Phenix Insurance v. Johnston

42 Ill. App. 66, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 664
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 7, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 Ill. App. 66 (Phenix Insurance v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phenix Insurance v. Johnston, 42 Ill. App. 66, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 664 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Lacey, P. J.

The decision of this case rests on the issue of waiver by appellant in favor of appellee of the clause against taking out additional insurance, or if not strictly a waiver, an estoppel in pais against appellant to insist on such supposed forfeiture. The facts in the case in regard to the matter are not much controverted and are few and simple, except possibly the one contention as to whether Eoswell Bills & Co. were the agents of the appellant in the transactions which will hereafter be mentioned.

■Appellee resides, and the house burned was on a farm in the vicinity of Peoria, Ill., and Roswell Bills & Co. were agents of the appellant and had been for twenty-five years in that locality for all commercial insurance, and at the same time were the like agents for other insurance companies. The firm of Eoswell Bills & Co. had the power as agents for the appellant in the mercantile department to issue policies of insurance, and was authorized to make indorsements on and transfers and assignments thereof without sending them away, but had no such power in regard to policies issued in the farm department, to which the risk in question belonged, as testified to by them and the general agent, Burch. But they received policies in the farm department like the one in question and sent them to Chicago to T. E. Burch, the general agent of appellant, residing in Chicago, as matter of accommodation, as testified to by Eoswell Bills. The policy of appellee was not taken out through Eoswell Bills & Co., but was obtained through insurance agents in another county. E. Bills & Co. advertised with the knowledge of appellant their agency in Peoria without the specification of any limitation. The facts of the case in regard to obtaining the additional insurance by appellee were about as follows:

On the 30th day of July, 1889, Eoswell Bills & Co., having issued to appellee a $2,000 policy of insurance on his dwelling house, already insured in appellant’s company, wrote to appellant’s agent, Burch, directed to Chicago, inclosing the policy of insurance sued on, as follows: “We * * * wish yon to indorse permit for §2,000 additional insurance on the dwelling house insured in said policy. We have written §2,000 on the dwelling in Hartford Insurance Co. Please return policy to us when completed.”

On the first day of August, 1889, Mr. Burch sent to them the following reply, viz.: “Gentlemen: We have your letter of the 30th ult. inclosing policy 0,263,081, Robert F. Johnston, requesting permission for §2,000 additional insurance on the dwelling, in the Hartford Insurance Co. We can not permit this further insurance without further information. The dwelling, according to the assured’s application, made in December, 1887, was worth at the time only §6,000, and we have never been advised of any alterations or improvement in it whatever, and as we are now carrying §4,000 insurance on it we must be understood as positively declining to permit the other insurance of §2,000 in the Hartford.”

On August 3, 1889, Roswell Bills & Co. replied to Mr. Burch, the general agent, as follows: “Dear Sir: We have yours of the first instant and note what you say of the permit for §2,000 additional insurance on the dwelling of R. F. Johnston under policy 0,263,081. When Mr. Johnston was in the office a few days ago he stated the dwelling had cost him over §9,000, and it was not many years since it was built, and from our observation of the house and our knowledge of the man, we would think §9,000 not a high estimate on the property. Mr. Johnston has gone to Kansas to be gone two weeks or more, and when he returns we will see him about it, and meantime we do not think the property over-insured at §6,000.” On the 31st day of August, 1889, Roswell Bills & Co. wrote another letter to the general agent, Mr. Burch, inclosing policies 0,250,817, issued to Elmer E. Johnston, and by him assigned to Robert F. Johnston, and by him to William W. Johnston, he having purchased the property, asking consent to the assignment and a return of the policies, then adding: “ In relation to the policies of Robert F. Johnston we sent you some time ago for consent to additional insurance, we saw Mr. Johnston about this time and stated what you said about the value of his dwelling as stated in the application. He says he probably stated the value as you say, but did not expect to put any more insurance on it; but the fact is, he says the house cost him over §9,000, with all the advantages of his own labor and low prices, and he considers the house fully worth $9,000. Mow, if satisfactory, please return policies and oblige.” There was no reply ever sent to the two last letters, but the two policies sent for consent to assignment were returned after appellee returned from Iowa, when Mr. Bills handed them to him done up in an envelope, remarking, “ There are your policies—it is all right.” Bills, on appellee’s starting to Iowa, had assured him the matter would be fixed up all right.

Appellee and Bills both supposed the policy in question was one of those in the envelope, and the former took the envelope home without opening it, and put it away, and never knew that the policy sued on was not in it till after the fire, when search revealed the fact that it had never been sent back from the office in Chicago. After the fire it was returned by the company to Mr. Johnston, appellee. Whether the appellant’s agents in Chicago purposely omitted to return the policy and answer Bills & Co.’s two last letters, does not certainly appear, but the probability is that the matter was overlooked and neglected. It would appear that this was the case from the statements of Mr. Burch, when Mr. Bills went to Chicago to see him in regard to the matter, though the former in his testimony states that he kept the policy because they expected appellee to send them word that he had canceled it or had canceled his policy of $2,000 in the Hartford Co., and that the first letter from Bills was not answered because no answer seemed to be required.

True it is, the appellee remained from the 31st of August, 1889, to the 31st of March, 1890, the day of the fire, under the impression that the appellant had consented to the second insurance, and was surprised to learn after the fire that appellant’s agent, Burch, had never passed on the question after the second application to him to do so by Bills’ letter of August 31, 1889,—neither refused nor consented to the second insurance. In reference to appellee’s belief as to the agency of Bills for the appellant, he testifies he supposed Bills was the agent for it in the transactions in reference to getting the consent of the company for the additional insurance.

The question arises in this record, conceding that Boswell Bills & Go. were not the agents of appellant in the transactions in regard to obtaining the waiver of the condition in the policy in suit as to admitting the §2,000 insurance, whether or not the appellant is estopped from denying a waiver in favor of such additional insurance. We are inclined to hold under, the evidence there should be such an estoppel, and consequently a waiver of the forfeiting clause in the insurance policy here in suit. The appellant’s attorney insists that the clause against other insurance should be held to mean that in case other insurance is taken out by the assured without the consent of the general agent in writing, that the policy becomes absolutely void, according to the literal terms of the policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 66, 1890 Ill. App. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phenix-insurance-v-johnston-illappct-1891.