43 N.H. 621 | N.H. | 1862
We are not aware that any doubt has been entertained of the validity of a stipulation in a policy of insurance, that notice shall be given of a loss within a limited time. When such a clause is inserted in a policy itself, it generally assumes in its terms the form of a condition precedent, until the performance of which, no obligation arises to make good the loss. In other cases as in this, the provision may be contained in the charter of the company. In either case, the nature of the provision is such that it must be wholly inoperative if it is not construed as a condition precedent; so that the questions which have been decided by the courts have been chiefly as to what constitutes a compliance with the condition. Bumstead v. Dividend Insurance Company, 2 Kern. 81; Schenk v. Mercer Insurance Company, 4 Zabr. 447; Bilbrough v. Mutual Insurance Company, 5 Duer 587; Francis v. Somerville Insurance Company, 1 Dutch. 78; Kernochan v. New-York Bowery Insurance Company, 17 N. Y. 428; Clark v. N. E. Insurance Company, 6 Cush. 342.
The charter requires that notice shall be given, in writing, of the loss, to the directors, or one of them, or to the secretary, within-
Itis claimed that the letter of the secretary, that “the directors had voted indefinitely to postpone the subject,” is a waiver of any objection to the time of the notice; that if the company intended tó insist upon the want of seasonable notice, they should have expressly disallowed the claim on that ground. .
The authorities are quite distinct, that if the notice given is defective or erroneous, and the insurance company put their refusal to pay the loss on other grounds, that is a waiver of this condition of the contract. 2 Kern. 81; 4 Zab. 447; 5 Duer 587; 1 Dutch. 78, ante. An objection of error in the notice, not suggested till the trial, was held to be waived. 17 N. Y. 428; 6 Cush. 342, ante; Peoria Insurance Company v. Lewis, 18 Ill. 553; Underhill v. Agawam Insurance Company, 6 Cush. 445; Vos v. Robinson, 7 Johns. 192; 21 Wend. 401, ante; Heath v. Franklin Insurance Company, 1 Cush. 257, 264; Noyes v. Washington Insurance Company, 30 Vt. 659.
In none of these cases does the objection of defective notice go to the time of giving it. They all relate to some deficiency of the matter, or form of the notice, and they generally treat it as not acting in good faith on the part of the insurer, that he should not give notice of a defect which there was time to remedy. 3 Smith 433.
A defect in the time of the notice stands on different ground from a defect in its matter; while the last, upon notice, may be remedied, it is otherwise with the former ; which is necessarily irremediable, if the insurer chooses to insist upon it. It may be waived, but it would be reasonable to require a different kind of evidence from that which ought to be satisfactory, in cases of mere defect of form. The silence of an insurance company, upon a defect-in the form of the notice, might be very injurious to the assured, but it is not at once seen how the assured could be benefited by notice that he had failed to give information of his loss within the stipulated time, or how he could be prejudiced by the omission.
The directors of the insurance company 'did not do as we think they ought always to do, decide- distinctly the question referred to them by the charter, that is, “ ascertain and determine the amount of the plaintiff’s loss, or damage,” but seem, in foi’m, to decline to. act on the subject. “ Their vote was to indefinitely postpone the same.” No reason is assigned for this course, and it does not therefore fall within the class of cases where the company refuse to pay the loss for other reasons than the defects of the notice, and we think no inference can bo drawn that, the company intended to-
The form of this vote is ambiguous as to the effect. If regarded as a refusal to decide, its effect would be very different from a refusal to allow the claim, and we think the vote in this case may be regarded rather as a refusal to allow any thing on account of the claim than as a refusal to ascertain and determine the amount of the loss or damage. In legislative bodies, from which this phrase is borrowed, an indefinite postponement is regarded as a denial of the claim.
This question may be regarded as material in connection with the next question of the case, whether the suit was seasonably commenced. In Nute v. Hamilton Insurance Company, 6 Gray 177, it is held that a stipulation in a policy or by-law, by way of condition precedent to their liability, that no recovery shall be had unless suit is brought within a certain time, is a valid condition, and unless it is complied with there can be no recovery; and it is said it had been so held in cases recently decided; and the same point was decided in Amesbury v. Bowditch Insurance Company, 6 Gray 596; Fulham v. New-York Insurance Company, 7 Gray 61; Wilson v. Ætna Insurance Company, 27 Vt. 99; Brown v. Roger Williams Insurance Company, 5 R. I. 394; Cray v. Hartford Insurance Company, 1 Blackf. 280; N. W. Insurance Company v. Phenix Oil Company, 31 Penn. 448. These authorities seem to us to be decisive that such a stipulation, as to the time of bringing the action, is valid.
In the case of Nevins v. Rockingham Insurance Company, 25 N. H. 22, it was determined, agreeably to the decision in Boyden v. Middlesex Insurance Company, 4 Met. 212, that under the charter of an insurance company similar to that of the defendants, if the directors do not proceed to act on the question of the amount of a loss within three months after it has been duly notified to them, the assured may bring his action to recover the loss; and in such case the provisions of the charter, requiring the action to be brought at the next term of the court, do not apply; the court holding that these provisions all appear to contemplate a case where a loss has been admitted, and the amount fixed by the directors, and the only question is, whether the insured is entitled to recover more. But in Vermont it has been held that the provision applies equally to the case where the directors have duly ,and seasonably considered the question of loss and determined to pay nothing. Williams v. Vermont Insurance Company, 20 Vt. 222; Dutton v. Vermont Insurance Company, 17 Vt. 369. These decisions seem to us to be founded in sound reason, and the decisions there and here may well stand together, as to the points decided. It was not necessary in the case here, to determine the latter question, since on either view that action was well brought, and it was left by the court undecided.
The policy of the charter seems to be to provide for a speedy settlement of claims for losses, which must unavoidably be productive of serious inconvenience to all concerned, if long left in an unsettled condition; and this evil is quite as-great where the directors have refused to allow any thing in a case of loss, as where they
We are, therefore, of opinion that the plaintiff is bound by his neglect to give seasonable notice of his loss, as well as by the neglect to commence his action within the time limited by the charter. We think the notice to Emery can avail nothing. It was notin writing, and was not made to any of the directors, or the secretary ; and its sole purpose seems to have been to obtain a discharge of the policy.
Judgment for the defendants.