Home Insurance v. Field

42 Ill. App. 392, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 278
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 42 Ill. App. 392 (Home Insurance v. Field) 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
Home Insurance v. Field, 42 Ill. App. 392, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 278 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Boggs, J.

This is an action of assumpsit, brought by appellee, to recover upon an insurance policy issued by the appellant company. The policy bears date October 31, 1889, and purports to insure a frame store house in the sum of 8400, and certain articles therein in the sum of §135, as the property of the appellee. This policy came into the possession of the appellee under the following circumstances:

John Scott, an agent of the appellant company to solicit applications for insurance upon farm property, came to Bates & Morrow, appellant’s agents at Boodhouse, Illinois, who had power to write policies for the appellant company, and requested that this policy be written. It was at his request written, and held by Bates & Morrow for some days, for payment of the premium.

Afterward, at Scott’s request, the policy was handed to him to be by him left with one W. H. Pinkerton, a merchant in Boodhouse. It was so left with Pinkerton, who was authorized to deliver it to the apjiellee if the premium was paid during the month of November. No written or other application for insurance is shown to have been made by the appellee, and the' record is entirely silent as to any arrangement or agreement between Scott and her as to the policy or the premium thereon. All that is shown is, that the policy was written at the request of Scott and left with Pinkerton, to be delivered to the appellee or her husband if the premium was paid during the month of November. On the night of the 24th of November, at which time the policy was yet in Pinkerton’s possession, the building and its contents were consumed by tire. In the forenoon of the next day, the husband of appellee came to Pinkerton’s store and without making known the destruction of the property, though the saíne was well known to him, paid the premium and received the policy. Pinkerton at once paid the money to Bates & Morrow, while hoth he and they were ignorant of the fact that the store house had burned.

One of the provisions of the policy is, that the appellant] (shall not be liable for any loss thereunder until the premium is actually paid. This appellee contends may be waived, and is waived, if the assured is granted an extension of time in which to make payment.

If the agents of appellant had delivered the policy to the appellee upon her promise that she would pay the premium in the future, it may be conceded that a waiver of such a provision would be declared; or, if it appeared that upon her promise of payment of the premium in the future, the agents had prepared the policy and retained it for payment—or delivered it to another person to be delivered, if the payment be made within the agreed time—then there might be force in a claim that such stipulation of the policy should be deemed to have been waived and the insurance company held liable if loss occurred within the time fixed for payment, though before actual payment of the premium. In either of these supposed cases there is a promise of the assured to pay, and of the company to insure, and an extension of the time of payment given, which would constitute a contract binding upon both parties thereto and would operate to waive a provision in the policy exempting the insurance company from a loss occurring before the premium fell due under the contract.

The provision of the policy in question is one that may lawfully be made, and when made must be enforced unless a waiver is proven. The burden of proving such waiver is upon the party who asserts it. There being nothing in this record from which it can be known that the appellee ever applied for this insurance, or that she ever, either by an expressed or implied contract, became in any way boundt o pay the premium, or that she intended to accept the policy, an essential element of a contract is wholly wanting. The policy was prepared and left with Pinkerton, who was instructed to give it to her if she did pay the premium, but there is an entire absence of proof obligating the appellee to pay at any time. To constitute a waiver of the provision under consideration, so that a court would be justified in ignoring it as a part of the contract of insurance, the existence of an indebtedness from the appellee to the appellant company, for the premium, must appear in the proofs.

It can not, it seems to us, be said in this case that an extension of time of payment of an indebtedness of the appellee was granted, because no indebtedness appears. An option of taking the policy at any time during the month by paying the premium thereon, was proffered to the appellee. Such is not an extension of credit but is rather a direct refusal of credit. The option given her could not in fairness or justice be exercised after the property had been destroyed. At the time of the fire there was no obligation on the part of the appellee to pay the appellant company for indemnity, and as the obligations of contracting parties must be mutual, there was then no obligation on the part of the appellant company to make good the loss. The judgment is not, therefore, supported by the evidence and must be reversed.

As the case will again be heard, it is necessary that we should consider other alleged errors involving questions of law that must arise upon the future hearing. The second, third, fourth and fifth of appellant’s pleas set out separate alleged breaches of the conditions of the policy, i. e., that appellee was not the sole owner of the property; that she made false and fraudulent representations in her proof of loss, and that the property was vacant and unoccupied. A general demurrer was sustained to each of these pleas. The ground of such demurrer is, that the plea of the general issue was broad enough to admit all evidence that could have been admitted under any of the pleas. The appellant was allowed to produce before the jury evidence in support of each of the special pleas, so that no reversible error occurred in that respect.

It is the opinion of a majority of this court that any evidence tending to show breaches of a policy as set out in these special pleas may be given under the general issue when the action is in assumpsit, and that therefore the demurrers to the several special pleas in question were properly sustained.

The title to the storehouse premises described in -the policy was in Lewis Doyle at the time of his death. It was his homestead. The appellee was then his wife, and at the time of his death lived there with him. They had one child, a daughter, who yet lives.

Upon the death of Doyle, the appellee became vested with an estate of homestead and an interest by way of dower in the premises. It is conceded that she had no other interest, right or title in or to the property. Neither homestead nor dower has been assigned to her. About two years after the death of Doyle, appellee married her present husband, George W. Field, and then removed with him to his home upon a farm owned by him about four miles distant, where she has since and for some four years resided.

She thus became invested with an estate of homestead in the property of her present husband, and necessarily divested of a like unassigned estate in the lands of her deceased husband.

She could not have two unassigned estates of homestead existing at the same time.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ludington v. Patton
99 N.W. 614 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1904)
Manchester Fire Assurance Co. v. Benson
66 Ill. App. 615 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1896)
Home Insurance v. Field
53 Ill. App. 119 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 392, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-insurance-v-field-illappct-1891.