Inventasch v. Superior Fire Insurance Co.

138 A. 39, 48 R.I. 321, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 22, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 138 A. 39 (Inventasch v. Superior Fire Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inventasch v. Superior Fire Insurance Co., 138 A. 39, 48 R.I. 321, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 85 (R.I. 1927).

Opinion

*322 Barrows, J.

This case is heard on exceptions of plaintiff to a decision for defendant after trial by the Superior Court sitting without a jury.

The parties have discussed briefly whether the written decision impliedly found disputed facts in favor of defendant. We shall not determine this because, the legal questions upon which the decision rested are controlling, even if tjhe facts asserted by plaintiff be accepted.

*323 *322 The action was on a standard form of fire insurance policy covering personal property. G. L. 1923, C. 258. It contained the condition: “This entire policy unless otherwise provided by agreement endorsed hereon or added' hereto shall be void ... if the subject of the insurance be personal property, and be or become encumbered by a chattel mortgage;” “no agent . . . shall have power to waive any condition of this policy except such . . . as may be subject to agreement endorsed hereon” and *323 further that no privileges or permissions affecting the insurance shall be claimed unless written upon or attached to the policy. In legal contemplation knowledge of such terms is possessed by the insured, Parsons v. Lane, 97 Minn. 98, Northern Ass. Co. v. Grand View Bldg. Assn., 183 U. S. 308, at 361, even though he be illiterate. Urbaniak v. Firemen’s Ins. Co., 227 Mass. 132. See also 26 C. J. 291.

After issuance of the policy in February, 1925, it always remained in plaintiff’s possession and no request ever was made for permission to mortgage the property. A chattel mortgage was placed July 22, 1925, without the knowledge of the company. July 30 the company, learning of said mortgage, notified its Boston agent who wrote to Fuller, its agent in Rhode Island, that information had been received that a chattel mortgage had been filed and if so ordering an immediate cancellation of the policy. Fuller on August 3 wrote plaintiff as follows: “We have received a letter from our insurance company requesting cancellation — because of the fact that they have information that a chattel mortgage has been placed — On this account they ask to be relieved of this risk and wish their policy cancelled . . .

“ ... Insurance companies do not like to insure stock covered by chattel mortgages but if you will write us the circumstances for which the money is to be used and when and how it is to be paid up we will advise the company and they may allow the insurance to remain in force.
“Kindly let us hear from you at once and in case this company cancels the policy after giving them this information, we may be able to place it in another company.”

To this communication plaintiff, an unlettered man, made no reply. Some time in August, in response to a ’phone call from Fuller, plaintiff says he got his brother to write a letter giving Fuller the information “why the mortgage was taken out, how payable and how much was paid already.” The contents of this letter were proved by the recollection of plaintiff’s brother. Fuller denied the receipt of any such letter and plaintiff admitted he had kept no copy of it. The *324 brother of plaintiff also testified that two weeks after writing the alleged letter he saw Fuller and asked him how he made out on plaintiff’s policy, to which Fuller replied, “You needn’t worry about that'. Everything is well taken care of.” This conversation Fuller denied. Plaintiff did nothing to have the policy validated and prior to loss did not again communicate with Fuller.

November 9, 1925, a fire occurred and later defendant offered to return the full premium, claiming misrepresentation in procuring the policy as well as its avoidance by reason of the chattel mortgage. Fuller’s commission shows that his authority was to effect insurance and renew policies, consent to assignments and transfers and collect premiums. He was more than a mere local agent or solicitor of insurance. He was the general agent through whose hands defendant’s Rhode Island business passed.

Plaintiff’s contentions are (1) that the policy was voidable not vciid; (2) that the company waived the right to insist that the giving of the chattel mortgage avoided the policy, and (3) that, irrespective of the alleged waiver, the company was estopped to assert invalidity of the policy.

It is true that this court has often referred to insurance policies as “void” when conditions have been broken. But in no case was the court construing the legal meaning to be given to the word “void.” The great weight of authority is that the word “void” is to be read as voidable when the condition is for the advantage of one party only. Williston on Contracts, § 746; 32 C. J. 1317; 14 R. C. L. 1155; that the condition against encumbrances and other conditions in the same group are for the benefit of the insurer with the consequent right to elect after knowledge of the breach of condition whether to treat the policy as of no effect or .as still in force. Insurance Co. v. Norton, 96 U. S. 234; Northern Ins. Co. v. Grand View Bldg. Assn., 183 U. S. supra. Williston on Contracts, § 758, says: “Even after breach of condition the contract still exists but it exists as a conditional contract.” . . . “the situation *325 is not the same as if no contract existed.” A holding that the policy has not become an absolute nullity is advantageous to the insured who by his voluntary act without knowledge of the insurer has placed himself outside the terms of the policy. This construction enables the insured to seek reinstatement of the policy without new consideration. Viele v. Germania Ins. Co., 26 Iowa, 9. The terms of the policy make plain how the insured may procure a reinstatement, viz., by securing the company’s consent in writing to the chattel mortgage. He must act in accordance with these terms, particularly when the policy remains in his possession. Tompkins v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 49 N. Y. Supp. 184 (chattel mortgage).

We therefore conclude that the policy by the placing of the chattel mortgage was not void beyond the possibility of reinstatement without new consideration. The placing of the chattel mortgage rendered the policy voidable at the option of the insurer.

Did the insurer waive plaintiff’s breach of condition? No contention is made that it did so in writing. The policy’s tferms concerning the method of waiving the rights of the insurer are not ambiguous. Such waiver must be written and attached to the policy. We recognize the existence of but can not agree with authorities holding that an oral waiver of the conditions of an insurance policy against encumbrances may be made by a general agent in spite of the explicit terms of the policy to the contrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 A. 39, 48 R.I. 321, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inventasch-v-superior-fire-insurance-co-ri-1927.