Moore v. Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance

45 Pa. Super. 541, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 229
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 Pa. Super. 541 (Moore v. Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance, 45 Pa. Super. 541, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83 (Pa. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Fanning, P. J.,

filed the following opinion:

This case came on for trial December, 1909. At the conclusion of the testimony, it being conceded that legal questions only were involved, an agreement was made that a juror be withdrawn, the case continued and submitted to the court for disposition.

FACTS FOUND

1. L. L. Moore was the owner of a farm in Rome township purchased of John E. Gillett. He effected an insurance, policy No. 2927, March 14, 1908, of $800 upon his barn there situate and $500 upon grain, stock and farming tools in the Farmers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Tuscarora, a domestic corporation.

2. Said barn and contents were totally destroyed by fire November 9, 1908, of which due and timely proof was given to the defendant company.

3. November 23, 1908, the value of the barn was fixed by the appraisers at $1,200, and the personalty at $653.35, or a total of $1,853.35, and two-thirds of said amount, which was the extent of the liability of the company under the policy, was fixed and agreed upon at $1,235.57, to which by the terms of the policy and adjustment made pursuant thereto plaintiff was entitled.

[543]*5434. At the time proofs of loss were prepared in accord^anee with the adjustment, L. L. Moore made oath to a statement that he had no other insurance on the property burned.

5. Three days prior to that adjustment, to wit, November 20,1910, plaintiff made proof of loss to the Liverpool & London Globe Insurance Company, which said company had written a policy on the same property about thirty days after the issuance of the policy in the Farmers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Company Of Tuscarora, the same bearing date April 13, 1908. These proofs of loss also contained a statement under oath that L. L. Moore had no other insurance upon the property burned. The loss was also adjusted by the said Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company and an agreement made to pay, less 1 per cent discount, $1,154.18.

6. Neither company had knowledge at the time of the adjustment of the loss that plaintiff carried insurance in the other, but an affidavit was made as stated to each company that there was no other insurance on the property.

7. The history of the case so far as relates to the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company is in brief as follows, that L. L. Moore when he purchased his farm upon which said barn was located, took out a policy of insurance in said company payable to JohnE. Gillett in case of fire as his interest might appear to secure balance of purchase money. This policy expired March 12, 1908. Two days later plaintiff took out his policy in the defendant company, although application had been made therefor about the first of the same month. A contract of insurance could not be made by the defendant company according to the by-laws on property insured in another company.

8. April 13, as stated, a policy was issued to him on the same property by the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company. This was doubtless procured for the benefit of the judgment creditor, Mr. Gillett, as the defendant company has no provision authorizing payment [544]*544to a creditor of the assured. The said company without knowledge of any other insurance adjusted the loss and paid to John E. Gillett, the judgment creditor, the sum of $1,154.16. Upon receipt of information that the plaintiff was insured or had a policy in the defendant company, the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company 'demanded repayment of said sum which was refused by said Gillett and the matter was finally adjusted by said Moore paying or refunding to said company the sum of $520.18. The amount retained being $634.

9. The total value of plaintiff’s property destroyed was estimated at $1,853.35. The defendant company adjusted the loss at two-thirds of its value or $1,235.57, and the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company at $1,154.18 or a total of $2,389.75 or $536.45 more than the property was worth in case of payment of both companies.

10. A clause in the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company policy reads as follows: "The .entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon or added thereto, shall be void if the insured now has or shall hereafter make or procure any other contract of insurance whether valid or not, on property covered in whole or in part by this policy.”

11. Article 8 of the by-laws of the Farmers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Tuscarora provides, “All policies in this company shall be null and void whenever buildings or their contents are insured in other companies.” The defendant company is composed wholly of farmers and declines to assume the risk of property upon which there is other insurance.

DISCUSSION

That the contract of insurance with the Farmers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Company was valid when written and up to the time of taking out a policy in the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company is not questioned.

If the policy in the last-named company was valid, the [545]*545defendant is relieved from all liability because it was provided and made one of the conditions of the contract with the former, and subject to which it was accepted that insurance in any other companies would render the policy null and void. Whether the plaintiff had insurance in-the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company becomes a question important for consideration.

Cases have frequently arisen where the insured procured policies in two companies, both containing provisions to the effect that other insurance must be noted on the policy or the same would be void.

Although not in entire harmony, the rule deducible from the authorities where conditions as in this case have not been complied with, appears to be that the first policy is valid and the second void.

In order to relieve the first company from liability the second contract must be one that is valid and enforcible.

Flanders on Fire Insurance, 57, sec. 9, states the rule as follows: “It is well settled that, if the second policy against which the contract stipulates is itself a void one, or one that cannot be enforced, it does not void the first, notwithstanding the clause of forfeiture.”

The following is from 2 Wood on Fire Insurance (2d ed.), sec. 372, “A condition that if other insurance shall be obtained without the consent of the company, the policies shall be void, only related to other valid insurance, and the policy is not voided by the procurement of other policies, that, for any cause, are invalid, but the entire invalidity of such other insurance must be established. The other policy or policies must at the time of the loss have been inoperative, so that no action could be maintained to enforce them. It is not necessary that they should have been absolutely void. It is sufficient if they were voidable. 'There is an intrinsic absurdity,’ says Bell, J., 'in holding that to be an insurance by which another is bound to make good another’s loss, only in case he pleases to do it. ’ ”

That the principle above stated is recognized as law' [546]*546in Pennsylvania appears from the case of Stacey v. Franklin Fire Insurance Co., 2 W. & S. 506, decided in 1841, where it was said by Rogers, J.

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45 Pa. Super. 541, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-farmers-mutual-fire-insurance-pasuperct-1911.