North American Fire Ins. v. Throop

2 Mich. N.P. 26
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Mich. N.P. 26 (North American Fire Ins. v. Throop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North American Fire Ins. v. Throop, 2 Mich. N.P. 26 (Mich. 1871).

Opinion

Opinion bp

Cooley, J.

Action upon insurance policy not produced on tbe trial, having been destroyed by fire. Parol evidence of its loss’and contents. Plaintiff testified that the policy insured him against loss or damage by fire to the amount of [27]*27$3,000; $500 on building, and $2,500 on lumber, felloes, poles, bows and shafts, manufactured' and in process of. manufacture, contained in said building..

After stating the value of the goods manufactured and in process of manufacture in the building at the time of the fire, he proceeded to say that he had 100,000 feet of lumber, which cost about $24 per M., and was worth $30 per M. About one-third of it was in the building, and the rest was in the yard.— The plaintiff, claimed that the lumber in the yard was covered by the policy and testfied to conversations with the agent of the company, wherein he told the latter that he wanted the whole property insured, outside of the buildidg as well as inside. This testimony was objected to as incompetent, and the Court overruled the objection.

Held, that this was an error. It is conceded that it was not competent to extend or enlarge by parol the terms of the written contract. But it was argued that it came within that class cases, of which Facey vs. Otis, 11 Mich., 213, affords an example in which parol evidence has been received to show the circumstances under which a contract has been made for the purpose of explaining its contents where ambiguous; or of another class, in which it has been held that where parties come to an agreement concerning the meaning.of equivalent words employed in their contracts, the courts will construe them aceordto the understanding arrived at. After an elaborate review of the contract and testimony the Court concluded that the contract covered only the stock of lumber in the building.

The second error relates only to the admission of evidence touching the incumbrances upon the property covered by the insurance. The defendant put in evidence an application, purporting to be signed by the plaintiff and which their witness testified was the application on which the risk in question was taken. This application contained the following questions and anáwers: Is there an incumbrance on the property ?” “ Yes.” “ If mortgaged, state the amount and to whom ?” “ Two thousand' dollars, to Topliff & Day.” Appended to this application was the following understandiug: “ And the said applicant hereby covenants and agrees to and with the said company that the foregoing is a just, [28]*28full and true exposition of all the facts and circumstances in regard to the condition, situation and value of the property to he insured, so far as the same are known to the applicant, and material to the risk, and the same is hereby made a condition of the insurance and warranty on the part of the insured.”

Plaintiff denied signing this application, but testified that he signed a different one, to which an agreement was appended, which set forth that the “ foregoing is a just, true and full exposition of all the facts, etc,, so far as the same appertain to the risk.” Pláintiff was allo-wed under objection, to testify that he had repeatedly told defendant’s agent in regard to the incumbrance, as they boarded together, and the fact of the mortgages to Hunt, and Topliff & Pay, and to W. H. Stone, together with their seveoal amounts, was well understood between them. The objection to the evidence was that it bad a tendency to vary the written contract, in which plaintiff eov* enanted that there was only one njortgage of $2,000 on the premises, and would, in fact, exempt from the covenant other mortgages.

Meld,that at the time this evidence was offered it was competent. Pefendants had put in a paper which they claimed was the application which plaintiff had signed. Plaintiff denied having signed it, hut admitted having subscribed a different one, whieh was not produced. The question what were the contents of the application actually made and what oevenants it contained was therefore a matter of dispute, and as bearing upon this the conversation between the parties concerned in putting it in writing was, or might be. of material consequence. There was therefore no error in admitting the testimony. But the Circuit Judge went further and instructed the jury that even though the application produced by the defendants was the ODe signed by the plaintiff,'yet if defendant’s agent filled out this application, and the plaintiff had previously given him full and correct information-concerning the incumbrances, then the failure to specify the. other mortgages in the application would not vitiate the policy or preclude a recovery. The Court say that the question raised by this charge has been the subject of much legal controversy, and after an elaborate discussion of the whole matter it was held that the estoppel is precisely the same where the agent of the insuree drafts the papers as it" would be in the ease of an individual insurer who was.himself personally present and acting.

[29]*29The plaintiff, while upon the stand as a witness, having denied the signature to the application produced by the defendant as the one upon which the policy issued, was cross-examined with a view to test the truthfulness of the alleged signatures. In the course of the examination counsel for the defense presented to the witness a paper folded so as to show only the name of the plaintiff in -writing, and asked him if the signature there pointed out was his. The Gourt allowed the witness to look over the'whole paper.'

Held, That this was corree^. The witness was entitled to all the forms of recognition which the circumstances and surroundihgs afforded.

In the application presented in evidence by. the defendants were the following questions and answers : Incendiarism — Have you any reason to believe your property is in- danger from- It ?” No.” In the blank fohn produced by the plaintiff, and which, was filled up and signed, the corresponding question is as follows : “ Has a building on the site of this been burned? Have you any reason to believe your property is in danger from incendiaries ? If so; how did the fire origihate, and in what office were you insured ?” Plaintiff gave evidence respecting a former supposed attempt to fire the building, and upon this evidence defendants requested the Court to charge that if the jury believe from the evidence that at the time of procuring the policy, plaintiff knew that an attempt had been recently made to burn the premises insure^-and failed to disclose that fact to defendant’s agent, who issued the policy, defendant is entitled to recover, if the jury believe from the evidence that a written application was - made by plaintiff to defendant, upon which the policy was issued, in which application plaintiff stated that he had no reason to fear that his property was in danger from incendiarism, and they find as a matter of fact that he had such reason, then.their verdict must be for defendant. These requests the Court' refused, but charged that if the jury believe from the evidence that'at the time of making the application plaintiff had ceased to' fear incendiarism, and did not think he had any reason to believe that his • property was in danger from it, then the fact that it was dnee fired will riot, vitiate the policy, and was not a breach of warranty; if the jury believe from the evidence that an attempt had been made to búrn .the building covered by the policy sued upon, shortly prior to the appli[30]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Facey v. Otis
11 Mich. 213 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1863)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Mich. N.P. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-american-fire-ins-v-throop-mich-1871.