Connecticut Fire Insurance v. Smith

10 Colo. App. 121
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1897
DocketNo. 1233
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Colo. App. 121 (Connecticut Fire Insurance v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Fire Insurance v. Smith, 10 Colo. App. 121 (Colo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Bissell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This not uncommon suit on a fire insurance policy presents some very novel and unusual features. The policy was issued to E. H. Smith, and covered property which belonged-to his wife, Mary H. The insurance was taken out when the property was in the Smith hotel, and it was afterward [122]*122burned, in the Arlington hotel. Whatever may be the opinion of the court respecting many of the questions presented, this suggests what we regard as fatal to the recovery. All matters whether of fact or of law will be omitted save as they bear on the two propositions which will be decided. On the 28th day of December, 1894, the Connecticut Fire Insurance Company through its agents, Atkinson and Reeves in Montrose, issued a policy for $500 to E. II. Smith on sundry household goods which were located in a building on certain designated premises in that town. The building was described as one occupied as a hotel by Smith, and known as Smith’s hotel. It contained many of the covenants and conditions which are found in most fire policies. It covered only the interest of the assured, prohibited other insurance save as consented to in the policy, forbade the removal and transfer of the property, declared void all changes hi the terms and conditions of it without the consent of the company in writing indorsed thereon, and contained the usual covenant that there should be no waiver of any condition unless it should be thus indorsed. This summary of the conditions is ample for our purpose since there is no unusual language found in the policy which requires special construction.

The parties do not disagree as to the property insured, as to its ownership, nor as to its transfer from the Smith hotel to the Arlington. The suit was brought in the name of Mrs. Smith who was the owner, and of necessity sundry matters were alleged in order to show the liability of the company for the destruction of property which belonged to her on a policy which had been issued to her husband. Generally speaking, the complaint alleged that Mrs. Smith was the owner at the time the policy was under-written, but that the contract was made out in the name of her husband through the mistake of the agents, and without any fault on her part, and with knowledge on the part of the agents that she was the owner. She likewise charged that afterwards, and in March, 1895, before the fire, she demanded of the defendant [123]*123company a correction of the mistake, that the agents agreed to correct it and to have it transferred to the plaintiff. She claimed to have relied on this promise and did nothing further before the fire happened and the loss occurred. The only trouble with this theory is that the proof does not sustain the allegations. It appeared on the trial, and to this extent there was no disagreement between the witnesses that for at least one, and probably two years prior to the time the present policy was issued, like policies for a similar sum and on the same goods, located in the same place and running to the same person had been issued, and the one in suit was but a renewal of the others. We therefore have an antecedent existing insurance issued by the Connecticut company on the same property to the same person. No complaint whatever was made by Smith respecting it, or by Mrs. Smith, but the contracts were accepted by the insured with no request to the agents to change the policy in any-respect either as to party or as to terms. It may likewise be said to be very clearly established by the evidence that the agents had no knowledge respecting the ownership either at the time this policy was issued, or for a year or two theretofore, and probably none on the 29th of March, at the time the plaintiff alleged the agents agreed to make the change. Manifestly, this proof did not even tend to show that the agents had made any mistake, or that if there was a mistake, it was one for which the company was in any wise responsible. At the trial there was some testimony given by Mr. Smith to the point that when the property was about to be removed from the Smith hotel to the Arlington, Atkinson, and one, Upton, who represented some other companies, were at the Arlington with reference to a change in some policies theretofore written by Upton, and also with reference to this policy which as will be seen hereafter was to be altered so as to cover the property in the Arlington in place of the other hotel. Smith attempted to give some testimony tending to show that there was some statement respecting the ownership of the property at that date, and that the agent Atkinson was informed then that Mrs. [124]*124Smith owned the property and the alteration desired would extend not only to the location, but would cover the matter of title. This however was not clearly established by Smith’s testimony, and it was completely overthrown by the testimony which Upton and Atkinson gave. Upton testified there was nothing said about the ownership of the property, and that whatever could be taken to refer to it, could in any event, be only an inference from a discussion respecting the change in the policies which ran to Mrs. Smith and a permission for $2,000, concurrent insurance in place of $1,500, which had theretofore been the limit and the transfer of the Connecti-' cut policy to the Arlington hotel. It might possibly be a matter of inference that when they were talking about the transfer of the Connecticut policy to cover the property in the Arlington hotel, there would be no relevancy to this discussion as to the increase of the concurrent insurance permitted on the policies which had been issued to Mrs. Smith, unless the Connecticut policy was likewise to run to her. This is the only basis on which the contention can be supported. This is too remote however to support a judgment against a company for the loss, when both Upton and Atkinson directly testified that nothing was said about the ownership of the property at the time, and what they say about it is totally undisputed. We therefore conclude there was no evidence tending to show that there was any agreement to insure Mrs. Smith’s property either in the Smith hotel or the Arlington, and no legitimate evidence which established, and scarcely any which even tended to the point that the policy had been by mistake so written as to insure Mr. Smith’s property and not that which belonged to his wife, Mary H. It is true Smith said that originally the policy ran to his wife on the property in the Smith hotel, but there was nothing whatever to show that Smith did not likewise have property there, and nothing which even tended to bring home to the agents knowledge that the particular property covered by the policy belonged to the wife rather than to the husband. We therefore conclude there was no evi[125]*125dence which even tended to establish a mistake in the contract. What may be shown on a subsequent trial it is impossible for us to imagine, but as the case now stands the verdict is entirely unsupported on this proposition.

We now come to the statement of the facts which bear on another legal proposition which has been strongly pressed on our attention. We shall only discuss one branch of it and shall entirely ignore the point that we are urged to decide that under the peculiar phraseology of this contract there could be no waiver of a condition unless the waiver was indorsed in writing on the policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Colo. App. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-fire-insurance-v-smith-coloctapp-1897.