52 Neb. 395 | Neb. | 1897
November 7, 1892, the Phenix Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, hereinafter called the “insurer,” issued its policy to Louis Slobodisky, hereinafter called the “insured,” insuring against loss or damage by fire for a period of one year, to the extent of $1,500, a dwelling house and furniture therein belonging to the insured. By the terms of the insurance contract no other or concurrent insurance on the insured property was permitted. The policy provided that it should be void “if the assured now has or shall hereafter make any other insurance, whether valid or not, on the said property or any part thereof,” without the consent of the first insurer thereto being indorsed on its policy. During the life of this policy the insured procured from another insurance company $500 additional insurance on the insured property, the consent of the first insurer thereto not being indorsed on its policy. February 21,1893, the insured property was destroyed by, fire. The insured brought this suit in the district court of Douglas county, alleging in his petition the issuance of the $1,500 policy, and that it was “but a continuation and renewal of a line of insurance” which the insured had placed with the insurer a number of years prior to the date of the policy in suit, and which said insurance had been placed with the insurer upon the agreement between the parties that the insured should be permitted to carry a total insurance upon the insured property of $5,000; that such a limitation was duly written in all policies which had been issued by . the insurer to the insured on his property prior to this $1,500 policy, and such a limitation should have been likewise written in that policy; that it was agreed between the insured and the insurer at the time of the issuance of the $1,500 policy that the insured might increase the insurance on such policy to an amount not to exceed $5,000, in such insurance com
1. One question of fact presented to the district court was whether the policy sought to be reformed recited the contract actually made and existing between the insured and the insurer. The court below found that the contract in reference to insurance actually made and existing between the parties was correctly recited in the policy. We
It was also held in the case referred to that a statement made by the insured to the agent of the first insurer that the former intended to procure additional insurance on the insured property was not notice of the existence of such additional insurance when obtained; but it was ruled in the case cited that notice to the agent of the first insurer that additional insurance had been taken out upon the insured property was notice to such agent’s principal. But the appellant has not brought himself within the doctrine of the case cited. It stands admitted of rec
The insurer had the right to presume that the insured would live up to the terms of the insurance contract, and it was no part of the insurer’s duty, or that of its agent, to institute inquiries or make investigations for the purpose of determining whether the insured had violated its contract. The judgment of the district court isi
Affirmed.