Helbig v. Citizens Insurance

120 Ill. App. 58, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 601
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 120 Ill. App. 58 (Helbig v. Citizens Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helbig v. Citizens Insurance, 120 Ill. App. 58, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 601 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in assumpsit by plaintiff in error against defendant in error, to recover the amount of a, policy of insurance, upon furniture, etc., in the Phoenix Hotel in Bloomington, Illinois, totally destroyed by fire June 19, 1900. There have been three trials of the case bv jury. The first resulted in a disagreement; the second, in a verdict and judgment against plaintiff in error, which was reversed by this court, upon writ of error, and the cause remanded (Helbig v. Citizens Ins. Co., 108 Ill. App. 625); and the third likewise resulted in a verdict and judgment against plaintiff in error.

To the declaration, consisting of one special count upon the policy of insurance, defendant in,error pleaded the general issue. Before the last trial, defendant in error, by leave of court, filed a special plea setting up a provision of the policy to the effect that no suit or action thereon to recover any loss or damage shall be brought unless commenced within twelve months next after the fire, and averring that the fire occurred June 19, 1900; that the suit was commenced June 18,1901; that a final judgment was rendered June 14,1902, from which no appeal was taken; that more than two years after the fire occurred plaintiff in error sued out a writ of error from the Appellate Court upon which the judgment of June 14, 1902, was reversed and the cause remanded; that the suing out of said writ of error was the commencement of a new suit, and that all subsequent proceedings are barred by the limitation clause in the policy.. To this plea, a demurrer interposed by plaintiff -in error was sustained by the court, and cross-error is assigned by defendant in error upon that ruling.

The writ of error, while a new suit, was a suit upon the record and not upon the policy, and the limitation clause in the policy cannot be held to apply. Helbig v. Citizens Ins. Co., supra. For the same reasons, the motion by defendant in error to dismiss the writ of error in this court, must be denied.

Error is assigned upon the action of the trial court in bolding an affidavit for a continuance of the cause, because of the absence of a material witness, to be sufficient, by . reason of which, plaintiff in error to avoid a continuance, admitted that the witness, if present, would testify to the matters averred in the affidavit. As the judgment in-this case must be reversed and the cause remanded for another trial, for the errors hereinafter mentioned, we deem it unnecessary to discuss and determine the question raised by that assignment of error.

Upon the trial, plaintiff in error introduced in evidence the polic) of insurance and also offered in evidence his proofs of loss thereunder. Upon the statement of counsel for defendant in error that it denied all liability under the policy and thereby waived proofs of loss, the court excluded the proofs of loss as unnecessarily encumbering the record. Plaintiff in error then rested his case, whereupon defendant in error moved the court to give to the jury a peremptory instruction, for the reason no proof had been offered or made that plaintiff in error had paid the premium for the insurance sought to be recovered. The court having announced that such peremptory instruction would be given to the jury, plaintiff in error entered his cross-motion to re-open his case for the purpose of introducing evidence of the payment of such premium. The cross-motion was allowed and plaintiff in error proceeded to introduce such evidence.

Upon the introduction of the policy of insurance and proofs of loss, plaintiff in error made out a prima facie case. Ill. Fire Ins. Co. v. Stanton, 57 Ill. 354; Forehand v. Niagara Ins. Co., 58 Ill. App. 161; Merchants Nat. Ins. Co. v. Dunbar, 88 Ill. App. 574.

The language of the policy, " The Citizens Insurance Company of Missouri, in consideration of the stipulations herein named and of fifteen dollars, does insure Oscar Helbig,’' etc., must, in connection with proof of the delivery of the policy to plaintiff in error, be held to-be an acknowledgment of the receipt of the premium, and it has been uniformly held in this State upon grounds of public policy that, in the absence of fraud, an insurance company is es-topped to prove, for the purpose of avoiding the policy, that the premium acknowledged in- the policy to have been paid, was not, in fact, paid. Ill. Central Ins. Co. v. Wolf, 37 Ill. 354; Teutonia Life Ins. Co. v. Anderson, 77 Ill. 384.

Defendant in error contended upon the trial that plaintiff in error refused to accept the policy of insurance and that it never became a consummated, binding contract, and in any event, that the policy was cancelled by mutual agreement of plaintiff in error and the agent of defendant in prror before the loss by fire. Under the facts in this case, if the plea of the general issue has been verified, it would be competent for defendant in error to show that plaintiff in error did not in fact pay the premium, not for the purpose of avoiding the policy, but in connection with other proof, as tending to show that plaintiff in error refused to accept the policy as a binding, consummated contract of insurance. Defendant in error could not consummate a valid contract of insurance with plaintiff in error by merely delivering to him or leaving at his place of business, a policy of insurance, in the face of the protest of plaintiff in error that he did not want such policy and his refusal to accept it. In the absence of proof to the contrary, the presumption is that the insured accepted the policy delivered to him as a binding contract of indemnity, but such presumption is liable to be overcome by proof to the contrary, if such proof is competent under the pleadings. In the absence, however, of a verified plea denying the execution of the policy of insurance, or a verification of the general issue, defendant in error must be held to admit the execution and delivery of the policy as going into effect at that time. Firemen’s Ins. Co. v. Barnsch, 161 Ill. 629.

Proof by defendant in error of the non-payment of the premium by plaintiff in error was, however, competent in support of the right of defendant in error to cancel the policy because of such non-payment. It was attempted to be shown by plaintiff in error, as a witness in his own behalf, that he had paid the premium to Mantel, the agent of defendant in error, at the time of the delivery of the policy, but upon the objection of the defendant in error, that the said Mantel had since died and that plaintiff in error was incompetent, under the statute, to testify as a witness to any transaction with such agent, plaintiff in error was not permitted so to testify. This was error. In support of the ruling, defendant in error cites Starr & Curtis, vol. 2, page 1836, par. 4, which is in part as follows : “ In every action, suit or proceeding, a party to the same, who has contracted with an agent of the adverse party—the agent having since died—shall not be a competent witness, as to any conversation or transaction between himself and such agent,” etc. It is insisted that the payment of the insurance premium to Mantel, the deceased agent of defendant in error, was a transaction within the meaning of that portion of the paragraph quoted, and plaintiff in error was therefore incompetent as a witness to show such payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 Ill. App. 58, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helbig-v-citizens-insurance-illappct-1905.