115 So. 156 | Ala. | 1928
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *170
Where an assignment of a policy to a purchaser or other owner has been duly assented to by an insurer, a new and independent contract arises between the insurer and the assignee. 26 C. J. 134; Bayless v. Merchants' Town Mut. Ins. Co.,
Chas. J. Scott, John B. Isbell, and C. A. Wolfes, all of Ft. Payne, for appellees.
There is such a variance between the allegations of plea 3 and the proof as would authorize the court to refuse the affirmative charge based on said plea. The policy does not require that the inventory taken twelve months before the issuance of the policy must have been made by Lewis. It is only required that inventories taken after the issuance of the policy be kept in the safe. Where insurance policies are susceptible of two constructions, the one most favorable to the assured will be adopted. Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Plaster,
Defendant's pleas were the general issue and that setting up the violations of specific clauses of the policy. These special pleas invoke provisions of the contract, to the effect, that "assured will (1) take a complete itemized inventory of stock on hand at least *171 once in each calendar year, and, unless such inventory has been taken within twelve calendar months prior to the date of this policy, one shall be taken in detail within thirty days of issuance of said policy," and, failing in this, the "policy shall be null and void from such date" of failure; (2) will keep a set of books presenting "a complete record of business transacted," of "all purchases, sales and shipments, both for cash and credit, from date of inventory"; (3) that "such booksand inventory, and also the last preceding inventory, if such has been taken (will be) securely locked in a fire-proof safe at night," and when the building is not open for business, or "will keep such books and inventories in some place not exposed to a fire which would destroy the aforesaid building"; and (4) concluded with the averment that the policy stipulated that, in the event of failure to produce "such set of books and inventories," said policy "shall be null and void, and such failure shall constitute a perpetual bar to any recovery thereon." And respective counsel concede that plea 2 concluded with the averment of assured's failure to take complete inventory of stock of goods on hand within 30 days of the issuance of the policy, "nor within one year previous" thereto. And the ruling as to this plea and the issues of fact raised by the evidence will be rested upon the concession of counsel that plea 2 in both cases before us are alike.
Pleas 3, 4, 5, and 6 contained matter indicated in plea 2, with the respective additional averments as follows:
"* * * Assured did not, within 12 calendar months prior to the issuance of the policy sued on, take a complete itemized inventory of stock on hand, and did not, within 30 days after the issuance of said policy, take such inventory.
"* * * The assured did not keep a set of books which clearly and plainly present a complete record of business transacted, including all purchases, sales, and shipments, both for cash and credit from the date of the last inventory and to the date of the fire.
"* * * Assured did not produce his set of books which clearly and plainly present a complete record of the business transacted, including all purchases, sales, and shipments both for cash and credit from the date of the last inventory to the date of the fire.
"* * * Assured did not produce the inventories required to be kept and produced by assured, by the provision hereinabove quoted."
Replications to pleas 5 and 6 are to the effect that, after the fire, all books, inventories, and papers set out in said pleas were produced or tendered to the local agent, "who wrote the policy"; that there was no demand by defendant for such production. Demurrers directed thereto should have been sustained. The authority of the agent issuing the policy, without more, was not that to waive production or other material provisions after the fire, and is not shown by the facts set out in the replications, nor by the express averment of the pleader. The third replication does not aver that defendant was required by the terms of the contract to make demand, nor is it averred that the books and inventories required to be taken and kept were preserved, or were forthcoming after the fire. The law would not require the doing of a useless thing as a demand for the production and inspection of books and inventories that were not taken or kept or preserved as per contract terms, and that were destroyed by fire. The insurer had the right to rely upon the warranties and covenants, in said respects, contained in the policy. Robinson v. Ætna Ins. Co.,
The use of the word "building" for "premises" in the plea (premises in the policy), and the use of the words "destroy the aforesaid building" in the plea for "destroy the property hereby insured," as contained in the policy, were averments of fact in the plea of the legal effect of the third covenant or warranty contained in the policy. And no variance was presented, nor would be declared, if the same had been duly invoked during the trial and according to the rule. It is sufficient to say that such variance was not insisted upon as the basis of affirmative instruction requested by plaintiffs as to said pleas.
Judge Malone owned and sold the property to Lewis on December 29 or 30, 1924, and the latter assumed possession of the business as owner on January 1, 1925, and operated it subject to Malone's contract of sale and right of intervention for cause. The intention manifested by the parties as to the renewal of the insurance expiring January 21, 1925, was to constitute a new contract with loss payable to Malone to the extent of his unpaid contract debt and the balance to Lewis as owner. This made them in legal effect joint adventurers in the consummation of the contract of sale and purchase, and as affecting the insurance on that stock of goods and the policies evidencing same held by Malone. Such is the effect of the evidence of Malone and Sawyer, the terms of the contract of sale in evidence, and arguments of counsel. Such was the effect of an assigned policy by the owner to the purchaser of a stock of goods in Bayless v. Mercantile, etc., Co.,
What was the contract? It is provided by the terms of the policy as follows:
"If, with the consent of this company, an interest under this policy shall exist in favor of a mortgagee or of any person or corporation having an interest in the subject of insurance other than the interest of the insured as described herein, the conditions hereinbefore contained shall apply in the manner expressed in such provisions and conditions of insurance relating to such interest as shall be written upon, attached, or appended hereto."
Such was the express agreement of the joint adventurers and insurer. There was no misjoinder of parties plaintiffs available to defendant. The joint adventurers may maintain the suit as plaintiffs, and each acts for the interest of the other. Christie v. Durden,
The relations of the plaintiffs to each other and to the insurer as to the insurance effective from January 22, 1925, entering therein as a part of the security to Malone for the purchase price of the goods, were that Lewis, the owner, was in possession from January 1, 1925, with the power of disposition in due course, and Malone was the loss payee, protected in his sale by the insurance, the installment payments of one-half the monthly gross sales, and the right of intervention for cause. After the change of possession was effective, Lewis had the ownership of the stock of goods, furniture, and fixtures, in the primary sense, and was not only placed in possession of the subject-matter, but of the inventory made by Malone in 1924 — it was left in his possession, and he kept the books. Malone took no further or active part in the conduct of the business from January 1, 1925, to the date of the fire in November, except only to make his collections of monthly installments and maintain a representative in and about the store to report to him of Lewis' operations.
Judge Malone is frank and specific as to his relations to the business and the inventory made by him between the 1st and middle of February, 1924; that he left it (inventory) in the store when he sold and delivered the possession to Lewis. He said: "I just left it under the safe * * * or put it on the safe"; supposed "that witness had no further use for it"; that it could not be found "after the fire"; did not again see that inventory after he "cleaned out the safe and turned it over to Mr. Lewis"; and wisely observed that, if he had not "sold out," he "was going to make another (inventory) in January," meaning for 1925.
We may say generally of the provisions of the policy for making and keeping inventories and books, what is known and provided as the iron-safe clauses have been considered by the courts and declared to be reasonable and effective for the prevention of fraud. Southern States, etc., Co. v. Kronenberg,
Lewis' delay in making inventory until just before the fire, and long after he, as owner, was required to make the inventory, caused the policy to lapse, and his belated act could not revive the policy. North River *173
Co. v. Waddell,
The distinction between clauses in insurance policies for the keeping of books and the taking and keeping of the required inventories, and to exhibit the same as required by the contract, are independent safeguards against fraud; and that there is a difference between the failure to take and keep such memorials of the business and the effort to substantially comply with the provisions of the policy as to the same.
The case of Hanover Fire Insurance Co. v. Wood,
" 'There is no authority in the courts, on the supposition that the purposes which the parties intended to secure may have been unnecessary or as well secured by other means to disregard the valid requirements and conditions of such contracts, or to construct by implication or otherwise, a new agreement in place of that deliberately made by the parties.' Dwight v. Insurance Co.,
— and that the bookkeeping must be such that it "perpetuates in intelligible and reasonably accessible form the memory of things as they were understood at their date." The general authorities and our decisions are agreed that such required compliance with contract provisions must be sufficient in themselves to reasonably show the quantum and value of the personal property on hand and destroyed; and the purpose and effect of parol evidence as to this cannot be made to do the office of such a memorial, or to supplement required books and inventories; that is, that such evidence may merely illustrate and explain the same as assured's effort to substantially comply with the terms of the policy. Hanover Fire Insurance Co. v. Wood, supra; Insurance Co. v. Williams,
And it is further asserted, on well-reasoned authorities, that the necessity for inventories as provided for by the policy, requiring a substantial record of the value and extent of assured's business during its conduct and to the time of its destruction by fire, cannot be dispensed with, nor is there a substantial compliance by a belated and incompleted compliance for books and inventories. Ætna Ins. Co. v. Mount, 15 L.R.A. (N.S.) 471, note. We will again advert to this part of the subject.
In this jurisdiction, speaking of a substantial compliance of the iron-safe clause as to keeping books, it was held a violation where the assured made the entries of sale upon a pocket memorandum book, and subsequently were transferred to the blotter, and from that blotter to the ledger; that he made these transfers "once a week, probably, and sometimes oftener"; that at the time of the fire the sales for the last four days had never been transferred from the blotter to the ledger; that he had lost his pocket memorandum, and the blotter had been left out of the safe, and was destroyed by the fire. This holding of noncompliance of policy requirements to make and keep books is rested upon the reason that the blotter was the only book in which he made entries of goods bought and sold on credit, and that it also showed the amount of goods used out of the store by the family of assured; and that these material facts were necessary for an authentic history of the business — of its quantum and value to and at the time of the fire. Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Allen,
That is, where the policy of insurance is avoided bynoncompliance (and the failure is not waived), the policy cannot be revived merely by the act of the insured making a subsequent or belated inventory. This is the result of the analogy to be found in the decision in the recent case of North River Ins. Co. v. Waddell,
We again advert to the general authorities as to the effect of a belated compliance with provisions of policies, as the taking of inventory. In Reynolds v. German Amer. Ins. Co.,
In Cooley's Insurance Briefs it is declared:
"A clause providing that the insured shall take an inventory at least once in each calendar year, that, unless one had been taken within 12 months prior to the date of the policy, one should be taken within 30 days thereafter, and that assured should keep such inventory, 'and also the last preceding inventory,' if such has been taken, requires that the inventory taken preceding the date of the policy should be kept. Continental Ins. Co. v. Cummings [
In Joffe v. Niagara F. Ins. Co.,
"The insured is required to keep the books and inventories as herein provided, and, 'in the event of failure to produce such set of books and inventories for the inspection of this company, this policy shall become null and void, and such failure shall constitute a perpetual bar to any recovery thereon.' The latter does not make a policy null and void merely because the assured does not keep his books in a safe, or as provided in the alternative, but the failure to produce the books and inventories has that effect, and constitutes a bar to recovery for a loss sustained. In other words, if there had been no fire, the closing of the store on this occasion would not have invalidated the policy, but as the fire did occur, and did confessedly prevent the books and inventories from being produced, then there can be no recovery in the absence of such books and inventories, unless the assured did what they agreed to do for the safekeeping of the books and inventories, or can be excused from not doing so.
"In that connection, we would add that we would have no hesitation in holding that if an assured, acting in good faith, placed the books in a safe which he believed to be fireproof, or in some place which he had the right to believe was not exposed to a fire which would destroy the building, the mere failure to produce the books would not necessarily be a bar to his recovery. On the contrary, we could readily concur in the view taken by the Supreme Court in Liverpool L. G. Ins. Co. v. Kearney,
And the subject is thus dealt with by the Texas Court in Continental Ins. Co. v. Cummings,
"The remaining question is, Did the warranty in the iron-safe clause of the policies require the producing of the inventory taken in January, 1901? * * *
"The inventory taken in January, 1902, was produced as required by the terms of the policies, and, if the policies required the production of but one inventory, then their requirements are satisfied. The inventories which are required to be preserved and produced are described as 'such books and inventory,' and 'the last preceding inventory,' etc., which refers to those mentioned in the second section of this clause, which, in turn, describes them as 'the inventory provided for in the first section of this clause' and 'the last preceding inventory.' The first section of the iron-safe clause provides for an inventory to be taken after the issuance of the policies, which was done in January, 1902. The inventory of 1902 was called for in section 1 of the iron-safe clause, and that of 1901 was the last preceding inventory. Therefore the assured was required by the third section to preserve and produce to the insurer both of those inventories, and, unless the testimony shall show *175 that the agent of the insurance company, knowing of the loss of the inventory of 1901, waived its production, the two policies issued in December must be held void as to the stock of goods."
The same rule was applied in Shawnee Fire Ins. Co. v. Thompson Rowell,
"The provision of a fire insurance contract which requires that the insured will keep such books and inventory securely locked in a fireproof safe at night, etc., is a promissory warranty, and is not substantially complied with by producing an inventory made one month prior to the fire, where it is shown that the inventory made within 12 calendar months prior to the issuance of the policy had been negligently allowed to remain out of the fireproof safe, and, together with the books, be destroyed, especially when the last inventory was not made in compliance with the terms of the policy, the goods not being itemized, but mere summaries of the amounts and values being given."
See, also, Dolliver v. Granite, etc., Co.,
It is noted that in Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Crawford,
"The law will be guided by a respect to general convenience and equity and by the good sense and reasonableness of the particular case, for it must be supposed that it was the intention of the parties that such construction should take place. In the case of Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Allen,
We have heretofore presented the holding in Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Allen,
Under the power of construction, courts will not make or remake contracts for the parties. It will only give force and effect to their contracts within the law — there being no questions of public policy or ultra vires presented — according to the obvious meaning of the parties, if expressed in clear and unambiguous terms. Kilby, etc., Co. v. Georgia Cas. Co.,
If the terms of the policy, by parties without disability, are plain and unambiguous, there being no questions of public policy or ultra vires presented, the rule of the contract is the law of the case. And here the contract clause of the policy was that the "assured will take a complete itemized inventory * * * at least once in each calendar year, unless suchinventory has been taken within twelve calendar months prior to the date of the policy, one shall be taken * * * within thirty days." The words of the policy "such inventory has been taken," were employed with the obvious meaning of taken by the assured, and do not refer to an inventory that had been taken by some other person. That is to say, the words such inventory must be referred to that inventory previously required of the assured, and the contract further required that the assured will keep "such books and inventory and also the last preceding inventory." The last preceding inventory made by Malone was left by him with Lewis, and not preserved in the iron safe with the books; and the inventory by Lewis was not taken within 30 days of his purchase. The latter was supported by the entry on his books and the assumption of a $15,000 valuation of the stock purchased from Malone. Lewis was depleting the stock by daily sales and the monthly payments to Malone of the agreed amount — "50% of the gross sales of said stock of goods." Thus is illustrated the necessity of making and keeping the required books and inventories as a true memorial of the quantum and value of the business during its conduct and at the time of its destruction by fire.
If the plaintiffs had produced the inventory taken by Lewis, it was not made within the time required by the contract by him as the owner. Not having taken an inventory in the calendar year, or within 12 calendar months prior to the date of the policy, he *176
should have taken one in detail within 30 days of the issuance of said policy declared upon, as required of him as owner. He did not make such inventory, but opened his books with a merchandise account in a gross or lump sum of the purchase price. And the books he kept began with an arbitrary sales price of $15,000, and were not supported by the required inventories. Such lump sums are insufficient in inventories, or as the detailed accounts of the business by the books required to be kept. Shawnee v. Thompson Rowell,
Malone's inventory was taken in February, 1924, and that by Lewis 9 months after his purchase and the assumption of possession of the property insured. Of this Lewis testified:
"I took an inventory of the Malone stock. This was taken between September 1st and September 7th, before the fire occurred in November, and that is the only inventory I took. I kept the books — besides the ledger a cash book, a day book and different books. (Here witness identified the books, the cash book as follows: 'A black book marked ledger consisting of 472 pages.' The ledger was identified as follows: 'A book marked S E Ledger consisting of 186 pages.' The inventory was identified as follows: 'Inventory Ft. Payne Sept. 1, 1925.' The Daily Sales Book was identified as follows: 'Daily Sales Book.')"
Witness further testified:
"I made up the daily sales book along, some time I would enter — that there Monday sales February 9th, possibly entered that on that day, and, if I was awfully busy, sometimes I would make a ticket $575, and file it, and then at the end of the week put them down on this, when I entered them I burned the ticket up. I made all the entries on the books and the inventory."
Malone said:
"The last inventory I made of the stock of goods was about the 1st of February, 1924, before I sold to Mr. Lewis in December, 1924; somewhere between the first and middle of February before I sold in December. That inventory was down there when I sold out. When I sold out to Lewis I just left it under the safe, my recollection is I took it out of the safe and put it under the safe. At the time I sold out I had an inventory in the safe made in February, 1924. If I hadn't sold out, I was going to make another in January."
On cross-examination:
"That inventory got burned, I suppose, Mr. Stewart. I throwed it on top of the safe or laid it down under the safe when I sold out to Lewis."
Hence the testimony is without conflict as to the inventories taken and preserved to and after the fire. And this evidence shows, without conflict, the Malone inventory was not preserved; that Lewis failed to make a timely inventory within 30 days from date of policy; that the books kept proceeded on the basis of the agreed purchase price, rather than an inventoried price of the volume and reasonable market value; and the books kept confused the cash sales with the amounts of cash collected on credit sales theretofore carried into the volume of the business.
The evidence as to keeping books and inventories is without dispute, and within the pleadings presents a question of law, and authorized the giving of affirmative instruction requested for defendant.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and BROWN, JJ., concur.