Home Ins. Co. v. Jones

165 So. 211, 231 Ala. 484, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 454
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 12, 1935
Docket8 Div. 610.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 165 So. 211 (Home Ins. Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Ins. Co. v. Jones, 165 So. 211, 231 Ala. 484, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 454 (Ala. 1935).

Opinion

FOSTER, Justice.

This is an action on a fire insurance policy. Defendant pleaded in abatement that plaintiff had not complied with the policy requirements as to proofs of loss. To that plea plaintiff replied. In No. 2, to which demurrer was overruled, he alleged in substance that a few days after the fire a certain named agent of defendant had “authority to solicit and receive applications for fire insurance, to issue and countersign policies of fire insurance and to collect premiums thereon, all for the ’defendant, who countersigned the policy sued on, and while acting for defendant and within the line and scope of his authority informed plaintiff it was not necessary for plaintiff to make proof of loss under the policy, but that all it was necessary for plaintiff to do was to prepare and furnish a list of the furniture destroyed by said fire together with the value of each item of said furniture, and plaintiff a few days thereafter, and within les’s than sixty days after the date of said fire did furnish” the list.

That is the same sort of pleading in its legal aspects as that considered and held sufficient in Am. Ins. Co. v. Millican, 228 Ala. 357, 153 So. 454. Both showed that the agent had more authority than that stated to exist in Penn. Fire Ins. Co. v. Malone, 217 Ala. 168, 115 So. 156, 56 A.L.R. 1075, and in Prine v. Am. Central Ins. Co., 171 Ala. 343, 54 So. 547, and other cases relied on by appellant. Whereas the ruling of the court in overruling demurrer to replication No. 2 is fully supported by the Millican Case, supra, and by Yorkshire Ins. Co. v. Gazis, 219 Ala. 96, 121 So. 84, and case's there cited. London & Lancashire Ins. Co. v. McWilliams, 215 Ala. 481, 110 So. 909.

Assignment No. 2 is not argued. Assignment No. 3 relates to replication No. 5 to the plea in abatement. It is predicated on the fact that the adjuster denied liability on the sole ground that the fire was purposely begun to enable plaintiff to collect the insurance.

Appellant argues that a denial of liability is not a waiver of proof when based on the *488 ground that the loss is not covered by the policy because it is a contention which, if true, shows that the loss is not within the coverage, invoking an application of a principle discussed in Fidelity-Phenix Fire Ins. Co. v. Murphy, 226 Ala. 226, 146 So. 387, when the loss is occasioned by the willful or fraudulent act of the insured.

In the first place, the replication does not show that plaintiff participated in the act of causing the loss. But the effect of the replication is that defendant denied liability on the ground that the policy did not cover the loss, in that it did not cover a willful or fraudulent fire caused by insured or for his benefit. The denial is in substance that as to this loss there was no policy contract which imposed on plaintiff any duty whatever, since it created no liability on defendant regardless of what plaintiff might do in respect to furnishing proofs of loss. The contrary is not held in W. O. W. v. Maynor, 206 Ala. 176, 89 So. 750. There the complaint alleged the death of insured. Plea 2 alleged that he was not dead, which was of course included in the general issue. It was held that a replication alleging a denial of liability made by defendant because of the vocation of insured was not good matter waiving the requirement that insured be in fact dead. But by all the authorities, a denial of the existence of a valid contract covering the loss is a waiver of the requirement that proofs be furnished. The cases are cited in Rhode Island Ins. Co. v. Holley, 226 Ala. 320, 146 So. 817; 26 Corpus Juris 406, et seq.; Continental Ins. Co. v. Parkes, 142 Ala. 650, 652(13), 39 So. 204.

Assignment No. 17.

We think the evidence copied in brief of appellant is sufficient in connection with the other circumstances in the case for the jury to find that the adjuster denied liability because the building was set on fire to enable plaintiff to collect the insurance.

In assignments 13 and 16 charges were refused defendant on the trial of the plea in abatement to the effect that if the list of goods furnished defendant’s adjuster as having been burned was not a true and correct list, the verdict must be for defendant on that plea, because some of the replications to the plea in abatement state that he did furnish defendant a list of the furniture destroyed.

But we do not think that the list is bound to be correct at the risk of a loss of plaintiff’s rights on that account unless it was fraudulently or willfully falsified, which should be specially pleaded. Often policies provide that fraud or false swearing by insured relating to the loss or in the proofs will forfeit any right. 26 Corpus Juris 382. But that is made so by the contract, and to have that effect should be specially pleaded, so that issue may be talc-, en on it. Therefore, if plaintiff did furnish a list of what he then thought or claimed was burned, its accuracy is not essential to sustain the allegation of the replications.

Assignments 14, 15, and 18.

These assignments all relate to the general charge' on the plea in abatement. On the issues made in replications 2, 4, and 5, if there was enough proof for at least one of them to be submitted to the jury, the general charge for defendant was properly refused.

We have shown that some of them* whether all or not are immaterial, were properly given to the decision of the jury.

Assignment No. 21 is obviously without merit, and we think it needs no discussion.

Assignment No. 24.

When, as here, the waiver, if any, was made before the time required by the policy to furnish proofs had expired, and when there was ample time to do so, it is immaterial whether defendant’s agent had knowledge of the failure up to that time to file them or not. It is not then in the nature of condoning a past omission, but of excusing the performance of an act regardless of what then had been done. The insured was not then in default, but by the conduct of defendant’s agent plaintiff was excused from performing the requirement, which may or may not have been attempted.

The allegations of replication No. 2 are by way of the recital of a conversation with defendant’s agent, and to the extent that it alleged that plaintiff informed defendant’s agent that he had not made the proof is an immaterial inducement, or incidental recital leading up to the main averment, that he informed plaintiff that it would not be necessary to make the proof. Such matters of inducement, since they are not of the essence of the action nor of its description, need not be proven exactly as alleged. 49 Corpus Juris 139, § 143, p. 144, § 154; Birmingham News Co. v. Little, 226 Ala. 642, 148 So. 398.

Assignments 45 and 46.

The court is here in his general charge stating principles of law in general *489 terms'not seriously claimed to be erroneous, but that they are not within the issues. The jury are not thereby instructed in respect to their finding in connection with those statements. Whereas the court does in other clauses charge them the true nature of the law and issues made by the several replications. We think no reversible error here intervened.

Assignment No. 19.

This negatives the right of plaintiff to recover on replication No.

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Bluebook (online)
165 So. 211, 231 Ala. 484, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-ins-co-v-jones-ala-1935.