214 P. 603 | Mont. | 1923
prepared the opinion for the court.
This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover from the defendant the amount due on a policy of hail insurance for losses alleged to have been sustained by reason of two separate hailstorms occurring on August 2 and August 11, 1920, respectively. Trial was had to a jury. The verdict
The appeal presents three questions for the consideration of this court: (1) Were the allegations of the complaint sufficient to plead and the evidence sufficient to prove that the plaintiff had an insurable interest in the grain? (2) Was the evidence sufficient to prove that plaintiff had given notice of loss? (3) Did the defendant waive the making of proof of loss by the plaintiff as required by the terms of the policy? We will set forth in this opinion only such portions of the pleadings and facts proven as are necessary for a determination of these questions.
The complaint, among other things, alleges: “That during the season of 1920, plaintiff had growing 140 acres of wheat in area in section 11, township 4 north, range 25 east M. P. M., and 67 acres of winter wheat in section 14, township 4 north, range 25 east M. P. M.” Before any testimony was offered in the case, the defendant objected to the introduction of any evidence, on the ground that the complaint fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The particular insufficiency claimed is that the portion quoted does not plead an insurable interest. The objection was overruled by the court. This ruling is specified as error. Section 8070, Revised Codes of 1921, provides: “Any interest in property, or any relation thereto, or liability in respect thereof, of such a nature that a contemplated peril might directly damnify the insured, is an insurable interest.”
The grower of a crop has an interest of such a nature that he would be damnified by a contemplated peril. Furthermore, we think the allegation is sufficient to plead that the plaintiff was the owner of the crop insured. The word “had” is the past participle of “have,” and “have” may denote ownership as well as mere possession. The pleading is
The appellant also urges that the proof of an insurable in- terest is also insufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment. Nothing more need be said than that the proof is slightly more specific than the allegation of the complaint. The plaintiff testified that he sowed the crop and performed other labor in connection with its production. He frequently refers to it as “my crop.” This is sufficient to raise a presumption that he was the owner of the crop, in the absence of proof to the contrary.
The defendant by its answer sets forth a copy of the policy of insurance upon which the plaintiff is seeking to recover. Among its provisions are contained the following: “Within forty-eight hours after the happening of any loss or damage by hail to the crops herein described, claimed by the assured to equal five per cent (5%) or more of the total insurance against hail thereon, as hereinbefore provided, the assured shall send by registered mail to the Continental Insurance Company at Great Falls, Mont., a written notice stating the number of this policy, the day and hour of the hailstorm, the amounts of other insurance against hail, if any, and the probable percentage of damage to the crops on each parcel of land herein described; and this company shall not be liable for any loss or damage, unless such .notice thereof is so furnished to this company within said time and no other form or service of notice shall be deemed proper notice within the provisions and meaning of this policy. * * * Within sixty days after the happening of any such loss or damage equaling five per cent. (5%) or over, unless such time be extended in writing by this company, the assured shall furnish to this company a statement in proof of the loss, signed and sworn to, setting forth the number and date of this policy, the location, description, and acreage of the land upon which the crops are situated, a description of the crops
The plaintiff testified that, on the morning of August 2, 1920, before daylight, his crop was damaged by a hailstorm to the extent of about twenty per cent. On the same day he went to the local agent of the defendant, Mutual State Bank of Broadview, and reported the loss. However, he only claimed fifteen per cent loss. As a result of this interview, the local agent prepared the following notice (omitting immaterial parts) :
“Notice of Hail Loss. This notice must be signed by the assured and sent by registered mail within forty-eight hours after loss occurs to Continental Insurance Company, Hail Department, at Great Falls, Mont. Do not telegraph. Broad-view, Mt., 8/2 1920. Gentlemen: Crops insured under policy No. 3168 were damaged by hail, which occurred' on the 30th
This notice was signed by the plaintiff and mailed to the defendant by registered letter on August 2. Since the notice recites that the loss occurred on July 30 at 7 P. M., the appellant contends that it was no notice of a loss occurring on August 2. There might be some force to the contention, were it not for the fact that the notice was prepared by the agent of the defendant, after the plaintiff had reported the facts. He had a right to assume that the notice was prepared in accordance with the data he had furnished. The plaintiff testified that there was no hail in his locality on July 30 or at any other time in July. On August 11, at about 12 o’clock M., another hail storm caused additional fifteen per cent loss to a portion of his crop. For the purpose of giving the required notice of loss, he went to the Mutual State Bank of Broadview on the 12th, where a notice similar to the one mailed on August 2, with such slight changes as the facts necessitated, was prepared in the same manner as before. This he signed, inclosed in an envelope properly addressed, and mailed to the defendant by registered mail. The registry receipt of the postmaster and the registry return receipt, showing delivery on August 14,- were offered and received in evidence. Demand was made on the defendant to produce the notice received on August 14. • Counsel for the defendant asserted that it had received none. No explanation was offered by the defendant as to what was received from the plaintiff on August 14. The evidence was sufficient to prove that the plaintiff gave notice of each loss as required by the policy.
In addition to notice of loss, the policy requires the as- sured to furnish the company a' sworn statement in
On the 15th or 16th of August, "W. E. Pierce, who was sent by the company to adjust the first loss, called upon the plaintiff. He was then informed by the plaintiff of the second loss, and stated that, although he had received no notice of that loss, he would adjust both at the same time. He and the plaintiff then made an examination of the crops. As a result of this examination, he testified that he found no hail loss, but about a ten per cent grasshopper loss. However, he made an offer of settlement upon a portion of the crop, as an attempt to compromise. On March 17, 1921, the special agent of defendant wrote to Mutual State Bank of Broad-view, in which the report of Mr. Pierce on trying to settle this loss is referred to. In this letter the company expresses a willingness to settle upon that basis in order to avoid litigation, but specifically denies that there was any loss. Some time in September, 1920, W. J. Moe, another adjuster, called upon the plaintiff in an endeavor to settle this hail loss, which he said was still in suspense. He made the plaintiff an offer of five per cent in settlement of his claim. This offer was refused as the offer made by Mr. Pierce had been. He testified that he told the plaintiff: “I want you to understand that the policy requires you to do certain things as the insured, and I have no right to excuse you from doing these things.” At no time was the plaintiff informed specifically by the company or by any of its representatives that it required him to furnish any sworn statement in proof of loss.
Our statute with reference to this subject provides: “All defects in a notice of loss, or in preliminary proofs thereof, which the insured might remedy, and which the insurer omits to specify to him, without unnecessary delay, as grounds of objection are waived.” (Sec. 8144, Rev. Codes, 1921.) “Delay in the presentation to an insurer of notice or proof of loss is waived, if caused by any act of his, or if he omits to make objection promptly and specifically upon that ground.” (Id., sec. 8145.) In Reeves v. National Fire Ins. Co., 41 S. D. 341, 4 A. L. R. 1293, 170 N. W. 575, construing a statute identical with ours and with a similar provision in the policy, it is said: “These sections were as much a part of the policy of insurance as though written therein, and are controlling wherein their provisions conflict with those actually contained in the policy.”
In Teasdale v. New York Ins. Co., 163 Iowa, 596, Ann. Cas. 1916A, 591, 145 N. W. 284, in speaking of the defense that no proof of loss was furnished as required by the policy, it is said: “It is a defense which does not appeal to the favor of courts, and a forfeiture so claimed will not be enforced if there be any reasonable ground on which to find that the condition has been waived.”
In Snell v. North British & Merc. Ins. Co., 61 Mont. 547, 203 Pac. 521, this court held that the company had waived the proof of loss required by the policy by placing the claim in the hands of an adjuster for settlement: The authorities
Objection was made to plaintiff’s instruction No. 3, given as court’s instruction No. 6. Apparently this instruction was given under the theory that the defendant had waived the requirement as to proof of loss by its silence after receiving the notice of loss. This court has held, in Da Rin v. Casualty Co. of America, 41 Mont. 175, 137 Am. St. Rep. 709, 27 L. R. A. 1164, 108 Pac. 649, that where a mere notice of loss is sent to the insurer, no duty rests upon the insurer to demand the affirmative proof required by the policy, and that mere silence did not constitute a waiver. In the same case it is held that the silence of the insurer is a waiver of his right to object to the sufficiency of the proof of loss, when the insured attempts to incorporate the notice and proof of loss in the same instrument, and complies with all of the requirements of the policy, except that some of the facts are not as fully and explicitly set forth as they might be. The plaintiff has not met that requirement in the present case. The notice of loss, although it contained much of the same information required by the policy in the sworn proof of loss, was absolutely silent as to several matters required, and was not sworn to. It was headed “Notice of Loss,” and was obviously only an attempt to comply with the requirement as to notice. As a proof of loss it was not sufficient to make the silence of the insurer constitute a waiver of the requirement of the policy in that respect. If the plaintiff were left to that theory he could not recover in this case. The in
We therefore recommend that the judgment and order be affirmed.
Per Curiam: For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Affirmed.