Miller v. Mutual Fire & Tornado Ass'n

269 N.W. 672, 219 Iowa 689
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
DocketNo. 42763.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 269 N.W. 672 (Miller v. Mutual Fire & Tornado Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Mutual Fire & Tornado Ass'n, 269 N.W. 672, 219 Iowa 689 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Donegan, J.-

In June, 1930, the Mutual Fire & Tornado Association of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, issued a policy of insurance which, among other things, insured the horses owned by Phillip Miller against damage hy fire, lightning and other causes. On July 13, 1932, while such policy of insurance was in effect, Miller notified W. S. Barnard, the agent who had solicited the said policy of insurance, that one of the horses thus insured had been injured by lightning on July 10, 1932, and, on the same day Barnard wrote the insurance company a letter telling it of the loss claimed by Miller. No acknowledgment of the receipt of this letter was ever made by the insurance company to either Miller or Barnard, and on August 3, 1932, upon the request of Miller, Barnard again wrote the' insurance company in regard to the matter. No answer or other communication was received from the insurance company in response to this second letter. Thereafter, some time during the month of October, an adjuster of the insurance company went to Miller’s farm and talked to him about his claim. According to Miller’s testimony, the agent of the insurance company told him that he had no claim. Miller thereupon became indignant, and the agent finally said:

*691 “Now, old man, don’t get excited. I am going down here. I have got some more claims like this. I am going down here to see then I will be back and if this mare ain’t right, I will pay for it.”

No further communications passed between Miller and the insurance company until March 11, 1933, when, at the request of Miller, Barnard again wrote the insurance company asking it what it intended to do about Miller’s loss. The insurance company replied to this letter on March 15, 1933, and stated that its record in regard to the case had been closed since October 31, 1932, when its adjuster reported to it that he had informed Mr. Miller that the provisions of the policy contract would have to he followed and that no claim could be allowed. Following the receipt of this letter, Miller instituted the present action, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $150. From such judgment and rulings, the defendant appeals.

Many errors are alleged by appellant as grounds for reversal. We will first consider appellant’s contention that the court erred in submitting the case to the jury, because there was no evidence whatever that the appellee had complied with the requirements of the policy in regard to furnishing proofs of loss, and because there was no evidence to support the appellee’s claim that such proofs of loss had been waived.

The policy in question contained the following provision:

“XIV. If loss occur the insured shall as soon as practicable after he ascertains the fact of such loss, give notice in writing thereof to the association, protect the property from further damage, forthwith separate the damaged and undamaged personal property, and put it in the best possible order, and shall, within' sixty days from the date of loss, except loss or damage to live stock, which notice must be given in five (5) days, furnish this association with notice thereof in writing accompanied by affidavit stating the facts as to how the loss occurred and.the extent thereof, so far as such facts are within his knowledge.”

The above provisions of the policy in regard to the time for giving notice and furnishing affidavit of loss conform to the provisions of sections 9045 and 9046, Codes of 1927 and 1931, and it is not claimed that any affidavit, of loss was ever furnished by'appellee. ’

*692 The letters sent to the insurance company by Barnard on July 13 and August 3, 1932, are as follows:

“Osceola, Iowa, July 13, 32.

“J. Lindley Coon, Sec’y

“Dear Sir: Mr. Phillip Miller, insured under policy No. 80681, came to my office this morning and said he had a mare damaged by lightning on the night of July 10, 1932. I asked him if there was any marks on the animal and he said none that he could see. I told him I would report it to the company and wait and see the outcome as the mare would probably be better or die in a few days and meantime if she lived he had better have a veterinary examine her and see what he could find.”

“Farmers of Cedar Rapids .

“Department of First American Fire Insurance Company

“Osceola, Iowa, August 3, 1932.

“J. Lindley Coon, Sec’y.,

“Cedar Rapids, Iowa

“Policy No. 80681 Phillip Miller

“Dear Sir: The assured came to my office today and reported a damage to a horse by lightning. He thinks the horse was hurt on July 9th, 1932, and told me it has never been right since that. Dr. H. D. Rosengrant was with him and he had examined the horse and thinks its condition is a result of lightning.

“Awaiting your advice, I am

“Yours truly,

“[Signed] W. S. Barnard.”

Nothing further occurred between the parties until October, when the agent of appellant visited appellee’s farm and the conversation to which we have heretofore referred took place.

I. Appellant contends that, even if the letter of July 13th be construed as the notice which the policy and the statute provide must he given within five days, still the appellee cannot recover because he never furnished the affidavit of loss which both the policy and the statute require must be furnished the insurer within 60 days from the date of the loss. Appellee meets this contention with the claim that such affidavit was waived.

The court, in its instruction No. 7, told the jury, in substance, that plaintiff claimed that he had mailed a letter within five days of the damage, and that on August 3d he mailed a second letter *693 advising the defendant of his damage “with offers to furnish additional and further proof”; that defendant kept said letters and offer without reply until late in October, when its adjuster visited plaintiff and agreed to pay the damage; that, if it found that the plaintiff did mail the letters as alleged, and did, within sixty days, inform the defendant as to all the facts so far as known as to the cause of the damage to the horse, then the defendant might waive the filing of further and additional proofs of loss; and that, if the defendant “did by its acts and conduct waive the filing of the proof of loss than was furnished by the plaintiff”, the defense of failure to furnish proof of loss within sixty days would fail.

Appellant complains of this instruction because it wrongfully-told the jury that the letter of August 3d contained “offers to furnish additional and further proof”, whereas no such offers were contained in said letter. An examination of said letter seems to us to support this contention of appellant. Appellant further contends that said instruction was erroneous because it submitted to the jury the question of waiver growing out of the letters of the plaintiff to defendant and defendant’s silence and failure to answer the same.

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Bluebook (online)
269 N.W. 672, 219 Iowa 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-mutual-fire-tornado-assn-iowa-1935.