Leigh v. Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance

37 Mo. App. 542, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 380
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 37 Mo. App. 542 (Leigh v. Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leigh v. Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance, 37 Mo. App. 542, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 380 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action on a policy of fire insurance. The plaintiffs had a verdict and judgment, and the defendant prosecutes this appeal. The error assigned is that the court erred in refusing to take the case from the jury, at the close of the plaintiffs’ evidence. No evidence was offered for the defendant. The plaintiffs seek to avoid the force of this assignment of error, by raising the argument in support of the result reached in the trial court that the plaintiffs’ right of recovery stood admitted on the pleadings.

I. We shall first get this question of pleading out of the way. The petition avers that the plaintiffs “have faithfully kept and fulfilled all the conditions and requirements in the said contract of insurance on their part.” The answer consists of a denial of this paragraph of the petition in the words in which it is averred, and of nothing more. The entire answer is as follows:

“Now comes the defendant by its attorney, and, for answer to plaintiffs’ petition, denies that plaintiffs have faithfully kept and fulfilled all the conditions and requirements of the contract of insurance referred to in said petition. ’ ’ The argument put forth in favor of the view of the pi aintiffs is that the word ‘ ‘faithfully’ ’ as used m the petition is a mere intensive word, having no legal meaning or effect; but that a denial of the. paragraph of the petition containing this intensive word, in the very language in which the paragraph stands in the petition, [545]*545amounts to a denial of the intensive word only; that is, that the denial in this case is not a denial of the allegation that the plaintiffs have kept and fulfilled the conditions and requirements of the contract, but only a-denial that they have faithfully kept and fulfilled the conditions and requirements of the contact. We agree with much of the able argument that has been put forth in behalf of this view; and if the question had been distinctly raised on demurrer and overruled, we might feel inclined to sustain the' respondents’ position. ■ We quite agree with the position that, as a rule of- pleading, where several things are averred by the plaintiff conjunctively^ they cannot under our code be denied conjunctively, but that they must be denied disjunctively; for a conjunctive denial would not, according to the fair interpretation of language be what our statute'requires in the case of a special denial, “a specific denial of each material allegation of the petition.” R. S., sec. 3521. But as the word “ faithfully” can hardly be said to be an allegation, but is a mere expletive word, we think that it can hardly be regarded as a fair, interpretation of this answer to hold that it is merely a denial of this expletive word. It is true even under the code that a pleading must be interpreted in doubtful cases most strongly against the pleader. But this rule does not require an unreasonable or unfair interpretation. The paramount rule of interpretation applies, we think, to ' pleadings as much as to statutes, to wills and to contracts, that they are to be interpreted so as to give effect to ■' the intent of the author, where that intent fairly appears in the language used. We think that it is fairly to be" inferred in this case, from the language used, that the defendant intended to traverse this particular allegation of the petition in the very terms in which it had beén made, and to rest its defense solely upon the issue that5 the plaintiffs had not complied with the conditions and requirements of the policy on their part.

[546]*546While it is true, as a general rule, that any reason may be urged in an appellate court, which is good in itself, in support of the judgment which is appealed from, yet we think, that a judgment ought not to be affirmed upon a technical and doubtful question of pleading which does not appear to have been distinctly raised in the trial court, when, if it had been so raised, it could easily have been obviated by an amendment — in this case by striking out a single word.

II. This brings us to the appellant’s assignment of error, and it is obviously well taken. The policy of insurance upon which the action is brought contains a clause, usual in such policies, requiring the person sustaining loss or damage by fire “forthwith to give notice of said loss in writing to the company,” etc., and, “as soon thereafter as possible, render a particular account of such loss, signed and sworn to by them, stating,” etc. No proofs of loss were ever rendered by the plaintiffs in this case. The well-known rule is that a condition in a policy of fire insurance requiring proofs of loss is a condition precedent to the right to maintain an action upon the policy, and if the condition is not complied with such an action must fail, unless the condition has been waived by the underwriter. Noonan v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 21 Mo. 81; Sims v. State Ins. Co., 47 Mo. 54.

As no such proofs were furnished in this case, the only remaining question is whether there was any evidence tending to show a waiver of them; for if there was no such evidence then the court erred in submitting the case to the jury. The entire evidence in the case consisted of the policy, supplemented by the following testimony :—

James A. Leigh, one of the plaintiffs, testified as follows : “A few days after the fire, I think eight or ten, an adjuster came to see me. He did not say much of anything, but said that he had seen the ground where the fire was. Mr. Bough ton was the agent of the company at the time of the fire, but not when the policy was [547]*547issued. He told me that he had notified the company of the fire. The house burned was, I suppose, one hundred and fifty or two hundred feet from where Mr. Boughton lived. I applied to the nearest justice of the peace, J. R. Wilson, for a certificate of the loss, but he would not give it. Do not know that he gave any reason; •only he said he had heard that the house was set on fire, •or something to that effect. He would not tell me who had told him so, or how he heard it. I then asked him ■to make an affidavit that the house was fraudulently burned, but he refused to do so. Some time last spring ■the state agent of defendant offered to pay five hundred .and fifty dollars to settle the matter.”

H. N. Phillips testified as follows: “Some two or three months ago the state agent of defendant came to see me at Malden, in regard to their loss, and said to me that he would pay five hundred and fifty dollars to settle the loss. I referred him to Colonel Kitchen, of Dexter.”

George N. Boughton testified as follows : “I was ..agent of defendant at the time this house was burned". I .notified the company by mail the same night. I think it was eight or ten days after the fire before the adjuster ■came.”

This was all the evidence in the case.

We do not suppose that the mere fact of the refusal -of the person who happened to be the. nearest justice of the peace, to give the certificate required by the terms of ■the policy, would prevent the plaintiffs from recovering, .if they had otherwise complied with the terms of the •policy in regard to furnishing proofs of loss; for . although, as held in Noonan v. Hartford Fire Insurance Co., 21 Mo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Mo. App. 542, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leigh-v-springfield-fire-marine-insurance-moctapp-1889.