34 S.W.2d 938 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1931
Affirming.
In its final analysis the important issue involved in this case is the right of an indemnity company to revoke the waiver of a forfeiture of the, indemnity because of a failure of the insured to conform to a condition contained in the contract. An abridged statement of the facts will disclose how the question arose.
Dr. E.H. Miller, of Vine Grove, Ky., owned an automobile which was maintained for the use of his family. The United States Fidelity Guaranty Company issued to him a liability insurance contract with omnibus coverage "to any person legally operating the automobile." The contract contained a condition requiring "immediate written notice of any accident with the fullest information obtainable at the time." During the life of the *45 contract, and while driving the automobile, Mrs. Miller met with an accident which resulted in serious injury to a child named Julia Poteet. No written notice of the accident was given to the guaranty company. Almost a year after the accident occurred, the Poteet child instituted an action against Mrs. Miller to recover damages for the personal injuries sustained in the accident. The summons in that case was served November 2, 1927, and delivered immediately to the agents of the guaranty company. The latter accepted the summons, and without reservation took charge of the defense of the action. It continued in exclusive control of the defense from early in November, 1927, until February 18, 1928, when its attorney addressed a letter to Mrs. Miller advising her that it disclaimed liability under the contract, and would no longer be responsible for the defense of the action. It was explained in the letter that the action was taken because of the failure to give notice of the accident as required by the condition contained in the contract of indemnity.
Mrs. Miller then employed competent counsel, and conducted the defense of the case at her own expense. A trial resulted in a judgment against Mrs. Miller in favor of the Poteet child for $1,000 and costs, amounting to $35. The present action was then instituted by Mrs. Miller upon the indemnity contract to compel the guaranty company to pay the judgment, together with a reasonable sum to compensate her for counsel fees incurred in the Poteet case. The circuit court directed the jury to return a verdict for Mrs. Miller for the amount of the judgment in the Poteet case and for such further sum as the jury might find from the evidence would represent the reasonable value of the services of her attorneys in defending the action for damages instituted by Julia Poteet. The jury returned a verdict accordingly, and the guaranty company has prosecuted an appeal, insisting that the failure to give notice of the accident as required by the policy entitled it to a peremptory instruction, and that the pleadings were inadequate to present the issue of waiver by the company of the condition of the policy.
A condition in an indemnity contract requiring the insured to give immediate written notice of any serious accident is reasonable and valid, and unreasonable failure to observe it constitutes a good ground for the forfeiture of the indemnity. Jefferson Realty Co. v. *46
Employers' Liability Assur. Corp.,
Forfeitures are not favored by the law, and the courts manifest a readiness to accept as sufficient to accomplish the purpose any circumstance that indicates an election or intent to waive a forfeiture. Knickerbocker Ins. Co. v. Norton,
Waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a known right, or such conduct as warrants an inference of such surrender, and it is not essential to its application that prejudice results to the party in whose favor the waiver operates. Sheldon v. Horton,
It is argued, however, that the doctrine of waiver is but another name for estoppel and, since Mrs. Miller was not prejudiced by the short delay occasioned by the action of the insurance company, the latter was free to change its position and return to her the defense of the case. Some courts have employed expressions indicating such a conception of the two doctrines, and have used the words as synonymous or as convertible terms. Globe Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Wolff,
Although the doctrines are sometimes carelessly confused, the distinction between them is clear, and the rule is firmly established that to constitute a waiver of a forfeiture it is not necessary that the facts should present the essential elements of an estoppel.
It is equally settled that a waiver, once made, is irrevocable, even in the absence of any consideration there, for, or of any change of position by the party in whose *48
favor the waiver operates. In Central Life Insurance Company v. Roberts, 165 Ky. at page 303, 176 S.W. 1139, 1142, an opinion of the Court of Appeals of New York was quoted to the effect that "waiver seems to be a 'technical doctrine, introduced and applied by courts for the purpose of defeating forfeitures.' " and, when made, it cannot be revoked. Kiernan v. Dutchess County Mutual Ins. Co.,
The waiver of a ground of forfeiture by treating the contract thereafter as a continuing obligation partakes of the principle of election and, like an election, cannot be retracted. Hemmings v. Home Mutual Ins. Ass'n,
In Knickerbocker Ins. Co. v. Norton,
No estoppel to dispute coverage by the policy was involved in defending a suit based upon several grounds, some of which admittedly were covered by the contract. But, in order to avoid a waiver even in such cases, the court held that notice must be given the assured to the end that its interests might be fully represented, especially in so far as they might be incompatible with the interests of the indemnity company.
It follows that the conduct of the insurance carrier in accepting the summons and in taking control of the litigation, with knowledge of the existence of the very ground of forfeiture it later attempted to assert and without reservation, constituted an irrevocable waiver of the right to forfeit the indemnity contract upon that ground.
The petition averred that notice of the accident had been given and there was a failure to prove that allegation. But it was further averred that summons served in the action instituted by Julia Potett was delivered to the guaranty company, and that it undertook the defense of that action, but afterwards notified Mrs. Miller that it disclaimed liability under that policy for failure of the the insured to give immediate written notice of the accident. The condition of the policy and the failure of plaintiff to comply with it were set up by the answer. The reply did not repeat the allegations of the petition respecting the waiver. It is now urged that the issue of waiver of the forfeiture should have been presented by the reply, and that the pleadings filed were insufficient to raise it. The matter was entirely proper to be pleaded in a reply in avoidance of the defense asserted (Civil Code of Practice, sec. 98, subsec. 2); but the ultimate *50
facts upon which the waiver was predicated were stated in the petition, and no harm came to the appellant from permitting the issue to be tried without further pleading. Rounds Jesse v. Cloverport F. M. Co.,
Matters of avoidance are not available on a mere traverse (Ill. Canning Co. v. Livingston,
It would be a vain and useless thing to reverse a correct judgment rendered upon a full development of the facts because the basis of it was alleged in the petition instead of being inserted in a reply. No surprise was manifested, and no suggestion made that any further facts affecting the matter could be produced. The facts concerning the conduct of the insurer which constituted a waiver of its right to invoke a forfeiture of the policy were alleged and fully established, and, in such situation, no prejudicial error could be predicated upon the mere fact that the waiver was prematurely pleaded, or appeared in the petition rather than in the reply. Lockhart v. Kentland Coal Coke Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.