24 A. 833 | R.I. | 1892
The plaintiff sues upon a fire insurance policy dated January 10, 1891, for the sum of $1,300. The house and barn covered by the policy were totally destroyed by fire November 5, 1891. The defendant's second plea sets up a condition *786 that the policy should be void, except as to the interest of the mortgagee of the premises, in case the insured had or should afterwards hare other insurance on said property without the assent of the defendant company in writing or in print, and avers that there was other insurance on said property, at the date of the policy, in the Attleboro Mutual Fire Insurance Company, without such assent, whereby the policy became void.
To this plea the plaintiff replies, first, that the defendant had notice of the prior insurance at the time of making the contract; second, that there was no other insurance at the time of the loss; third, that, as the Attleboro company's policy had the same provision, it became void upon the procurement of the policy in suit; and, fourth, that the plaintiff, before the issuing of the policy, informed the agent of the defendant company that the property was already insured in the Attleboro company, as alleged in the plea.
The defendant moved to strike out the first and fourth replications for certain technical defects, but, these having been amended, the case now stands on demurrer to all the replications.
The first question is, whether the defendant company is estopped from setting up the clause in question by notice to itself of the prior insurance at the time the policy was issued. The notice is not pleaded strictly as an estoppel; but since the facts set forth can be shown on trial without special pleading, we see no reason why it may not be set up in the replication with the same legal effect that the fact would have in evidence.
The same question was decided in Greene v. Equitable Ins. Co.
As to the second replication, we think it is clear that, as the condition in question relates to the validity of the contract at its inception, it is immaterial what the facts were at the time of the loss. If the policy was invalid at its issue, for want of consent for *787 other insurance, it was invalid altogether. If it was not invalid, then it does not appear to be void at all, and hence it is of no consequence what the fact was at the time of the loss.
To sustain the third replication we think it must appear that "other insurance," in the sense of the policy, is valid insurance. It has been held that, when a policy is void by its own terms, it is no insurance, and no breach of the condition relating to other insurance. See May on Insurance, 2d ed. § 365, and cases cited. The first policy in this case was valid prior to the date of the policy in suit. If the last policy was invalid and there has been no subsequent insurance, it is difficult to see upon what ground the first policy is avoided and the second held, as set up in the replication. With precisely the same clause in each policy, the principle is not plain which would select the second as the subsisting policy and avoid the first. There may be good reason for saying that both should be avoided, as a guard against temptation on the part of the insured to obtain what he may suppose to be other good insurance; but we see no good reason for holding that the operation of the clause avoids the first policy and holds the second. In N.E. Fire M.Ins. Co. v. Schettler,
The fourth replication raises a question of greater difficulty, whether the fact that the plaintiff informed the agent of the defendant company, who procured the insurance, of the existence of other insurance, is a sufficient answer to the plea setting up the clause of the policy as to other insurance and alleging the breach of it. Upon this point we think the tendency and weight of modern decisions are in favor of the plaintiff. In some of these cases, however, it is to be observed that the agents were general agents of the company, having full authority to make contracts of insurance and to issue policies, and consequently standing in the place of the company itself. SeeGerman Ins. Co. v. Gray,