117 Mo. App. 229 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
This is an action on a fire insurance policy in which plaintiff prevailed in the trial court. It appears from the terms of the policy that plaintiff was a retail merchant in a small town in Jasper county and that it was stipulated that: “The assured shall keep such books and last inventory, and also last preceding inventory, securely locked in a fire-proof safe at night, and at all times when the building mentioned in this policy or the portion thereof containing the stock described therein, if not actually open for business; or, failing in this, the assured will keep such books and inventories at night, and at all such times in some place not exposed to a fire which would ignite or destroy the aforesaid building.” The evidence showed that a loss occurred by fire about six months after the policy was issued. It also showed that plaintiff did not comply with those provisions of the policy.
Plaintiff, in support of the judgment, relies upon a waiver of the provisions. There was evidence tending to show that defendant’s agent had been insuring plain
The first question, then, is on the power of the agent to waive the provisions in controversy. In view of the rulings of the courts in this State in the last few years, there can be no doubt of the authority of the agent. He solicited, issued and countersigned the policy, and collected premiums, and was therefore the alter ego of the company. [James v. Ins. Co., 148 Mo. 1.]
The remaining question is, did he waive such provisions. We have already stated the evidence in plaintiff’s behalf bearing on that question. Prom such evidence, it appears that the agent was informed by plaintiff when he issued the policy that he would not do what is therein provided he should do; and that after he issued the policy he knew that plaintiff, in keeping with what he had told him, was not complying with these provisions. That, on the day before the fire, the agent
But it is said that under the case of Gillum v. Fire Ass’n, 106 Mo. App. 673, the judgment in this case cannot be sustained. That, under the law as there stated, all prior and contemporaneous understandings between plaintiff and the defendant’s agent became merged in the policy. On the other hand, we are cited to the cases of Bush v. Ins. Co., 85 Mo. App. 155, and Hanna v. Ins. Co., 109. Mo. App. 152, in support of the judgment. These, defendant contends, are not in harmony with the Gillum case. In the Gillum case, the policy, like the one in controversy, contained the iron-safe clause. The judgment •was reversed and the cause remanded on account of an instruction given for the plaintiff which, in terms, di
It seems to us that tbe decisions, to which we have referred herein, were all made in recognition of well-understood principles of law. First, that all prior and con
Under these views, objections to testimony made by defendant were not well taken; and there was no error in giving plaintiff’s second instruction. While that instruction refers to knowledge of defendant’s agent before the policy was issued and that the agent was informed that plaintiff would continue to do as he had in the past, yet, such reference to prior knowledge was for the purpose of connecting knowledge of the same condition existing after the policy was issued (of which there was evidence) and submitting the hypothesis of defendant, with such knowledge, collecting the premium on the policy and allowing it to run without objection or cancellation.
We do not discover any error materially affecting the merits of the controversy and hence affirm the judgment.