43 Mo. App. 513 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
This action is on an insurance policy. Defendant lost in the trial court, and appeals. The policy provides that any additional insurance shall be indorsed in writing on the policy, otherwise the policy
The provisions of the policy against further insurance and against a waiver unless each be indorsed on the policy, can be waived by defendant’s agent. Bernard v. Ins. Co., 38 Mo. App. 106. And the evidence in this case of waiver was sufficient to justify its being submitted to the jury. In this connection objection is made to a conversation going to show a waiver, which occurred between the plaintiff and the defendant’s errand boy, who delivered the policy. This conversation clearly should not have been admitted and would have justified a reversal, but for the fact that the court excluded the testimony by an instruction asked by defendant.
The criticism of plaintiff’s instruction, in stating that, unless defendant did not waive such violation as stated in “ other instructions,” is founded on the assertion that no other instructions defined or referred to a waiver. ' It is true a waiver is not expressly defined or mentioned in other instructions, yet defendant’s instructions. embody that which amounts to a waiver and would unquestionably be understood as embodying what is referred to in the instruction of which complaint is made. •
Plaintiff, in giving in his testimony as to the articles damaged or lost by the fire, used a memorandum or list, which he took three days after the fire, but before anything had been disturbed or removed. The list contained a large number of articles. We think he was rightly permitted to use'such list as a memorandum from which to refresh his memory. Wernwag v. Railroad, 20 Mo. App. 473; Dungan v. Mahoney, 11 Allen, 572.
We have considered the other objections made by defendant, but regard them as insufficient to justify a reversal, and affirm the judgment.