66 Neb. 590 | Neb. | 1902
This case, was before ns at a former sitting on a petition in error filed by the plaintiff in the court below, and the cause was reversed and remanded because of the action of the trial court in directing a verdict for the defendant insurance company. See Johnston v. Phelps County Farmers’ Mutual Ins. Co., 63 Nebr., 21. At a subsequent trial in the district court a verdict was directed for plaintiff, and the defendant insurance company now brings error to this court. By reference to the former opinion, it will be noted that the case then presented rested on the proposition that all the property covered by plaintiff’s policy of insurance had been destroyed, and that plaintiff had paid and defendant received the delinquent and subsequent assessments after the fire, and that no property remained to which the policy, if renewed, could attach. Under this theory of the case the rule was announced that “where all the property covered by the policy is destroyed by fire while the policy-holder is delinquent, so that nothing remains to which renewal of the insurance might attach, receipt of the amount of subsequent assessments levied after the loss, in addition to the assessment levied prior to and delinquent at the time of the loss, with knowledge of the facts, is inconsistent with reliance upon the forfeiture and is a waiver thereof.” At the second trial of the cause in the court below the defendant insurance company, for the purpose of complying with the rule announced in this case at the first hearing, introduced evidence tending to show that plaintiff’s policy of insurance covered a large amount of property which was not destroyed, and that the company accepted the delinquent assessments from
The defendant insurance company contends that in the light of this new evidence the case falls within the rule recently announced in Farmers’ Mutual Ins. Co. v. Kinney, 64 Nebr., 808, in which we held that “where all the propérty covered by a policy of a mutual fire-insurance company is not destroyed, the receipt of subsequent assessments by the company, from a member who has sustained a loss while his policy was suspended for default in the payment of assessments, will not operate as a waiver. of such default.” On the other hand, it is contended by plaintiff Johnston that our former holding in this case, that under the evidence then presented the acceptance of the subsequent assessments from plaintiff by defendant company amount to a waiver of his default in not paying his first assessment, has now become the “law of the case” and is binding on these parties, and that we should not recede from it. This evidently was the view taken by the learned trial court at the last hearing of this case, and probably guided his action in directing a verdict for plaintiff. While this court in a long line of decisions has adhered tenaciously to the rule of the “law of the case,” it has confined this rule to questions of law determined between the same parties at former hearings in this court, but has never extended it to questions of fact, except when essentially the same questions were presented for a second review. It was said by Holcomb, J., in Missouri P. R. Co. v. Fox, 60 Nebr., 531, 538: “The evidence in different cases, and in different trials of the same case, may, and often does, differ in many essential particulars. It may shift and change as the current of a stream in a bed of sand. Not only may changes occur by reason of newly-
Prom what has been said, it follows that we are now called upon to review this' case in the light of a materially changed condition of testimony, to which the rule of the “law of the case” does not apply. At the former hearing we held that if all the property covered by plaintiff’s policy of insurance was destroyed by the fire and no property remained under the protection of the policy of insurance, the acceptance of subsequent assessments by the company was inconsistent with any other theory than a waiver of the forfeiture. We think the former opinion was right and still adhere to it, but we are now confronted with a statement of facts which unmistakably shows that all the property covered by the policy of insurance was not destroyed by the fire, and this changed condition of the evidence, in our judgment, takes the case, out of the rule of Johnston v. Phelps County Farmers’ Mutual Ins. Co., supra, and places it clearly within the rule announced in Farmers’ Mutual Ins. Co. v. Kinney, supra. It is urged, hoAvever, that in any view of the case the court was justified in directing a verdict for plaintiff, because the assessment on which plaintiff was delinquent at the time of the fire was made without proper authority, and no proper notice had been given plaintiff of such assessment. The delinquent assessment was the first assessment ever made by this company after its organization, and it appears from the record that four of the six directors of the company met after a loss had been sustained and ordered an assessment of one mill on each of the policy-holders of the company, and-that the secretary of the company thereupon made the assessment and served
The formal defect in the notice which requested the payment of the assessment by plaintiff “at his earliest convenience” is urged as a fatal defect. The by-law of the company as to notice provided as follows: “It shall be the duty of the secretary, whenever such assessment shall have been made, to immediately notify every person composing such company, personally, or by letter, sent to his usual post-office address of the amount of such loss and the sum due from him as his share thereof, and of the time and to whom such payment is to be made, but such time shall not be less than twenty (20), nor more than forty (40) days from the date of such notice.” This bylaw entered into and became a part of plaintiff’s contract with the company, and limited at most his “earliest convenience” to forty days from the time that he received the notice. Again, it appears that after receiving the notice plaintiff went to the secretary of defendant company and promised that he would pay the loss as soon as he could» The record also shows that later another secretary was elected of defendant company, and that he notified plaintiff personally that he was in arrears and must pay his
It is therefore recommended that the judgment of the district court be reversed and the cause remanded.
By the Court: For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.