115 Wash. 103 | Wash. | 1921
This action is based upon an insurance policy, and recovery is sought for property damaged
The policy was issued on the 27th day of June, 1918. The fire occurred approximately a week later. Shortly after the fire, the respondent, the insured, presented to the agent of the company that had issued the policy an itemized statement of the articles destroyed, with the cash value of each item specified. The agent referred the respondent to the adjuster. The statement was then presented to the adjuster. It was not such a statement, however, as was required by the terms of the policy. The policy was the standard form contemplated by the statute and contained a provision that, if a fire occurs, the assured shall, within sixty days thereafter, present proof of loss in the manner and form therein specified. There is another provision in the policy that its provisions cannot be waived unless such waiver be written upon or attached to the policy.
The proof of loss not having been such as to meet the requirements of the policy, the controlling question in the case is whether the insured was misled by the agent or agents of the company into the belief that the proof which he had furnished was all that was necessary. Upon this question, the evidence is conflicting. The respondent testified that, when the proof was presented, he was told that it was all that was necessary and that there was nothing more that he would be required to do. The evidence on the part of the appellant was that no such assurance had been given.
The rule in this state, supported by numerous decisions, is that the making of proofs of loss as required
It is suggested in the brief of the appellant that the company would not be bound by the acts of the local agent or the adjuster. The question, as a rule, arises between the adjuster and the insured. The adjuster, being the agent, the company should not be permitted to benefit by his wrong-doing committed while performing the functions of the agency.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Tolman, Mitchell, and Mount, JJ., concur.