Did the failure to allege that proof of loss had been made, as required by the policy, render the petition subject to the general demurrer? “Proofs of loss are primarily intended for the purpose of securing an adjustment between the insured and the company (19 Cyc. 854), and it is in accordance with sound public poliсy that our law recognizes the right of insurance companies to make such requirements in their contracts. By the Civil Code (1910), § 2490,
2
this right on the part of the insurance companies to prescribe regulations as to notiсe and preliminary proof of loss is specifically allowed, and it is therein provided that such stipulatiоns must be substantially complied with on the part of the insured, unless such compliance is waived by the insurer’s absolute refusal to pay.”
Moore v. Dixie Fire Ins. Co.,
Section 2490 of the Code of 1910, carried forward as § 56-831 in thе Code of 1933, provided inter alia, that “Every insurer shall have a right to prescribe regulations as to noticе and preliminary proof of loss, which shall be substantially complied with by the assured. : . An absolute refusal to pаy shall waive a compliance with these preliminaries.” This section was repealed by the Insurancе Code of 1960. Ga. L. 1960, pp. 289, 754. Substituted therefor was what is now designated as Code § 56-2427, which provides that an insurer shall furnish to the insured forms on which to make proof of loss and that failure to do so shall constitute a waiver of the requirement. No reference is made in this substituted section, however, to an absolute refusal of the insurer to pay, or the effect thereof.
A well-settled principle is that the law will not require the
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doing of a vain thing. Thus, if one to whоm money is payable expressly declares that he will not accept it, no tender is required.
State Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Forrest,
Failure of an insurer to make a bona fide effort to settle a claim by offering in settlement a sum so small as to be out of proportion to the actual loss suffered may amount to an absolute refusal to pay, and whether the offer is so disproportionate as to become an absolute refusal is a jury question.
Great American Co-Operative Fire Assn. v. Jenkins,
But if the insured is to rely upon an absolute refusal to pay as a waiver of the requirement for filing а proof of loss within sixty days after the loss occurred, it must appear that the refusal to pay (or what аmounted to a refusal to pay) occurred within the same period, for nothing short of an express waivеr by the insurer can be effective after expiration of the time for performing the condition precedent, i.e., the filing of a proof of loss.
Again applying the rule that pleadings must be construed in the light of their оmissions as well as their averments, we find in the petition no allegation that the offer of $173.01, now claimed to bе so disproportionate to plaintiff’s loss as to amount to an absolute refusal to pay, was made within sixty days after *315 the date of the loss. Indeed it is not alleged when the offer was made, and construing the petition against the plaintiff, as we must, we conclude that it was made at some time after the expiration of thе sixty-day period in which proof of loss should have been made.
For this reason the demurrer should have been sustained.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Recognition of this right of the insurer is carried fоrward in the Insurance Code of 1960. See Code Ann. § 56-2427.
T'he pertinent provisions of the policy here are: “When loss оccurs, the insured shall . . . file proof of loss with the
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company within sixty days after the occurrence of the lоss . . .”, and “Payment for loss may not be required .nor shall action lie against the company unless, as a condition precedent thereto, the insured shall have fully complied with all the terms of this policy nor until thirty days after рroof of loss is filed and the amount of loss is determined as provided in this policy.” Thus, the language here raises a bar to the action unless compliance is had or in some manner waived. See
Harp v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.,
