Palmer v. Patrons' Mutual Fire Insurance

186 N.W. 511, 217 Mich. 292, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 976
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1922
DocketDocket No. 27
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 186 N.W. 511 (Palmer v. Patrons' Mutual Fire Insurance) 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
Palmer v. Patrons' Mutual Fire Insurance, 186 N.W. 511, 217 Mich. 292, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 976 (Mich. 1922).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiff recovered a judgment on directed verdict in the Lapeer county circuit court against defendant on an insurance policy it had issued to him covering his dwelling. Defendant is a domestic [294]*294farmers’ fire insurance company incorporated under Act No. 262, Pub. Acts 1895 (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 9586 et seq.). Plaintiff’s policy was issued February 2, 1911. The fire occurred March 6, 1916. Plaintiff promptly gave notice of his loss to the officers of defendant and pursuant to its articles of association an adjusting board of three members was appointed by its president and secretary, one of its directors named Bartlett, with two others named Brown and Laidlaw as members of plaintiff’s own and a nearby grange. This board met on May 13, 1916, and adjusted the loss at $600. No question is raised' as to the amount of the adjustment or honesty of the loss. Soon thereafter defendant’s secretary gave notice of.an appeal from this adjustment to its board of arbitration which consisted of three members elected by its board of directors. Hearing was had before this board of arbitration on June 13, 1916, which reversed the decision of the adjusting board and disallowed the claim on the sole ground that plaintiff had allowed his subordinate grange dues to remain unpaid for more than nine months preceding the time of his loss, arid his policy was thereby suspended under section 25 of defendant’s by-laws which provides as follows:

“Every member shall keep his subordinate grange dues fully paid up and any member who shall permit or allow his dues to remain unpaid for the space of nine months suspends his policy for the time in which his dues may thus remain unpaid, and the company shall not be liable for any loss or damage sustained while his dues are more than nine months in arrears.”

It is undisputed that plaintiff was a member in good standing of subordinate Oxford grange at the time the policy was issued to him, and never was delinquent in payment of any dues assessed against him by the same. This grange did, however, cease to function and became inactive or dormant some years [295]*295before his loss occurred, during which time no officers were elected, nor dues assessed against its members. Its charter is not showffi to have been forfeited nor any of its members expelled or suspended during that time. Defendant continued regular annual assessments on plaintiffs insurance which he promptly paid on receipt of such notice. Its articles of association required an annual assessment roll, dated September 25th, to be made in which each policy holder should be assessed ratably to cover all losses, expenses, etc., of the company, his assessment being made payable during October following. On July 31, 1919, over three years after rejection of his loss, defendant canceled plaintiffs policy for nonpayment of his 1918 assessment. Defendant’s secretary who had appealed from the amount of its adjusting board to its. board of arbitration in May, 1916, admitted that the board of arbitration had refused to allow plaintiff’s loss when he levied the 1916 assessment against plaintiff and sent him notice thereof, that he had collected from him the 1916-1917 assessments which were retained and.no offer was ever made to return the assessments plaintiff had paid.

In this case the facts are undisputed. Had plaintiff withdrawn or taken a demit from his local grange, affiliated with no other and thereafter paid no grange dues, the case would seem to quadrate in facts and principle with that of Laxton v. Insurance Co., 168 Mich. 448, where plaintiff withdrew from his grange and paid no further dues but continued to pay his insurance assessments until after he suffered a fire loss, which defendant refused to pay because the insured had not kept up his dues in' a local grange and retained all assessments he had paid up to the time of his loss. In this case, however, plaintiff never severed his connection with his local grange, the records of which show him a member since 1904, was [296]*296not expelled or suspended by it, and had paid all dues' it ever assessed against him. He had regularly paid his insurance assessments to defendant, including two annual assessments made against him by it after his fire loss, which it accepted and retained. Although it is possible the State grange might have forfeited the charter of his local grange owing to its dormant condition it did not do so. While yet retaining its charter the subordinate grange could at any time have resumed its functions by the action of its members who were in good standing. Lemmen v. Allendale Grange, 201 Mich. 179.

Plaintiff contends that section 25 of defendant’s bylaws does not apply to the situation presented here, because plaintiff had kept all subordinate grange dues fully paid, and his dues were not “nine months in arrears” when his loss occurred, or if it does apply the Laxton Case is analogous to its facts and controlling in principle. The learned circuit judge in directing a verdict apparently adopted the latter view, saying in part:

“The company could waive this by-law and the levy and retention of assessments after the knowledge of the defendant constitutes a waiver. It was thus the duty of the arbitrators not to reject the claim because of plaintiff’s failure to pay his grange dues. The decision of the Supreme Court was binding on them and their failure to give it effect would invalidate their award. It would result in a legal fraud on the plaintiff.”

In the Laxton Case the plaintiff paid defendant one year’s assessment after his loss which it tendered back after suit was begun, which he refused. In this case plaintiff paid two’ years’ assessments which defendant retained and made no offer of return. In the Laxton Case plaintiff contended that the defendant through its secretary knew of what was done by plaintiff and did not cancel his policy, but after this knowledge [297]*297came to it assessed plaintiff and collected the assessment which it still retained. The trial court found there were issues of fact on those contentions and submitted them to the jury. On the question of waiver this court there said:

“The fact is not in dispute that after it is claimed the policy became void, and after, according to the finding of the jury, the secretary had notice of the facts, that assessments were made and collected, which assessments are yet retained by the defendant. Under these circumstances, we think the judgment should stand” (citing cases).

In the instant case defendant pleaded in bar an award by its appellate board of arbitration provided for in article 5 of its articles of association, which by article 6 is made binding and final on appeals taken from an adjusting board to the exclusion of litigation by any loser. Under this plea it is contended broadly that the courts were closed to plaintiff, and when his counsel sought to attack the award on the ground of fraud objection was interposed for the further reason that a court of law had no jurisdiction to disregard or set aside an award because fraudulently made.

Although not made clear in the opinion, it may be noted that a similar objection was made in the Laxton Case and properly overruled as the record of the case discloses defendant early denied all liability, thereby waiving its right to arbitration, and none was had.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 N.W. 511, 217 Mich. 292, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-patrons-mutual-fire-insurance-mich-1922.