39 Pa. Super. 396 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909
Opinion by
When this case was before the court in 35 Pa. Superior Ct. 120, we held that certain evidence which had been excluded was competent, relevant, and material and should have been received, and when received, at least as to the credibility of the witnesses, would necessarily have been raised; and if the offers of evidence presented by the defendant had been received, and if the testimony had risen to the level of the offers, it would have become a question of fact for the jury. On the retrial of the case, the plaintiff recovered a verdict after the excluded evidence suggested in the earlier trial had been received, and the question was fairly submitted to the jury. On this appeal all the assignments of error present but one controlling question, namely, was there sufficient evidence to submit to the jury the question whether the defendant had waived the effect of an alleged false warranty which had been made by the plaintiff in his application for the accident policy in suit. It is admitted that the plaintiff accepted a general accident policy issued January 27, 1905, upon which is in
The accident on which this action is founded occurred on March 2, 1905; and this suit was brought on October 18, 1905. Subsequent to the happening of this accident, it was alleged by the plaintiff, that the company, after having a full knowledge of all the facts in the case, continued to treat the plaintiff as a member of the company, and gave him notices of the amount of the monthly premiums due on his policy, which were to be paid on May 1, June 1, July 1, and August 1, succeeding; that he paid the premiums to July and then withheld further payment on account of the company refusing to pay him the amount claimed on account of his accident. The relation of Boyer and Phillips, the agents of the company, was explained in detail in the testimony, so that it became purely a question of fact under proper instructions for the jury to determine whether the defendant had waived the defects in the plaintiff’s claim by continuing to receive the premium due on his policy, and that the assurances given to him by the agents of the defendant that his relation to the “True Blue ” company did not conflict with his alleged warranty to the defendant.
The company might have stood on the literal construction of its own rules, and made a successful defense when it first had knowledge of the accident to the plaintiff, but instead of doing this, it is urged that a number of visits were made to him by persons acting for the company, and representations were made to him which would determine his right to recover. The extent of their authority and the representations they
As is said in McSparran v. Southern Mutual Ins. Co., 193 Pa. 184: Notice is knowledge or information legally equivalent to knowledge brought home to the party notified, in immediate connection with the subject to which the notice relates: Sitler v. Fire Ins. Co., 18 Pa. Superior Ct. 139. Notice to an agent when it is the duty of the agent to act upon such notice, or to communicate it to his principal, in the proper
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.