Niagara Fire Insurance v. Scammon

100 Ill. 644, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 156
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 100 Ill. 644 (Niagara Fire Insurance v. Scammon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Niagara Fire Insurance v. Scammon, 100 Ill. 644, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 156 (Ill. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action brought by J. Young Scammon, against the Niagara Fire Insurance Company, upon a policy of insurance issued by that company on January. 21, 1874, for $5000, upon the premises known as No. 16 Congress street, city of Chicago, which were destroyed by fire July 14, 1874. The cause was submitted to the court for trial without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $6700, which was affirmed on appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District, and the defendant appealed to this court.

The only point made in favor of a reversal of the judgment is, that notice of the loss and the proofs of loss were not served upon the- company in compliance with the terms and conditions of the policy as to time. The clause of the policy in that respect is as follows: “In case of loss the insured shall give immediate notice thereof, and shall render to the company a particular account, in writing, of said loss, under oath,” etc. The fire occurred July 14, 1874. Written notice of the loss, dated July 29, 1874, was served on James B. Floyd, who was the local agent of the company in Chicago, August 5, 1874, and proofs of loss signed by the plaintiff, under date of August 5, 1874,» sworn to before a notary public under the same date, with the certificate of an architect under the date of August 25, 1874, were served upon David Beveridge, general agent for the company, in Chicago, on April 23, 1875.

In May on Insurance, sec. 462, it is said with reference to notice of loss: “If the notice be required to be forthwith, or as soon as possible, or immediately, it will meet the requirements if given with due diligence, under the circumstances of the case, and without unnecessary and unreasonable delay, of which the jury are ordinarily the judges.” This court has recognized such to be the rule. Peoria Marine and Fire Ins. Co. v. Lewis, 18 Ill. 560; Knickerbocker Ins. Co. v. Gould, 80 id. 388.

In the latter case, where the provision of the policy was, “in case of loss the assured shall give immediate notice thereof in writing,” the fire occurred October 9, 1871, and the proofs of loss were delivered to the company November 13 thereafter; it was held, that under the circumstances of that case,—the confusion and derangement of business following the great fire in Chicago of October 8 and 9, 1871,—the provision of the policy for giving immediate notice of the loss had been complied with. So that the words “immediate notice,” are not to betaken literally, but they mean that notice is to be given with due diligence under the circumstances of the case, and without unnecessary and unreasonable delay.

The testimony of the assured in the present case was, that this, and other policies he held were, at the time of the loss, in the custody of the United States Mortgage Company; that he had no description of them; that he called on Mr. San-some, agent of that company, and asked him for them, and he gave them to him; that “just as soon as I could be about I gave notice to the insurance companies.” It might be inferred from this that the assured had been prevented by sickness from giving earlier notice. We do not feel prepared to say that the court manifestly erred in finding that there had been a compliance with this requirement of the policy for giving immediate notice of the loss,—that there had been due diligence in giving the notice under the circumstances of the case.

As to the proofs of loss, the counsel for the respective parties .differ in their construction of the policy as to the time when the proofs of loss are to be furnished,—appellee’s counsel contending that by the terms of the policy they are not required to be made within any specified or described time, and appellant’s counsel that the proofs should be furnished to the company with the immediate notice of loss,— that is, should be furnished immediately. In Knickerbocker Ins. Co. v. Gould, supra, the provision in the policy in regard to notice and proofs of loss was in the same words as in the policy in this case, viz: “In case of loss the assured shall give immediate notice thereof in writing, and shall render to the company a particular account of said loss in writing, under oath, ” etc. In that case this court was inclined to the view of appellant’s counsel, that under such provision notice of loss and proofs of loss should be furnished to the company at the same time; but as helping to sustain that construction, resort was had to another provision of that policy which is not found in the present one.

Such insurance contracts being signed by the insurer only, and prepared by persons acting in the exclusive interest of the insurance company, the language is that of the insurer, and hence the rule is, that the provisions and conditions of the policy are construed most favorably for the insured. May on Insurance, sec. 175; Aurora Fire Ins. Co. v. Eddy, 49 Ill. 106.

It is not said in this policy, as frequently is in such policies, that the proofs of loss shall be made “as soon after as possible, ” nor that they shall be made at the same time with the notice, but only “in case of loss the insured shall give immediate notice hereof, and shall render to the company a particular account in writing of said loss, under oath, ” etc.; and in the same paragraph the consequences of failing to comply with this stipulation as to proofs is expressly declared, to-wit: “Until such proofs and certificates are produced, and examination and appraisal permitted, the loss shall not be deemed proved or payable. ”

The time for the giving notice of the loss is named, that it shall be immediate, but the time for furnishing the proofs of loss is not named. To hold, then, under the form of language here used, that the proofs are to be furnished at the same time with the notice, (that is, immediately,) and with only the delay which that term admits of, would not be according to the way the language would ordinarily be taken, and the words here used, with such a construction put upon them, would be calculated to mislead, and operate as a snare to the insured. If insurance companies would have promptness in the making of proofs of loss, they should require it in plain words, so that the assured may clearly see that diligence is required of him; and it would seem unfair to allow such a requirement of diligence to be hidden under the general language that proofs of loss shall be rendered, without mentioning any time within which they shall be rendered. Where, as in the present ease, there is nothing in any other part of the policy to favor such a construction, we can not hold that by the clause in question the proofs of loss were to be furnished at the same time with the giving of the notice,— that is, immediately. We think this a proper interpretation to apply, under the authorities, in the case of the use by an insurance company of such uncertain language. Such was the construction put upon the condition of a policy similarly worded, in Kilips v. Putnam Fire Ins. Co. 28 Wis. 472.

We find, then, that there was here a time specified when the notice of loss was to be given,—that immediate notice was to be given,—but that there was no time specified within which proofs of loss were to be furnished, and there should be a difference of construction as to the time of acting in the two cases—more speedy in the former than in the latter case. The requirement of immediate notice would indicate that notice was to be speedily given.

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Bluebook (online)
100 Ill. 644, 1881 Ill. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niagara-fire-insurance-v-scammon-ill-1881.