188 Mo. App. 653 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This is an action upon a policy of fire insurance for $4000 issued by defendant September 27,1911, upon a two-story frame dwelling house owned by plaintiff in Maryville. The petition alleges the house was totally destroyed by fire January 31, 1913. while the policy was in force and prays for the recovery of $4000, together with interest, statutory penalties and costs.
The answer admits the house was damaged by fire on the date alleged in the petition but denies the loss was total and pleads that an appraisal held pursuant to a provision of the policy resulted in the loss being appraised at $1900.36, which sum defendant afterward tendered to plaintiff in full settlement of its liability. The verdict was for plaintiff for the face of the policy and accrued interest and on the overruling of its motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, defendant appealed.
Tbe policy in question comes within the operation of the valued policy statute (sec. 7020, R. S. 1909) which provides that “in case of total loss of the property insured, the measure of damages shall be the amount for which the same was insured.” It is conceded that the sound value of the house at the time of the fire was, at least, $5000, and that if the loss was total plaintiff was entitled to receive the full amount of the insurance but defendant contends and its evidence tends to show that the house was only partially destroyed and that the award.of the appraisers fully covered the loss.
The evidence of plaintiff is to the effect that while the house was not entirely consumed it had lost its structural character and that the cost of repairing it would exceed the cost of replacing it with a new house.
At the time of the fire and for sometime thereafter plaintiff was ill in a hospital near Boston and was unable to attend to business. The first information she received from sources of her own selection was to the effect that the ■ loss was not total but exceeded the amount of the insurance. The agent of defendant who corresponded with her contended that an estimate he had made of the damages placed them at the total sum of $1667.55. Under date of June 9, 1913, the agent wrote plaintiff who was still in the hospital: ‘ ‘ For the Company it is denied that the amount of the loss is as great as the amount claimed ($4000) and for the Company an appraisal is requested in accordance with the
Plaintiff answered promptly complying with the request and nominating her appraiser. The two appraisers thus appointed selected an umpire and the three inspected the property and concurred in appraising the loss at $1900.36. Plaintiff did not know until just before she brought this suit that the loss was total, but she did not concede in her letters to defendant that it was not and insisted that it exceeded the insurance. Plaintiff gave no person authority to represent her in the adjustment of the loss and when she agreed to the appraisal was possessed only of such information respecting the extent of the damage as she had received from persons she had employed to inspect the ruins and estimate it.
Since this is a valued policy the liability of defendant is measured by the statute (Sec. 7020) and if the loss was total within the statutory meaning of that term, the stipulation in the policy for an appraisement or arbitration could not be employed to reduce the liability of defendant for the reason that the amount of the demand being liquidated by the statute the agreement of plaintiff to arbitrate, which could have had no other effect than that of reducing her demand, was nugatory for lack of a consideration to support it. [Marshall v. Insurance Co., 80 Mo. App. 18; Stevens v. Insurance Co., 120 Mo. App. 88; Carp v. Insurance Co., 104 Mo. App. 502; Dry Goods Co. v. Insurance Co., 79 Mo. App. 550; Coffin v. Insurance Co., 142 Mo. App. 295; Baker v. Insurance Co., 57 Mo. App. 559; Murphy v. Mercantile Co., 61 Mo. App. 323; Mc
The instructions from which we have quoted properly defined the term ‘ ‘ total loss. ’ ’ The test of whether a building was wholly or only partially destroyed by fire is well stated in Stevens v. Insurance Co., supra, (1. c. 102) to be “whether the building as a building has lost its identity and specific character as such by means of the fire and as a result thereof has become so far disintegrated that it can no longer be properly designated as a building, even though some parts of it may remain standing.” Since the evidence of plaintiff supports the finding of the jury expressed in the verdict that the parts of the house left standing were so badly damaged that they had no structural value, we have before us a case in which we must assume that the loss by fire was total and, therefore, that the arbitration was void for lack of a consideration.
But it is argued by defendant that plaintiff when she brought the suit was estopped by her own conduct from claiming a total loss. Counsel say that “when plaintiff with full knowledge of the facts entered into an appraisal under the terms of the policy to determine the amount of her loss, thereby putting the defendant to trouble and expense, she was estopped to claim in a subsequent suit on the policy that her loss was total or to deny that her loss was partial only.” Harmon v. Stuyvesant Insurance Co., 170 Mo. App. 309, is the principal authority relied upon to support this position. In that case the defendant insurer, with full knowledge of all the facts, demanded an appraisal on the ground that the loss was partial and afterward, in an action on the policy, attacked the award for the reason that as the loss was total, there was no ground in view of the valued policy statute, upon which to have an appraisal/ and therefore the award was void. We observed in the opinion that “defendant fails to
We fail to perceive any benefit defendant may be allowed to derive from that decision. Defendant had full knowledge of all the facts relating to the extent of the loss from which the jury found that it was total and with such knowledge demanded an appraisal which the law would not allow in such case. Plaintiff being ill in a distant city and compelled to rely upon what turned out to be inaccurate if not interested sources of information concerning her loss, did not have full knowledge of the facts, did not ask an appraisal, and complied with defendant’s demand protesting that her claim should be measured only by the face of the policy. How could it be said that defendant was misled by her compliance with its peremptory demand and was induced to go to the trouble and incur the expense of participating in the appraisal? Obviously the argument is without merit.
There is no prejudicial error in the record and the judgment is affirmed.