Defendant, Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company of Missouri, issued to plaintiff, Gussie Williams of Charleston, Missouri, a policy of insurance providing so-called $25 deductible collision coverage on plaintiff's 1953 DeSoto sedan, which said policy admittedly was in effect on January 27, 1955, when the DeSoto was damaged by “upset.” In this jury-tried suit “for damages on said policy,” defendant appeals from an adverse judgment of $1,000.
Following the accident, plaintiff obtained and submitted to defendant two repair cstimates, one of $1,074 by the then DcSoto-Plymouth dealer at Cairo, Illinois, and the other of $1,195.41 by the then Chrysler-Plymouth dealer at Cape Girardeau, Missouri. Having obtained a firm bid of $526.85 from Dace Paint & Trim Co. of Sikeston, Missouri, defendant exercised its policy option to repair the insured automobile rather than to pay the loss in money; but, objecting to Dace, plaintiff refused to deliver her automobile to defendant for repairs by him. During February, 1955, plaintiff traded in her damaged DeSoto on a new automobile purchased from the then DeSoto-Plymouth dealer at Bloomfield, Missouri. This action was instituted shortly thereafter.
The policy in suit stated, among other things, that “the limit of the company’s (defendant’s) liability for loss shall not exceed the actual cash value of the automobile, or, if the loss is of a part thereof, the actual cash value of such part at time of loss nor what it would then cost to repair or replace the automobile or such part thereof with other of like kind and quality, with deduction for depreciation” and further provided that “the company may at its option pay for the loss in money or may repair or replace the automobile or such parts thereof as aforesaid.” No issue was raised as to the time at which, or as to the manner in which, defendant exercised its policy option to repair the insured automobile ; and, with customary and commendable frankness, plaintiff’s counsel here concede that affirmance of the judgment nisi depends solely upon their contention that, by tendering $562.67 ($501.85 as the amount of Dace’s firm bid less plaintiff’s $25 retention, $40 for towing and storage, $13.72 for interest to the date of tender, and $7.10 for court costs accrued to date) in its answer, defendant abandoned its option to repair and admitted “its liability under the policy in accordance with the petition,” subject only to determination by the jury of “the reasonable amount of the repair.”
When not invalidated by statute, 1 provisions such as those quoted from the policy in suit clearly are enforceable according to their terms. 2 Where, as in the *589 instant case, there has been a timely and unequivocal exercise of the insurer’s option to repair, the insured has no choice but to acquiesce, 3 and the original contract of insurance is converted into a contract to repair, 4 under which the insurer becomes obligated so to restore the damaged automobile that, when returned to the insured, its function, appearance and value are substantially the same as they were immediately prior to the accident. 5
We need not here speculate as to whether circumstances might arise which would justify an insured in refusing to honor an insurer’s timely and unequivocal exercise of its option to repair. It will suffice to say that indubitably no such circumstances are disclosed in the instant case. With respect to Dace (to whom defendant proposed to deliver the insured automobile for repair), plaintiff’s only comment, coming to us naked, bald, unadorned and unexplained, was that she “objected to him.” From the record as a whole, our impression is that plaintiff’s present complaint is that Dace intended to repair certain damaged parts rather than replace them with new parts; but, in the absence of any evidence indicating that, when plaintiff refused to honor defendant’s exercise of its option to repair, she had any knowledge as to whether Dace proposed to repair all or any of the damaged parts, obviously his intention (whatever it may have been) could have afforded no legal justification for plaintiff’s arbitrary and unyielding conduct in this case.
Furthermore, defendant’s policy obligation was “to
repair or replace
the automobile or such part thereof with other of like kind and quality, with deduction for depreciation,”
not
to
replace
every damaged part with a new part [cf. Watkins v. Motors Insurance Corp., Mo.App.,
There is a paucity, as well as a conflict [see 46 C.J.S., Insurance, § 1195d (2), loc. cit. 134], of authority as to whether an insurer is relieved of all liability by an insured’s unwarranted refusal to honor the insurer’s valid exercise of its option to repair. That, in such event, the insurer has no subsequent liability is a conclusion which might be supported by sound reasoning and cold logic [see Beals v. Home Ins. Co.,
What was the effect of defendant’s tender in the instant case, upon which plaintiff relies for affirmance of her judgment? Of course, a tender by defendant constitutes an irrebuttable admission that, regardless of the outcome of the action, defendant was indebted to plaintiff at the time of institution of suit,
to the extent of the
tender,
7
However, as we have said recently, the effect of a tender is,
generally stated, “only to stop the running of interest and give the defendant the costs.JJ
Willis v. American National Life Ins. Co., Mo.App.,
We cannot agree that defendant’s tender had any such effect. On her own evidence, plaintiff had no right to recover on her pleaded theory, i. e., that she had “duly fulfilled all of the conditions of said policy on her part” hut that defendant, “without just cause and excuse, refused and failed to pay the plaintiff according to the terms of said policy.” Compare Western Advertising Co. v. Midwest Laundries, Inc., Mo.App.,
The judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $1,000 is set aside and the cause is remanded with directions to enter judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $562.67, the amount of defendant’s tender, with all costs accruing to the date of tender to be taxed against defendant and all costs accruing thereafter to be taxed against plaintiff.
Notes
. Since defendant is a mutual insurance company doing business under Sections 379.205 to 379.310, incl., the quoted provisions of the policy in suit are not in conflict with Section 379.150 which, with respect to a loss within the operation of that statute, grants to the
insured
an option to require either repair of the damage or payment in money. See Section 379.310. ’ (All statutory references herein are to RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S.) Contrast Non-Royalty Shoe Co. v. Phoenix Assur. Co., Ltd.,
. Boecker v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., Mo.App.,
. Home Mut. Ins. Co. of Iowa v. Stewart,
. Pierce v. American Fidelity Fire Ins. Co.,
. In Barton v. Farmers Ins. Exchange, supra, 255 S.W.2d loc. cit. 457, the insurer’s obligation was stated as being “to put the automobile in as good a condition both in appearance and mechanically as it was prior to the upset”; but, as many authorities point out, it could not well be said that there had been substantial restoration of a damaged automobile if, after repairs, its reasonable market value was substantially less than immediately prior to the accident. For an excellent discussion of this subject, see Potomac Ins. Co. v. Wilkinson,
. Barton v. Farmers Ins. Exchange, supra, 255 S.W.2d loc. cit. 456(3). See also American Standard County Mut. Ins. Co. v. Barbee, supra, 262 S.W.2d loc. cit. 124(2); Stuyvosant Ins. Co. v. Driskill, Tex.Civ.App.,
. 52 Am.Jur., Tender, Sec. 37, p. 242; Scofield v. American Mut. Ins. Co., 227 Mo.App.
166,
