54 S.E. 271 | N.C. | 1906
The plaintiff sued to recover the amount of an insurance policy for $500 issued by defendant to him on 21 October, 1903, for one year on a stock of goods. The policy contained among others, the following provisions material to be stated: "This policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void if the subject of insurance be personal property and be or become encumbered by a chattel mortgage. If this policy shall become void or cease, the premium having actually been paid, the unearned portion shall be returned on surrender of this policy, or the last renewal, this company retaining the customary short rate." It was written according to the standard form prescribed by the statute. The premium of $11 was paid. On 11 May, 1904, the plaintiff executed a chattel mortgage to the McClelland Paint Company for $867.16 on the said stock (236) which was duly registered. The defendant did not consent to the giving of the mortgage and had no notice thereof until after the stock of goods was destroyed by fire, which occurred in June, 1904, nor until after the nonwaiver agreement hereinafter mentioned was executed, unless certain correspondence between the plaintiff and H. M. McAden amounted to such consent or notice. The plaintiff wrote to McAden on 18 December, 1903, as follows: "I hope you will not think it presumptuous of me in writing this letter and requesting a loan or an indorsement of my note for $300 for twelve months for the following purpose and conditions: I have recently gone in business on my own account and have bought goods on my own credit, standing to the amount of $1,600, and on which I have paid something over $700, and should you favor me to the extent of this loan, I will apply that to my creditors, which will put me in the position of having goods here in my store $1,000 or more, paid for, that I am willing to give you a chattel mortgage on, to guarantee the payment of this $300. I will, of course, keep my stock up to its present standing, and monthly reducing my indebtedness. I am also carrying my goods insured for $1,000; one-half of insurance is placed with your company. I have not been dealing with banks long enough to have any financial standing with them. I *202
now have a mortgage of $600 on my house and lot, placed there about the first of this month; $300 of it I have used in reducing my indebtedness; other amount remaining in Mechanics Building and Loan Association until I start and complete two rooms on my house. I am willing to thoroughly satisfy your mind, as to my business condition, by showing you through my store, stock, books, invoices, and receipts." On 21 December, 1903, McAden, as president, replied as follows: "I acknowledge receipt of your letter of 18th and note contents with interest. I regret to say that just at this time I am not in a position to (237) accommodate you in the manner you desire. Regretting not being able to assist you at this time, and wishing you success in your undertaking, I remain," etc. The plaintiff executed a nonwaiver agreement before the adjustment of the loss was undertaken by the defendant's agent. He proposed to prove by himself, first, that he did not know the nature of the contents of this instrument, and, second, that the agent told him that signing the paper would prevent any difficulty in settling the loss. The evidence, on objection of defendant, was excluded. The following issue was submitted: "Is the defendant indebted to the plaintiff upon this policy?" The court charged the jury that if they believed the evidence they should answer the issue "No." Plaintiff excepted. The jury answered the issue "No." Judgment was entered upon the verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.
The validity of the provision in a policy of insurance against the creating of encumbrances without the consent of the insurer can hardly be contested at this late day. It has now become the settled doctrine of the courts that the facts in regard to title, ownership, encumbrance, and possession of the insured property are all important to be known by the insurer, as the character of the hazard is often affected by these circumstances. "When a person's interests in a property are qualified or complicated, the motive to care for and protect it is weakened; and, following the principle that in a large majority of cases governs conduct, we may expect to find indifference and often neglect where interested vigilance is required to secure safety. When a person insures property where the title is in dispute, or if it be heavily encumbered, there will sometimes exist a dangerous temptation to withhold protection to such a degree as to invite accident, and this may frequently be done without a conscious intent of wrongdoing on the (238) part of the insured. This fact is always recognized by insurance *203
companies; and as the success of their undertakings is not based on the exceptional, but the general, principles of business morality, their purpose is to fix relations under the contract that will create no motive on the part of the insured for the commission of crime. It will be found, therefore, that policies generally provide that when the property becomes encumbered, or any change takes place in title or possession, notice of the fact must be given to the company, and its consent had, or a forfeiture will result." Ostrander on Fire Insurance (2 Ed.), sec. 84; Alston v. Ins. Co.,
But it is quite sufficient, as we have just seen, to defeat recovery upon the policy for a loss if it provides against encumbrances (240) without the company's consent and this provision is violated. "This Court has uniformly held that where it is expressly provided that the policy upon certain contingencies shall be void, effect will be given to such language." Gerringer v. Ins. Co.,
We see no evidence in this case of any waiver of this stipulation by the company or of any consent that the plaintiff might encumber the *205
property. The polite reply of the company's president and the expression of his regret to the plaintiff that he could not accommodate him, when requested to indorse his note for $300, and his further wishing him "success in his undertaking," cannot, surely, be given that effect. If it bore on its face the evidence of any consent at all — and we do not think it does — it would be restricted to a loan and mortgage on the property of $300, whereas the plaintiff encumbered it to the amount of $867.16. This left him only an actual interest, the value of his (241) equity of redemption, of about $750, whereas the total insurance amounted to $1,000. But the expression in McAden's letters, "wishing you success in your undertaking," would seem to refer, not to his success in securing the loan from some other person, for, as far as appears, he did not contemplate such a course, but to the success of the business in which the plaintiff says, in his letter, he had recently embarked "on his own account." The plaintiff had not even intimated any intention of borrowing money from any other person, and certainly McAden was not required to anticipate that he would do so, and especially that he would place a mortgage upon his property to secure the loan, without first complying with the plain requirement of his policy, which was then in his possession. It has been held that notice of an intention on the part of the policyholder to do something contrary to the terms of the contract will not estop the company, although not objected to by it at the time, because the company has the right to infer that the holder of the policy intends at the proper time to obtain the assent of the company to the act before it is done. Ostrander, supra, sec. 350;Ins. Co. v. Sorby,
It is argued though, that the company should have returned or at least tendered the unearned portion of the premium before it could insist upon a forfeiture. The policy expressly provides that the unearned portion of the premium shall be returned on surrender of the policy. This is the contract of the parties, and we are not permitted to change it. There has been no surrender of the policy, but the complaint is drawn and the trial proceeded, upon plaintiff's part, upon the theory that the policy was valid and would not, therefore, be surrendered. The condition precedent to the return of the premium has not been performed, but a refusal to comply with it is to be clearly implied. It has been held in a number of cases that in a case of a breach of condition which invalidates the policy, the company is not bound at its peril, upon notice of such breach, to declare the policy forfeited or to do or say anything to make the forfeiture effectual, and a waiver will not be inferred from mere silence or inaction on its part. It may wait until claim is made under the policy, and then rely on the forfeiture in denial thereof or in defense of a suit brought to enforce payment of it. 6 A. E. (2 Ed.), 939; Dowd v. Ins.Co., 1 N.Y. Supp., 31; Ins. Co. v. Brecheisen,
Nor do we think the last position taken by the plaintiff's counsel is tenable. It made no difference whether the plaintiff knew what was in the nonwaiver agreement or not. He signed it, and the law presumes he did know what was in it, and he will not be heard, in the absence of any proof of fraud or mistake, to say that he did not. Cuthbertson v. Ins.Co.,
No error.
Cited: Modlin v. Ins. Co.,
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