Schimp v. Cedar Rapids Insurance

124 Ill. 354 | Ill. | 1888

Mr. Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of assumpsit, brought by the appellant, Julia C. Schimp, in the Champaign circuit court, against the; Cedar Rapids Insurance Company, to recover-a loss by fire,, under a policy issued to her by the company, June 16, 1882, on her dwelling, furniture, etc., to the amount of $1500. The-premium ivas $21.50, $10 of which was paid in cash, and a, note given for $11.50, payable June 1, 1883, with this provision in it: “This note is given for insurance, and in case of loss under the policy for which it is given, becomes due and payable on the date of such loss,”—which we understand tornean, that if a loss occurred for which the company was. liable, the note was to become due'on the date of such loss. ’The property covered by the risk was destroyed by fire on the 18th of February, 1883. Suit was commenced on the 12th of April, following, and the premium note was paid by appellant to appellee, through a bank, on the 28th day of May, 1883, being a month and a half after the suit was commenced. The plaintiff having been unsuccessful in both the lower courts, brings the case here for review.

Appellee set up as a defence, in the trial court, certain breaches of the conditions in the policy. Appellant’s counsel do not question the truth of the facts constituting the defence thus set up, but insist. that the company is not in a position to avail itself of that or any other defence, by reason of its having accepted payment of the premium note after having obtained full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances constituting the defences made to the action. Indeed, it is conceded that if the company has not waived the right to set up the defences relied on, by reason of having accepted such payment, the judgments below are right, and ought to be affirmed. A recurrence to a few well settled principles, it is believed, will relieve the question thus presented of all real or apparent difficulty.

That the company had a complete defence to the action ofi the policy at the time the suit was commenced, is admitted. But this, like most other rights, is one that might be abandoned, released or waived. There is no pretense that it has been released, intentionally abandoned, or expressly waived, so that if there has been a waiver at all, it is what is known to the law as an implied waiver. This class of waivers is frequently to be met with in the law of insurance. Thus, where the assured has been guilty of some breach or breaches of the conditions of the policy, and the insurer, with full knowledge thereof, during the pendency of the risk, accepts a maturing premium, or does any other act recognizing the continued existence and validity of the policy, such acceptance or other act will operate as a waiver of the right of forfeiture- occasioned by said breaches, unless something appears to show that it was not intended to have that effect, and that the assured so understood it. This well recognized rule in the law of insurance is founded, at least in part, upon the fundamental principle, that one having the exclusive right to terminate art executory contract, must abrogate it altogether, if at all. He can not be heard to say it is valid for one purpose, and, in the-same breath, that it is invalid for all other purposes, but it is. founded chiefly upon the general principles of common honesty and natural justice, which the law exacts of mankind in their intercourse and dealings with one another.

The doctrine of waiver, however, in our opinion, has no application whatever to the facts of this ease. The act of the company relied on as a waiver of its right of defence, occurred long after the risk under the policy had terminated by the happening of the contingency insured against,—long after the-defendant had refused payment of the loss, on the ground there had been a forfeiture of the policy, and in the face of an. action brought to enforce the payment of such loss. {

The cases relied on by appellant’s counsel differ materially in their facts from the present case, and, in our opinion, fall far short of sustaining the position in support of which they are cited. The policy being a valid obligation and binding contract between the parties, upon its delivery to the assured the risk attached, and commenced running, and would have continued to run until the loss occurred, but for the breach of its conditions by the assured, which rendered it void at the election of the company, and it is not claimed that there was any waiver of such breach until after the commencement of the present suit. The insurer is not required, in such case, to formally declare a forfeiture. It is sufficient to set it up by way of defence when sued for the loss, as was done in this ease.

The waiver or estoppel relied on can not prevail. It is destitute. of that element which is most essential to either. It does not appear, nor is it claimed, that the assured has been misled in any manner, to her prejudice, by the company accepting payment of the note. "What other course of conduct could the appellant have pursued than that which she did? She simply prosecuted the suit previously commenced by her against the company, to its termination, the company, from the beginning, denying its liability. As the payment of the note is the only ground on which she now claims she ought to recover, it is clear such payment could not have contributed to her failure to succeed in the courts below. The ground of recovery now urged is, in legal effect, an admission that there was no right of recovery when her suit was commenced. The payment to the company, therefore, so far from misleading her, to her injury, has, according to her present contention, greatly improved her prospect of success. Upon the "delivery of the policy and commencement of the risk, the appellee acquired a present vested right in the premium, as an entirety. The payment of part of it was merely postponed, and consequently the company had the right to receive the money. But' however this may be, we are clearly of opinion that the receiving of it did not operate as a waiver of the breaches of the conditions of the policy.

The view here taken is fully supported by, the late case of Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Amerman, 119 Ill. 329, and the authorities there cited.

The judgment will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.