy was regularly continued in force by payment of the premium in 1909, and neither since that date nor at the time of the fire was there any lien on the property, the jury are instructed that the existence of the lien at the time of the policy worked no forfeiture thereof.”
The objection to this instruction is not well taken. The record shows thafi the lien which was on the property at the time of the issuance of the policy was paid off on October 27, 1909, and that after it was so paid off the company collected the premium for 1910 and reinstated the policy and assessed it as a policy in force for 1910. Under the constitution and by-laws, which are a part of the contract between the parties, the payment of each annual assessment is a renewal of the policy. When, therefore, the plaintiff paid in 1909 the premium for 1910 it renewed the policy for another year, and at the time the
It is further insisted that the court erred in permitting the witness, George E. Pilaster, who signed the application and the premium note on behalf of the plaintiff, to testify that both the application and the note were in blank when he signed them; and, further, to testify that the word .“none,” in answer to the question in the application with respect to incumbrances, was not in his handwriting and was not put there at his direction. This evidence was not objected to until the witness had left the stand, when the court was asked toi exclude it upon the ground that it was an attempt, by parol evidence, to alter and vary the terms of a written contract.
The 'evidence was clearly inadmissible. Southern Mutual Ins. Go. v. Yates, 28 Gratt. (69 Va.) 585. The learned judge of the circuit court recognizes that this evidence was not admissible, certifying in bill of exceptions No. 1 that it was all excluded by instructions Nos. 2 and 3. These instructions do not in terms 'exclude the evidence, but their effect is to do so. Further consideration of this matter is, however, unnecessary, because the case must be remanded, and, if another trial is had, the evidence objected to will not be admitted.
The judgment complained of must be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside and the cas'e remanded to the circuit court for a new trial, if the plaintiff be so advised, to be had not in conflict with the views expressed in this opinion.
Reversed.