98 Cal. 557 | Cal. | 1893
The complaint in this ease alleges in substance the issuance of a policy by the defendant insuring plaintiff in an amount not exceeding $2,500 against loss by fire upon certain described property, and that plaintiff had other insurance upon the same and other property, all of which insurance aggregated $127,000; that during the term of such insurance the said insured property was greatly damaged and partially destroyed by fire, and immediately after such lire plaintiff, in accordance with the terms of its policies, presented to defendant and all its other insurers, jointly, proofs of its loss, and claim for damages sustained thereby. The complaint further alleges that plaintiff and its insurers were unable to agree upon the amount of plaintiff’s damage, “and under and in accordance with the terms and conditions of said policies” the question of the amount of such loss was submitted to the arbitrament of two persons, who, being unable to agree, selected an umpire, as they were authorized to do, and that said arbitrators investigated plaintiff’s claim of loss and decided and reported to plaintiff and its insurers that the amount of plaintiff’s loss was $90,000, “and thereupon said loss was adjusted at
“ 9. That after said awards were rendered neither the defendant nor the other insurers ever expressly covenanted, agreed, or promised with the plaintiff as an adjustment of said loss to pay to said plaintiff the sum of $90,000, or any other sum”; and,—
“11. That after said award had been "made, defendant never expressly promised or agreed to pay to plaintiff $1,859.25, or any other sum.”
1. The j udgment cannot be sustained upon the findings. The cause of action stated in the complaint is not upon the policy of insurance issued by defendant to plaintiff, nor upon an award in the nature of a judgment fixing the liability of defendant upon such policy, but is upon an agreement alleged to have been made by defendant with plaintiff after the amount of plaintiff’s entire loss had been appraised by arbitrators, and by which agreement it is alleged that defendant promised to pay to plaintiff a certain proportionate share of such appraised loss. (Saville v. Ætna. Co., 8 Mont. 419; Wagner v. Insurance Co., 143 Pa. St. 338.)
The finding of the court that such alleged agreement was never made is fatal to the judgment upon this appeal. The distinction between the cause of action stated in this complaint, or an action upon an award fixing the liability of an insurer under an insurance contract, and a cause of action upon a policy of insurance, is marked and important, not only by reason of the difference in the facts required to be shown in order to maintain the different actions, but also because of the fact that in an action like this the defendant is cut off from defenses which might be interposed to an action upon the policy. “Where an insurance company, after a loss, has adjusted the claim therefor, and has agreed to pay a certain sum in liquidation of the claim, it cannot in an action setting forth such facts, object that the action was not brought within the time limited in the policy. In such a case the action is not upon the policy, but upon the agreement to pay. Neither in such a case can it set up a breach of warranty, or of any of the conditions of the policy in defense, for adjusting the loss and promising to pay it is a waiver of all breaches on the part of the assured, and of all defenses which might have been made, except for such waiver.” (2 Wood on Fire Insurance, sec. 450; Smith v. Glen’s Falls Ins. Co., 62 N. Y. 85; Saville v. Ætna Ins. Co., 8 Mont. 419; Stache v. St. Paul Ins. Co., 49 Wis. 89; 35 Am. Rep. 772; Wagner v. Insurance Co., 143 Pa. St. 338.)
After an award has been made under such a limited submission, and the insurer has expressly promised to pay it, the insured may maintain an action, either upon the policy alleging the fact of the award for the purpose of fixing the amount of the recovery, or he may sue upon the new or subsequent agreement to pay, in which latter case the fact of the agreement is material, and must be proven.
It is urged, however, in one of the briefs filed in behalf of
2. The real question in the case, and which may become important upon another trial, if the complaint should be so amended as to state a cause of action upon the policy of insurance, and the evidence should be in accordance with the special findings contained in this record, relates to the binding force of the award given by the arbitrators selected to appraise the amount of plaintiff’s loss. The defendant alleges in its cross-complaint that this award was not the result of the judgment of the arbitrators, but was based solely upon the consent or agreement of the insurance companies to the effect that the arbitrators might fix the amount of plaintiff’s loss, in the sum stated in such award, without any examination, and without the exercise of any judgment of their own. The defendant further alleges that such consent was obtained by reason of plaintiff’s fraudulent concealment of certain books and inventories in its possession, and which would have shown the amount of its loss to have been much less than the sum fixed in the award. The submission to arbitration grew out of the fact that plaintiff and the insurance companies were unable to agree upon the amount of damage sustained by plaintiff, and undoubtedly contemplated that the award when made should be the result of the honest judgment of the arbitrators, after a full examination and investigation of the matters upon which the award was to be made, and after due consideration of all the proofs which should be submitted to them by the parties to the submission. The court does find that after such submission the arbitrators pro
The policy issued by defendant was upon a stock of agricultural implements manufactured and in process of construction by plaintiff, and the agreement of defendant was to make good to plaintiff such immediate damage to the property insured as might be caused by fire, the loss or damage to be estimated according to the actual cash value of the property, not exceeding the cost of replacement; and it was further agreed that in case of loss the plaintiff would, if required, produce and exhibit for examination by defendant its books of accounts and other vouchers. It will be easily perceived that this provision of the policy in relation to the production of books and vouchers was one of very great importance to the defendant, and was intended to aid the defendant in ascertaining the cost or value of the property insured in case of its destruction by fire; and the court below found that after the plaintiff had made its claim for the loss alleged to have been sustained by it, the defendant and the other insurance companies “requested an inspection of the books of the corporation plaintiff, for the alleged and avowed purpose of ascertaining the amount of plaintiff’s loss and damage by said fire”; and thereupon one Shippee, a director of plaintiff, who had been appointed as its agent to effect a settlement of plaintiff’s loss with defendant and the other insurance com
The court below also found that defendant and the other insurers consented that the arbitrators might find the amount of plaintiff’s loss to be $90,000, “ because of the absence of any book or books of account kept by plaintiff showing the cost of construction or value, and the previous inability of the arbitrators .... to agree upon an umpire, and of the inability of the insurance companies to establish a less amount than $90,000 as the loss, and rather than go to a lawsuit, and acting upon the statements theretofore made to them that there were no books showing cost of construction or value,” and “ that, if defendant and plaintiff’s other insurers had known of the books in the possession of plaintiff showing cost of construction and value,” they would not have given such consent. We think, also, the findings show that the actual value of the property destroyed, and which was insured by defendant, was very much less than the amount fixed by the award.
It would seem very clear from these facts that the conduct of Palmer in concealing from defendant the books and inventories referred to, and which conduct was the same in effect as a representation that there were no such books and inventories in existence, was a substantial inducement to the action of defendant in waiving its right to have an appraisement of plaintiff’s loss in accordance with the terms of its policy, and in consenting that such loss might be fixed at $90,000, without any examination or exercise of judgment upon the part of the arbitrators.
The facts as found by the court below and hereinbefore stated, bring this case squarely within the rule of the foregoing cases and entitle the defendant to be released from its consent to the formal award, if plaintiff is affected by the fraudulent conduct of Palmer. The plaintiff insists that the fraudulent concealment, of which defendant complains, was the unauthorized, w’iful act of Palmer alone, and in violation of the instructions given him by plaintiff in the matter of exhibiting its books, and that for this reason the plaintiff should not be held responsible for such concealment. In support of this contention, cases are cited to the effect that where the acts of an agent are wilful and beyond the scope or limit of his employment, the principal is not bound thereby; but this case does not fall within the principle thus invoked. Palmer was the agent and representative of plaintiff. He was plaintiff’s chief book-keeper, in charge of its office and books, and was the person to whom defendant was referred by plaintiff when a demand was made for an inspection of the books. The plaintiff could only act in the matter through the agency of some living person, and Palmer was the person selected for that purpose, and in all that he did or omitted to
It is lastly claimed by plaintiff that the books and inventories concealed were only the estimates of Palmer, and were incorrect, and had never been approved by plaintiff, and that for this reason the defendant was not injured by their non-production. The court below found “that the estimates of the cost of construction of the said machines, as entered in said books, did not include an allowance for interest upon investment in the plant of plaintiff, nor for salaries paid to its superintendent and other principal employees, nor for power, wastage, or tools; but did include an allowance of ten per cent over and above estimated cost, intended to cover the wear and tear upon the plant of plaintiff.” It is not material to the question under consideration to determine whether any or all of the matters referred to in this finding would properly enter into the cost of the construction of the property destroyed, although it is plain that some of them would not. It is sufficient to say that the estimate of such cost was made by the person selected by the plaintiff for that purpose, and the court finds that such estimate was made pursuant to the directions of its directors, and was entered in the books of plaintiff, and kept and retained by it in its business office. This being so, it was the duty of
3. The judgment or decree of December 19,-1890, denying to defendant the relief demanded in what is termed its cross-complaint, was not a final judgment, and the attempted separate appeal therefrom must be dismissed. There can be but one final judgment in an action, and that is one which in effect ends the suit in the court in which it, is - entered, and finally determines the rights of the parties in relation to the matter in controversy. (Elliott’s Appellate Procedure, secs. 90, 91; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Locke, 107 Ind. 9.)
This the decree of December 19, 1890, did not attempt to do, but only purported to dispose of one of the defenses' to the action. Such a judgment is, to say the least, irregular, but as it is merged in the final judgment, the reversal of the latter will also operate to vacate the former.
The appeal from the so-called decree of December 19, 1890, Is dismissed, and the appeal from the final judgment in the action entered on January 7, 1891, will be reversed.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
McFarland, J., Garoxjtte, J.; and Harrison, concurred.
Rehearing denied.