77 N.J.L. 749 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court. The plaintiff is a corporation engaged in the trucking business and its president is Thomas Orr. The suit is on a policy of indemnity, called a theft or burglary policy, whereby the defendant agreed to indemnify Thomas Orr during a certain period subject to certain “special and general agreements, terms and conditions” in the policy contained, “which are to be construed as co-ordinate and precedent to any recovery” under the policy. The policy by endorsements was made to cover losses of the Thomas Orr Trucking and Forwarding Company, the plaintiff, and applies in each particular to direct loss by burglary, theft or larceny. There are certain special agreements annexed to the policy, among them one headed “The company shall not be liable for loss or damage.” There is also a schedule consisting of twelve paragraphs. Then follows a number of “general agreements” headed by the phrase, “Company not liable.” The policy is made “subject to the agreements contained on the back hereof and the statements and agreements contained in the schedule in the attachment (or rider) hereto attached, which statements the assured makes and warrants to be true, and which agreements, statements and schedule form a part of this contract as fully as if recited at length over the signatures hereto affixed.”
Two losses were alleged, viz.—first, goods to the value of $5.23.90, shipped by Sternberg, consigned to Blogg & Lit-tauer on January 21st, 1907, stolen in transit, and the second, $542.70 of merchandise shipped by the Castle Island Linen Company, 25 White street, stolen while on the sidewalk after receipt for them had been given by plaintiff before loading. Judgment was rendered for the full amount of these bills in favor of the plaintiff.
The first error assigned relates to the defence that the plaintiff failed to perform certain conditions precedent, namely, that upon discovery of the loss the plaintiff failed to gi ve ‘‘immediate notice thereof by letter to the home office of the company in New York City, and also by telegram to the company at the city where this policy is countersigned, briefly stating the particulars and probable amount of loss (telegraphic message at the company’s expense), and also to give immediate notice thereof to the company’s local authorized agent and the nearest public police authorities having jurisdiction.” There was no proof of immediate notice of loss by letter; no proof as to sending a telegram and no proof that immediate notice was given to the company’s local authorized agent, except that such notice in one of the cases perhaps might be inferred from the fact that a representative of the company appeared shortly after the loss.
The ground of the motion to nonsuit as to this subject was thus stated: “There is no evidence from which the jury can find that the assured upon the discovery of the loss gave notice by letter to the home office, and no evidence from which the jury can find that upon the discovery of the loss the assured gave immediate notice to the company’s local authorized agent; there is no proof and no evidence from which the jury could rightly conclude that immediate notice was
In a case of theft where it is for the interest of the company to apprehend and punish the criminal, a requirement Cor immediate notice is a reasonable regulation, and whether the failure to give it technically amounts to the non-performance of the conditions precedent, or whether we call it a forfeiture, is immaterial. In either case, it is a reasonable provision and valid and of the essence of the contract. See 4 Cooley Ins. B. 3570. It was, moreover, under the pleadings incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove the performance of these conditions. It cannot be doubted that where there is an allegation by the defendant of non-performance of the special conditions precedent, the general performance of which has been asserted by the plaintiff under our statute, supra, the burden of proof remains with the plaintiff to show performance as at common law. The object of this statute is to eliminate prolix pleading and evidence. Dewees v. Insurance Company, 5 Vroom 244; Vail v. Penna. Fire Insurance Co., 38 Id. 422, and cases cited. But the change in the form of pleading hi nowise avoids the rule that “whoever desires any court to give judgment as to any legal right or liability dependent on the existence or non-existence of facts which he asserts or denies to exist must prove that those facts do or do not exist.” Steph. Dig. Ev. 460. Of a somewhat similar statutory provision in Vermont it was said: “But does it follow that because the defendant must specially put in issue such matters, the burden of proof is therefore shifted? We do not construe the act as changing at all the substantive rights of the parties, but only as providing for a simpler mode of declaring. * * * If the
Objection is made that no proofs of loss were filed by the plaintiff as required by the policy. The conditions require that proofs of loss shall be signed by the assured, and if a corporation, by its officer in his official capacity. The proofs of loss were signed by Orr as an individual. It is further asserted that they were not made up fully with reference to the requirements of the blanks furnished by the company for that purpose. It appears, however, that they were received by the company without objection, except in the case of one of the claims, and as to that they were returned to tire plaintiff with the objection that they had not been sworn to. This defect was remedied by the oath of Mr. Orr, and then the proofs were taken back and retained by the company without objection.
Waiver of conditions, the performance of which is to take place after a loss has occurred, differ from waiver of conditions which arc contained in the policy having to do with the contract itself before loss. The former may be waived by parol. Carson v. Jersey City Insurance Co., 14 Vroom 300; affirmed, 15 Id. 310. In the present case the return of the proofs to the plaintiff for correction and their subsequent retention unobjected to is sufficient to constitute such waiver (Merchants' Insurance Co. v. Gibbs, 27 Id. 679), especially when coupled with a denial of liability on other grounds. Roumage v. Merchants’ Fire Insurance Co., 1 Gr. 110; State Insurance Co. v. Maackens, 9 Vroom 564. The defendant must therefore be deemed to have waived any informalities and defects in the preliminary proofs of loss. Furthermore, the declaration expressly avers that the plaintiff rendered to the defendant proofs of loss after the happening of the losses and of each of them, in accord-
There is a further objection made that the nonsuit should have prevailed because of the statement in the policy that the drivers and men in charge of the conveyances were bonded by the Fidelity Company, when in fact, in this case, they were not. This appears to be a warranty of a fact known to the plaintiff (Finn v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 41 Vroom 355) and its falsity will void the policy. On this ground there should have been a nonsuit.
The ne.vt point made is that according to the terms of the policy the company is not liable for the loss of goods while on the sidewalk of a thoroughfare unless' they were under the supervision of the assured or his authorized employe, and that the case being destitute of testimony of such guarding while the goods were on the sidewalk, and the loss occurring while they were on the sidewalk, the defendant is not liable.
The evidence is not clear as to whether one of the cases lost was on the sidewalk and left unguarded or not, but as to the other goods lost the question does not arise. The motion for a nonsuit and for the direction of a verdict having been made upon the following ground, “that, there is not sufficient evidence from which the jury can conclude that the loss happened in any manner covered by the policy,” dearly did not bring to the attention of the court the special point in the mind of counsel that one of the cases was left unguarded on the sidewalk, and, furthermore, as the motion could not apply to both the losses, but only to one, it was too broad, and its,refusal was right. Garretson v. Appleton, 29 Vroom 386.
There was no failure to prove that the conveyances did not bear the proper license numbers. There was evidence that the trucks bore the license numbers.
The policy provided that “the company if it so elects, shall have the entire charge of the prosecution of offenders, * * * and the assured shall, at the request of the company, swear out a warrant for the arrest of the offenders.”
It was also provided that “the assured * * * shall fill up and forward the burglary notice form furnished by the company. * * * The said forms will be delivered to the assured upon demand.”
The swearing out a warrant was not a condition precedent, for it became obligatory upon the plaintiff only after request. The plea of the defendant avers such request and refusal and concludes to the country. This precluded a reply which was the plaintiff’s right, and that reply might have denied the request, or set up new matter in confession and avoidance. To such a provision the plaintiff was not required to aver per-
But it is not shown that either of tire two objections lastly mentioned refers to both losses. A nonsuit therefore could not rest upon these grounds if the record disclosed a proper exception.
The next objection is as to the ¡iroof of the value of the goods lost.
The policy confines the company's liability to “the cash or market value of property at the time of the loss.” Mr. Orr was allowed to testify what amount he was liable to pay Sternberg for the goods and that he had already paid in part. But that was harmless because a witness, Greenspan, testified to the value of these goods, having qualified for that purpose after cross-examination, as to his knowledge of values. But there was no proof of the market value of the goods received from the Castle Island Linen Company except the bill for them which had been rendered to Mr. Orr. This was admitted as proof of their value. It was not supplemented by any other competent testimony. It was error to admit this evidence.
Because this case must be tried again it has been minutely examined in order to indicate to counsel the views of the court upon the several points mooted under this writ, this course being deemed better under the circumstances than to reverse upon a single point.
The judgment is reversed and the record remitted to the court below to the end that a venire de novo issue.