This is an action of contract to recover money paid by the plaintiff to a shipper of goods which were stolen while in course of transportation in a truck
Material facts disclosed by the evidence are these. The action was brought after Bolta Rubber Co. Inc. v. Lowell Trucking Corp.
The defendant’s exceptions are to the denial of сertain of its requests for rulings, which were in substance to the effect that the evidence would not warrant a finding for the plaintiff, that it did warrant a finding for the defendant, and that the plaintiff had waived the terms and conditions of the policy of insurance upon which it relies by increasing the limit of its liabilities from $50,000 to $60,000 by indorsement made subsequently to the time when it had full knowledge of the loss in question, and by accepting payments of premiums upon the policy after that time. Among other contentions the plaintiff has argued that as matter of law the liability of the defendant to the plaintiff was conclusively adjudicated in Bolta Rubber Co. Inc. v. Lowell Trucking Corp.
In the matter оf the requests for rulings of the defendant bearing upon the questions of waiver or estoppel, the judge found specifically that the plaintiff did not have "full knowledge of the loss referred to as occurring on August 16, 1937, at the time [the] policy . . . was incrеased or during the period from August 16, 1937, to November 6, 1937, wherein it accepted premiums on [the] policy . . . and . . . [he]
The defendant has also argued that, since the indorsement on the policy upon which the plaintiff seeks to recover, namely, that including the provision that the “insured agrees to reimburse the Company for any payment made by the Company on account of any loss or damage involving a breach of the terms of the policy and for any pay
There was no error in thе denial of the defendant's requests for rulings to the effect that the evidence did not warrant a finding for the plaintiff. There was also no error in the denial of the request that as matter of law the evidence warranted a finding for the defendant. Thе denial of this request can stand only if as matter of law the evidence would not warrant such a finding. Since upon all the evidence a finding by the judge was required as matter of law that the defendant had broken the terms and conditions of the poliсy and indorsement thereon, and upon the specific findings of the judge a finding was required as matter of law that the defendant had not sustained the burden of proving a waiver by the plaintiff of said terms and conditions, the ruling in question could not have been grаnted properly by the judge. Treating the denial of the request in question as a ruling of law that the evidence would not warrant a finding for the defendant, we are of opinion that it was correct. See Hoffman v. Chelsea,
Exceptions overruled,..
Notes
Motor Carrier Act of August 9, 1935, c. 498, 49 U. S. Sts. at Large, 543, U. S. C. (1934 ed.) Sup. IV, Title 49, §§ 301-327. See Bolta Rubber Co. Inc. v. Lowell Trucking Corp.
