C. V. Nalley brought suit, against Hanover Fire Insurance Company to recover for a $2000 loss of merchandise by fire, under a policy of insurance, a copy of which was attached to the petition as exhibit A. The petition as amended alleged as follows: His property, consisting of automobile parts, accessories, etc., of the value of $8205.71, as per schedule attached marked exhibit A-l, was destroyed by fire on April 6, .1936, at a time when a tornado visited the city in which his business was located. Immediately after the destruction of the property and within the time provided by the contract he gave notice thereof to the defendant, and made proof of loss as required by said contract, and has fully complied with all the requirements of the policy preliminary to filing suit; and upon receipt of such notice the defendant finally and absolutely refused to pay to the plaintiff the amount due on said contract, and denied all liability thereunder. Immediately before injury to the building occupied by the plaintiff as a place of business, fire was ignited in the building occupied by a hardware company adjacent to and immediately west of plaintiff’s building, and such adjoining building was blown down by the tornado, and the elevator motor from the fourth floor of the building crashed down upon the roof of the building occupied by the plaintiff and through plaintiff’s building to the ground floor thereof, bringing with it a portion of the rear wall from the upper stories of the adjoining building, the bricks of which fell through the opening made by the crashing of. the motor into the building occupied by the plaintiff. The falling of
The policy, as shown by the copy attached as an exhibit, required that proofs of loss be submitted within sixty days after a fire, and, among other things, contained the following provisions: “The sum for which this company is liable pursuant to this policy shall be payable sixty days after due notice, ascertainment, estimate, and satisfactory proof of the loss have been received by this
The first question presented is whether or not, under the facts alleged in the petition, the defendant was relieved from liability under the fallen-building clause, which provides that “If a building or any part thereof fall, except as the result of fire, all insurance by this policy on such building or its contents shall immediately cease.” It is contended by the plaintiff that, the word “fall” is an intransitive verb, meaning “to descend from a higher
The clause around which the controversy revolves does not seem to have been heretofore considered in either of the appellate courts
In Fred J. Kiesel & Co. v. Sun Insurance Office of London,
Counsel for the plaintiff cite the case of Dows v. Faneuil Hall
Another contention of the plaintiff is that by' retaining the unearned premium with full knowledge of the loss and of the happening of the contingency the insurer waived the forfeiture. Let it be remembered that we are not dealing with a case where the insurer seeks to cancel a contract, and a return of the premium or any part thereof is a condition precedent to cancellation. Ordinaria, “if the policy is not illegal, and once attaches, and the risk is assumed, the entire premium is earned, and if a forfeiture results from a breach of a promissory warranty or of a condition subsequent, the insurer can not be required to return any part of the premium. It is all earned when the risk attaches.” (Italics ours.) Parsons, Rich & Co. v. Lane,
In Everett-Ridley-Ragan Co. v. Traders Ins. Co., 121 Ga. 228, 230 (
It is also contended by the plaintiff that a waiver resulted from the act of the insurer’s agent in “requiring” the filing of proofs of loss, which involved trouble and expense to the insured; and that the insurer is estopped, also, from insisting upon the forfeiture. The petition, however, does not show that the insured was called on to do anything that he had not agreed to do in prosecuting his claim; nor does it show that the defendant had in any way misled him or put him to a disadvantage. The policy stipulated that the company would not be liable for any sum unless proofs of loss were submitted, that no loss would be payable until sixty days after receipt of the same, and that no action on the policy could be sustained until after such compliance on the part of the insured.. The suggestion or statement of the agent, “File your proofs of loss. I would wait fifty or fifty-one days, as they may settle; but watch the months with thirty-one days, because it will be too late after sixty days,” did not amount to a waiver of the clause by the insurance company. No new burden was imposed or suggested. No promise was made. There was nothing said or done from which any waiver by the company could be said to have resulted. In Graham v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., 106 Ga. 840, 843 (
Judgment affirmed.
