105 F. 286 | 5th Cir. | 1900
This is an action on a’fire insurance policy, and is brought' by Johnston Bros., a commercial firm composed of Charles A. Johnston, a citizen of the state of Mississippi, and Harrison B. Johnston, a citizen of the state of Alabama, against the Sea Insurance Company, Limited, of Liverpool, England, a corporation created and existing under the laws of Great Britain. The policy sued on was issued August 31, 1898, by the Sea Insurance Company to Johnston Bros, to insure them against loss or damage of their cotton by fire during the year following the date of the policy. It was an open policy, and was to cover cotton to be after-wards declared by the insured. Johnston Bros., having 4,000 bales of cotton at West Point, Miss., declared 2,000 bales of them as covered by the policy. This declaration contained no specific description of the cotton. Johnston Bros, were authorized by the terms of the policy to issue certificates under it for such cotton as they might
The unmaking of a written or oral contract is, of course, within the power of those who made it. The parties who make the contract can rescind it, but it requires, to accomplish this, the same concurrence of their wills which is required to make a contract. Mutual release from the old contract is an adequate consideration for the rescission. This doctrine is applicable to the contract of insurance. Bish. Cont. (2d Ed.) §§ 812, 813, 815; Joyce, Ins. § 1637; May, Ins. (4th Ed.) § 67. The contract of insurance in this case contains this language: “Either party at liberty to cancel upon giving 30 days’ written notice to that effect, but without prejudice to any risk pending at the termination of that period.” This provision is intended to authorize either party to cancel the contract without the consent of the other. It has no bearing on the question of rescission by mutual agreement. In Insurance Co. v. Phinney, 178 U. S. 327, 20 Sup. Ct. 906, 44 L. Ed. 1088, the court was dealing with a case in which a state statute was cited which declared that no life insurance company doing business in that state.should have power to declare forfeited or lapsed any policy hereafter issued or renewed by reason of the nonpayment of any annual premium. The
“Columbus, Miss., January 24, 1899.
“Messrs. Albert Willcox & Company, New York, N. Y. — Dear Sirs: Tbe gross of your bill as rendered January 14 struck us at sight as being excessive for tbe amount of business done. Upon investigation we find the rate in excess of tbe rate sbe°t you gave us and from si/100 to 60/ioo in excess of what we get from the Atlantic Mut. When you sent us tbe rate sheet on September 9, you stated that tbe rates were higher, and you would alter them later to whatever we bad quoted from other companies. We inclose your bill, and will thank you to make at least 33% % reduction; else we cannot go on, as business will not stand any such rate.
“Yours, very truly, Johnston Bros.” "
“New York, 7th February, 1899.
“Messrs. Johnston Bros., Columbus, Miss — Dear Sirs: We duly received your favor of the 24th ult., and have been going into the matter of your premiums. We regret that it is quite impossible for us to compete with the rates of the Atlantic Mutual. Shippers, as a rule, find it quite impossible to use the policy of this company; but, if you are able to do so with satisfaction, we fear that we cannot hope to compete with the rates. You refer ns to our letter of the 9th September, and say that we would alter the rates to whatever you had quoted from other companies. We have referred to our letter, and we cannot see that we made such a statement. We said that we "inclosed a scale, which was the lowest that had been so far issued, and that, should any reduction he made later on, we would promptly advise you. No material reductions, however, have been made by any of the stock companies, and, as we have said before, we cannot obtain with the stock companies rates as low as yon can get from the Atlantic Mutual, and it is fortunate for you if yon can use their policy. We think that we may possibly he able to secure you a reduction of Vie % all around if your business is continued with the Sea Insurance Oo., but, if you decide not to go on using this policy, we fear it will he impossible to make any reduction, and we would kindly ask you to return your policy, as under it the Sea Insurance Co. are entitled to insurance on all the shipments you have made. We return you our bill, which we can reduce by Vi6 % if we continue your business. We should be obliged if you would kindly send us a check to balance the account.
“Yours, very truly, Albert Willcox & Oo., per Douglas Franks.”
“Columbus, Miss., Feb. 21, 1899. •
“Messrs. Albert Willcox & Oo., New York, N. Y. — Gentlemen: Your favor of the 7th instant was duly received. This reply has been delayed by the writer’s absence the past ten days. The rates you charge are not only in excess of the Atlantic Mutual, but of those given by such companies as the North American to our competitors, and it will be impossible for ns to go on with such a handicap. The letter that we referred to was a personal one to the writer, which jve inclose, and will thank yon to return. We inclose check and policy, which we suppose will conclude the whole matter. If we are mistaken, please return the check with inclosed letter.
“Yours, very truly, Johnston Bros.” '
“Written evidence, as a general rule, must be construed by the court, and the first instruction was confined to that purpose. It gives the true exposition oí the correspondence, and therefore is not the subject of error.”
A clear and elaborate statement of the rule is found in the case of Goddard v. Foster, 17 Wall. 123, 21 L. Ed. 589. That case involved the construction of letters that had passed between the parties in reference to a previous contract which was rescinded. The court said:
“Next error assigned is that the court erred in charging- the jury that the correspondence showed an agreement between ihe parties distinct from the prior written agreement, which was litigated in the equity suit, but the court is of the opinion that the charge was correct, as it is well-settled law that written instruments are always to be construed by the court, except when they contain technical words, or terms of art, or when thei instrument is introduced in evidence collaterally, and where its effect depends not merely on*290 the construction and meaning of the instrument, but upon extrinsic facts and circumstances, in which case the inference to be drawn from it must be left to the jury. Where the question was whether there was a contract between two parties to be deduced from correspondence, Parke, B., said: ‘The law, X take it, to be this: that it is the duty of the court to construe all written instruments. If there are peculiar expressions used in the instrument, which have, in particular places or trades, a known meaning attached to them, it is for the jury to say what is the meaning of those expressions, but it is for the court to decide what is the meaning of the contract.’ Contracts are frequently made by correspondence between the parties, and in such a state of the evidence it was held in the ease of Begg v. Forbes, 30 Eng. Law & Eq. 508, that the question was exclusively for the court; Jervis, C. J., remarking, ‘Surely, the construction of written documents is for the judge, whether many or few in number.’ Exceptional eases aiise where the contract rests partly in the correspondence and partly in oral communications, in which it is held that the question whether or not there is a contract is a question for the jury. Courts of justice, however, are not denied the same light and information the parties.enjoyed when the contract was executed, but they may acquaint themselves with the persons and circumstances that are the subjects of the statements in the written agreement, and are entitled to place themselves in the same situation as the parties who made the contract, so as to view the circumstances as they viewed them, and so to judge of the meaning of the words and of the correct application of the language to the things described.”
The letters- in evidence in this case are not introduced collaterally. They are made exhibits to the defendant’s answer. This defense is as distinctly founded on the letters as the suit is founded on the policy. In a- jurisdiction where the system of pleading permitted it a special plea of rescission would have been filed, setting out the three letters, and alleging that the check inclosed in the letter of February 21, 1899, was accepted and collected, and the policy retained by the insurance company. If the insured was advised that such correspondence and facts were not a rescission, a demurrer would have been filed to such plea. The question then without doubt would have been one of law for the court to decide, — whether the letters and,facts stated in the plea constituted a rescission. The letters are before the court, under the system of pleading proper within the jurisdiction, as exhibits to the answer and as evidence. Their authenticity is admitted. The additional fact of the receipt and acceptance of the check is also undisputed. The result, then, depending on the written evidence and the other undisputed facts, it seems to us clearly a question of law for the court to decide whether or not they constitute a rescission of the contract of insurance. In the letter of January 2áth Johnston Bros, complain of the rates charged on the policy, and request a reduction of 33J per cent, in the bill rendered; else they could not go on, as the business would not stand the rates charged. Willcox & Co., in their answer on February 7th, decline to make the reduction requested, but state that they might get a reduction of one-sixteenth per cent, all around if business were continued with the Sea Insurance Company; 'Tut,” they added, "if- you decide not to go on using this policy, we fear it will be impossible, to make any reduction, and we would kindly ask you to return your policy.” The bill was returned to Johnston Bros, in this letter. The offer was made to reduce it by one-sixteenth per cent, upon condition that “we continue your business.” Johnston Bros, reply to this letter, inclosing a check for the full
Where the case depends on correspondence, the genuineness of which is conceded, and on oral evidence about which there is no conflict, and where such oral evidence is of a kind that different inferences cannot be drawn from it, it is the duty of the court, on request, to direct the verdict. If it would be the duty of the court to set (aside a-verdict if found for the plaintiff, the court should direct 'the jury to find a verdict for the defendant. Pleasants v. Fant, 22 Wall. 116, 22 L. Ed. 780. The evidence of the witness Johnston as to his intention in writing the letters cannot be received to affect the plain meaning of the letters. Hinds v. Keith, 6 C. C. A. 231, 57 Fed. 10, 13; Burke v. State, 71 Ala. 377, 382. If such evidence is admitted in the case without objection, it is to be disregarded by the appellate court in construing the written contract. Moody v. McCown, 39 Ala. 586. On the question under discussion —the "question of rescission — there is no conflict in the legal evidence. It,depends on the correspondence, with nothing needed to supplement it, unless, perhaps, the conceded fact of the acceptance and collection and failure to return the check inclosed in the letter of February 21st. The circuit court should have granted the request of the Sea Insurance Company, and directed the jury to find a verdict for the defendant.
We shall not comment on the other defense presented — that no cotton to which the policy had attached was included in the cotton •alleged by., the plaintiff to have been destroyed by- fire. We only