Copeland v. Dwelling-house Insurance

43 N.W. 991, 77 Mich. 554, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 774
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 43 N.W. 991 (Copeland v. Dwelling-house Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copeland v. Dwelling-house Insurance, 43 N.W. 991, 77 Mich. 554, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 774 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Long, J.

This action is brought to recover upon a policy of insurance, issued by defendant company to plaintiffs, on April 15, 1886, for $1,000; $300 of the insurance being upon the barn and sheds, $100 upon the hog-pen, granary, and hen-house, $400 on hay, grain, farming implements, wagons, carriages, etc., and the balance of $300 on live-stock. A premium of $9.50 was paid for the policy to William Murch, defendant's agent at North Branch, Lapeer county.

On the morning of November 17, 1886, the barns, sheds, and a large quantity of hay, farming implements, etc., were consumed by fire. Proofs of loss were thereafter made in due form, and payment of the loss demanded. The defendant company refused payment, and at the time of joining issue in the suit brought on the policy gave notice with its plea:

“1. That the policy mentioned in said declaration was issued by said defendant on the faith of an application therefor, partly in writing, and partly in print, signed £Mary Copeland, per Wm. Copeland,' in which application it was represented and warranted that the property insured, and for the burning of a portion of which property recovery is sought in this cause, was unincumbered, while in truth and fact the barn mentioned in said declaration and in said policy was incumbered by a certain mortgage, which said mortgage is as follows, to wit: One certain mortgage given by Mary A. Copeland to one John M. Wattles, bearing date September 15, 1885, for the sum of $300, which mortgage remained unpaid at the time of the fire mentioned in said declaration.
“2. That said plaintiff Mary A. Copeland, after the issuing of said policy, and before the fire mentioned in said declaration, did, without the consent of said defendant, further incumber said barn by a mortgage, which last aforesaid mortgage is described as follows, to wit: One certain mortgage given by Mary A. Copeland to one John M. Wattles, bearing date September 15, 1886, for the sum of $100, which last aforesaid mortgage remained unpaid at the time of the fire mentioned in said declaration.
[556]*5563. That the burning of the property for the recovery of which this action is brought was procured by the said plaintiff William Copeland.”

The only question presented by counsel for the defendant. company arises under the second paragraph of the notice attached to the plea. There is no controversy but that Mary A. Copeland, one of the plaintiffs, and the one in whom the title to the real estate was vested upon which the barn and other property destroyed were situated, on September 15, 1886, and after the issue of the policy by defendant’s agent, placed a mortgage upon the realty for the sum of $100, running to John M. Wattles, mortgagee, and that said mortgage remained unpaid at the time of the fire. It is this act of which the defendant complains, and which it is claimed violates the policy.

On the trial of the cause plaintiffs claimed that at the time of the making of the application (which was in writing) for the policy, and prior to the time the policy issued, they informed Mr. Murch, the defendant’s agent, that they expected to put the mortgage of $100 upon the property in a short time and that he assented thereto. This Mr. Murch denies. ' The question was submitted to the jury by the court in his general charge. The court directed, if they found that Murch made such an agreement with plaintiff, the company would be bound by it; and the fact that plaintiffs, subsequent to the time of the issuing- of the policy, placed the mortgage upon the property without further notice to the company would not invalidate the policy.

It appears that Mr. Murch, the agent of the company, had authority to make and deliver policies of insurance without referring the application to the company prior to the making and delivery of the policy. Before the policy was made he inspected the property, and concedes [557]*557that the farm upon which it was situated was worth $2,000. The plaintiffs, it appears, were insured in the Lapeer County Mutual Insurance Company, and the policy therein was in force at the time the application was made in the defendant company. Murch, however, solicited the plaintiffs to change their insurance, and first took the application of the husband, who signed Mary A. Copeland’s name thereto, “per William Copeland.” The title to the farm was in Mrs. Copeland’s name, but the title to the personal property, or some portion of it, was in Mr. Copeland. Murch was fully informed of these matters, and advised the issuing of the policy to them both. A few days after the first application was made by William Copeland, Murch, the agent, called at the house, and there filled out a new application. Mrs. Copeland says:

“I took the application, and looked it over, until it came to the passage where it asked if there was any liens or incumbrances against the property, and the answer was ‘No.’ I pushed the paper aside. My husband came to me; he says, ‘What is wrong'with the paper?’ I pointed to that passage. He turned to Mr. Murch and says: ‘ Mr. Murch, explain it to my wife as you did to me/ and he read the passage to him. ‘ Oh/ he says, ‘that means that there isn’t incumbrance enough to make the risk hazardous.’ He says, ‘It don’t matter if there is an incumbrance, as long as there is not enough to make the risk hazardous.’ I says, ‘I object to signing under those circumstances;’ and he said he would fix that all right, and I supposed he did. I told him then that John M. Wattles held a mortgage of $300, and my husband spoke up and said that we might want to get some further money, — one or two hundred dollars, — and he said it would be all right, or that he would fix it all right. * * * Before this policy was delivered to me I fully advised him in relation to the mortgage that was to be put upon it, and what I intended to do with it, and we relied upon and accepted that policy, supposing that he would make that indorsement upon the application that we signed. I accepted it upon those terms.”

[558]*558This testimony is fully denied by Mr. Murch, and he claims that there was no such arrangement or understanding; that nothing was said of any incumbrance being on the property, or that any was to be put on. Mrs. Copeland, however, is fully supported by her husband and by Mr. Daniel Draper, who was present when Murch, the agent, was looking the property over, and who says that William Copeland then advised him of the incumbrance, and their desire to put on another mortgage, when Murch said it would be all right.

It is a somewhat curious fact that on the trial the last application was not produced, nor in any manner accounted for. The application signed by William Copeland for his wife was the one produced, and which Murch himself testifies Mary A. Copeland never signed. It was the second application which Mary A. Copeland read over, and which she and her husband say Murch agreed to “fix all right,” and upon which Mrs. Copeland says Murch agreed to make the indorsement. Whether it was fixed all right, or whether Murch made such an indorsement upon it, noting the incumbrance then existing, and an agreement for the placing of an additional mortgage of from $100 to $300 upon it, is not shown by the application introduced. Apparently this last application was the one upon which the policy issued, and was the only one defendant was entitled to have in evidence, even under its own testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 N.W. 991, 77 Mich. 554, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copeland-v-dwelling-house-insurance-mich-1889.