43 Mo. 573 | Mo. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 15th of August, 1865, the defendant issued a fire insurance policy to the plaintiffs upon their mill for $3,000 — $1,500 upon the mill, and $1,500 upon the machinery — with the following clause in writing: “ Eighteen thousand dollars on same insured elsewhere, and two thousand additional to be insured, to be reported in total when required.” The printed part of the policy contained the usual stipulations for notice and indorsement upon the policy or acknowledgment in writing of all previous and subsequent insurances, in default of which the policy should cease and be of no effect.
The property was burned on the 27th of February, 1866, and this suit is to recover the $3,000 insurance. The defendant answers that the assured made other insurances of the property,' which, with the amount already insured, exceeded the sum of
The evidence showed that at the date of the policy the total amount of insurance was $18,000, besides the policy issued by the defendant, and at the date of the loss only $12,000, including said policy. It also appeared that on the 13th of September, 1865, the plaintiffs were insured in the Morris Company for $2,000, making the stipulated amount $23,000, and, on the 11th day of November following, in the “National” for $2,500, of which they gave defendant no notice, and about the middle of December, more than two months before the fire, some of the old policies were canceled, so as to bring the whole amount of insurance considerably within the amount stipulated. The plaintiffs undertook to prove that before they took the additional $2,500 more than they had a right to take, one of the old policies for' the same amount had been canceled, thus making not even a temporary over-insurance; but they only succeeded in proving that in June, 1865, the agent of the company that had issued it came to inspect some additional improvements and told them he should cancel their policy at the end of the year, which was before the new policy was taken; but it appeared he did not actually cancel it until December, making an over insurance of more than a month. The Circuit Court treated this over-insurance, without notice or indorsement upon the policy, as a forfeiture, and rendered judgment for the defendant. The case is brought here by appeal, and that is the only question raised upon the . record.
The general doctrine that a previous or subsequent insurance without notice, in a policy requiring such notice, and with a clause of forfeiture like that of the defendant, discharges the
But there are some apparent, though not real, exceptions to this doctrine. The contract is to be enforced according to its spirit, not its letter merely. Thus, it is also well settled, though perhaps not with the same unanimity, that if the second policy, against which the contract stipulates, is itself a void one, or one that cannot be enforced, it shall not avoid the first, notwithstanding the clause of forfeiture. (Gale v. Belknap, 41 N. H. 70; Jackson v. Massachusetts Ins. Co., 23 Pick. 418 ; Clark v. New England Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 6 Cush. 342; Rising Sun Ins. Co. v. Slaughter, 20 Ind. 520.) But see Carpenter v. The P. W. Ins. Co., 16 Pet. 495; Bigler v. New York C. Ins. Co., 22 N. Y. 402; and Mitchell v. Lycoming Mut. Ins. Co., 51 Penn. 402, which seem to contradict the other opinions, at least so far as to hold that the latter policy must be actually avoided by the insurer before the first will be held valid. Thus it is seen that this covenant is not construed literally, for, if it were, any forbidden policy, whether it could be enforced or not, would release the one
The Supreme Court of Illinois, in N. E. F. & M. Ins. Co. v. Schettler, 88 Ill. 166, have applied the principle to another state of facts. The plaintiff in error had insured the defendant, with a proviso in regard to other insurance similar to the one under consideration. During the year, the person insured, by the written consent of plaintiff’s agent, moved his store building and goods upon another lot in town. Before arid after he so moved, he had three other policies upon the property, of which the plaintiff had no notice. The court held that the policy was not forfeited, for the reason that the removal of the store rendered the other policies worthless; and though there had been an over-insurance during part of the life of the plaintiff’s policy, yet, when the loss occurred, it was the only subsisting one, and therefore valid.
Upon the effect of over-insurance, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania uses this language: “ The over-insurance was attempted to be surmounted by the alleged invalidity of the subsequent policies. We think the court adopted the proper distinction: if they were void at the time of the loss, they constituted no obstacle; but if avoidable only by reason of some breach of condition enabling the insurers to avoid them, but which they had waived, the over-insurance undoubtedly existed.” (Mitchell v. Lycoming Mut. Ins. Co., supra.)
These last two cases expressly require, one by statement and the other directly, that the policies relied upon to avoid the one containing the covenant of forfeiture should exist and be in force at the time of the loss; and, upon an examination of the numerous authorities upon the general subject, I do not find one to contradict them. In the great body of the cases the over-insurance existed when the loss occurred, and the question could not be raised.
Analogous to forfeitures for over-insurance are those that arise from selling the property. Such sale ends the insurance, both because the insurable interest is parted with, and because it is contrary to the usual terms of the policy. And yet a sale, in the
In Lane v. Maine Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 3 Fairf., Me., 44, upon a policy expressly stipulating against sale, when, during the existence of a policy, a merchant sold the goods and leased the store, both of which were insured, and in about six months, and before the fire, took back both the store and the unsold goo'ds, it was held that the policy was not forfeited. So, in Powers v. Ocean Ins. Co., 19 La. 28, the Supreme Court of Louisiana held that if insured property were sold, and, upon non-payment of the purchase money, were taken back, and afterward burned, the policy was good, notwithstanding the stipulation for forfeiture; and that “ there was a suspension of the risk, but the risk revived as soon as the property reverted back to the plaintiff.” Our own court have held the same doctrine in Morrison’s Adm’r v. Tennessee M. & F. Ins. Co., 18 Mo. 262, though it was not necessary to go so far in Powers v. Ocean Ins. Co.
Thus it is seen that the rigid rules of the English courts, in relation to express warranties, are not applied to stipulations for notices of subsequent insurances or to subsequent sales. They are contracts, to be enforced, like other contracts, according to their true spirit.
There is an obvious distinction between a concealment or false statement of facts existing at the commencement of the risk and a neglect of duty in regard to a matter occurring afterward. In the one case the policy never takes effect — the risk is never assumed — while in the other it is only interrupted. I cannot find that it has ever been held that a temporary non-compliance with an .express warranty even of itself works a forfeiture, unless
The form warranties in marine insurance, where they arose, was express, as that the assured “warrants" this or that to be so, or “ warrants " that such a thing will not be done, or that he will do or will not do this or that, and “ they were written on the face of the policy." (Arnold.) The greatest strictness of fact or compliance was held to be necessary in such warranties. But many printed stipulations have come to be treated as warranties, and, where they relate to existing facts, are usually regarded as conditions precedent to liability for the loss. As to the future, the same strictness is not always required, and the inclination of of the courts to substitute the spirit of the contract for the letter is very apparent, and as far as possible these stipulations are taken out of the category of-warranties, and some less stringent term applied to them.
“ Stipulations, though having the character of warranties and conditions, are to be reasonably construed in reference to the subject matter, and not captiously or literally." (1 Phil. Ins. § 872. See observations of Justice Shaw in Haughton v. Man. M. F. Ins. Co., 8 Metc. 114; also see Shaw v. Robberds et al., 6 Ad. & E1. 75; Mayall v. Mitford, id. 670.)
■ In the case at bar it is clear that the assured intended to comply literally Avith the stipulations of his contract. Having been notified that one of his policies would be, canceled at a certain time, he procured another insurance of an equal amount. But it turned out that the policy was not canceled until about a month after the last insurance had been effected, thus making an over-insurance for a period terminating more than two months before the loss. In holding this such a violation of the conditions of the policy as to Avholly discharge the defendant, Ave think the Circuit Court erred, and that its judgment should be reversed.
The cause is remanded,