We need not consider the second question posed since the first is determinative of the issues in this case.
The underwriter for Cotton States was permitted to testify that the company’s position was that “if we had received a notice from the agent that the insured would not sign the endorsement or pay the additional premium a direct notice of cancellation would have been sent out the same day.” This was objected to on the ground that “it called for a hypothetical conclusion and it has no bearing on the issues here whatsoever.”
Testimony that if an insurance company had known certain facts it would have rejected an application for insurance amounts to a conclusion and is inadmissible.
Mutual Benefit &c.
Assn.
v. Bell, 49
Ga. App. 640, 651 (
It must be reiterated that this purported intention of the insurance company either to require a higher premium or to cancel the policy was not communicated to the insured. In fact, the sole notice given, which related only to a requested increase in premium, was not sent to the insured but to the agent. He testified that any discussion with the insured as to a higher premium or as to exclusion of the son took place at the time the policy was entered into. There was no evidence of any conversation between the agent and the insured concerning the matter of which the agent was notified in January, 1961.
“A consideration is necessary for the valid modification of the coverage provisions of an insurance policy, whether the effect of the modification is to extend or limit the risks against which the insurance affords protection.”
Dunn v. Utica Mut. Ins. Co.,
Under the recited circumstances, we find the endorsement was without consideration and the trial judge erred in finding to the contrary.
Judgment reversed.
