Rogers v. Home Insurance

136 S.W. 743, 155 Mo. App. 276, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 219
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 743 (Rogers v. Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Home Insurance, 136 S.W. 743, 155 Mo. App. 276, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 219 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

This action is based on a policy of fire insurance for $3000, in which plaintiff recovered the full amount with interest and in addition thereto the sum of $300 attorneys’ fee and. $300 penalty for alleged vexatious refusal to pay.

The policy was issued on the 16th of November, 1905, and contained a provision that if any other or additional insurance was on the property when this one was issued, or if any other was taken after its issuance, the policy should be wholly void, unless consent for such other insurance was endorsed on the policy. The record discloses that at the time the policy was issued there was no other insurance, but that several months afterwards, in May, 1906, other insurance in different companies, in amounts aggregating four thousand dollars, at times [280]*280from the first to the 23d of May, was taken by plaintiff without having defendant’s consent for any of them endorsed on the policy. To avoid this failure to comply with this provision in the policy — a provision always upheld by the courts — plaintiff pleads a waiver, and that is the principal question for our consideration.

We may start with two statements: First, that provisions avoiding a policy for additional insurance, taken without the insurer’s consent, and endorsement upon the policy, are willingly upheld as being in the interest of morality as well as justice, by preventing the temptation to arson and perjury which sometimes arises from over-insurance; and, second, that such provisions may be waived by the insurer, or its agent acting for it.

The waiver pleaded by plaintiff is not that shown in evidence; on the contrary, it is affirmatively disproved. The waiver is set out both in the petition and reply. In the petition it is explicitly stated to be that plaintiff had the other insurance when he took out the policy in suit and that defendant’s agent knew it. And this is repeated in the reply, where it is alleged that defendant knew the amount of insurance on the property at the time it issued the policy in suit, and prior thereto, and at the time of the fire had full information thereof and, with knowledge of all the facts, made no objection to the other insurance, but consented thereto and waived the 'giving of .notice thereof by plaintiff and waived .the endorsement thereof on the policy.

It is shown, and is conceded, that at the time this policy was issued there was no other insurance, and the waiver now claimed is based on a different state of facts, ■viz. on knowledge of policies taken out several months after the issuance of the policy in suit. But no objection seems to have been made on this score at the trial and we therefore pass it by, and will address ourselves to a consideration of the evidence said to establish the waiver. It was given by plaintiff and his son and though dis[281]*281puted. by testimony in behalf of defendant, we must accept what it tends to prove as the facts in the case.

Matters transpiring between defendant’s agent and plaintiff and his son, are what is relied upon to establish the waiver. This agent was the cashier of a local bank where plaintiff did business and where he had a private box in which he kept his papers, including the policy in suit. Plaintiff testified that when he took out the policy (in November, 1.905) the agent said he ought to have more insurance and spoke of $10,000 being the proper amount; but he said what he was then taking was enough at that time. Then, in the latter part of April, 1906, more than five months afterwards, he met the agent on the street and told him that he “was about ready to take out other insurance now and I would send my boy there (to the bank) to get the policy.” He further testified that the agent asked to issue the other insurance himself, but he declined, saying that he wished to patronize others also and that the agent said: “All right, if that is your choice.” And that he afterwards sent his boy to the bank to get the present policy in order to copy description, terms, etc., in the policies he stated he intended to take. He stated' that this conversation was in the latter part of April, and the first additional insurance was dated the first of May, but how many days between the conversation and the date of the policy he could not say. The son, however, testified that afterwards his father told him to go to the bank to get the policy from his box, and that he afterwards met the agent on the street and told him his father wanted to get the policies, that he was going to take out enough additional insurance to make it in the neighborhood Gf $10,000 on the buildings and machinery, and wanted to have the terms alike. The agent said “All right, I will get them for you.” He then said he went to the bank the next day and got the policies and the next day after that the policy of May 1st was issued. But the other additional policies were taken out at [282]*282different times, one ten days and another three weehs after, and that the last one five days before the fire.

This testimony shows that defendant’s agent was informed beforehand that- other insurance would be taken out; but it further shows that he was not notified that it had been taken out. In other words, it shows that he was informed of an intention and expectation to do a thing in the future, but was not informed that such intention or expectation had been afterwards carried out or accomplished. Does such knowledge constitute a waiver of the provision of the policy requiring “any other contract of insurance” to be endorsed on the policy?

The question was pointedly decided in the negative in Gray v. Ins. Co., 155 N. Y. 180. In that case it was held that where an insurance company issues a policy with knowledge of existing facts which would render it void in its inception if its provisions were insisted upon, it will be presumed that it waived such provision, “as a contrary inference would impute to it a fraudulent intent to deliver and receive pay for an invalid instrument.” Thus if it had been shown, as pleaded by plaintiff, that there was other insurance at the time this policy was taken and defendant’s agent knew of it, and yet collected the premium and delivered the policy without endorsing it on the policy, it would be presumed he waived that requirement; otherwise he would commit a fraud. But it was further held that where there is no other insurance, and the insured subsequently informs the agent of an intention to procure more, it is not notice that he has procured it. That case cites another which holds that “notice of an intended act at a specified date in the future, does not ripen into knowledge of an existing fact, even when the period specified-has passed.” [McNierney v. Ins. Co., 48 Hun 239, 246.] In Havens v. Ins. Co., 111 Ind. 90, the court, in the course of the opinion, said: “The position of the appellant comes to this: After the policy was executed, [283]*283an agreement was made that other insurance might be taken, and that a written stipulation to that effect would be inserted in the policy. Other valid insurance was taken, without any notice to the company, or request to insert the stipulation agreed upon, and now it is said the company is estopped to insist upon the condition printed in the policy. This position is not sustainable. As has been seen, insurance companies are estopped to insist upon the enforcement of conditions when they have knowledge of existing facts which are inconsistent with the conditions imposed.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 743, 155 Mo. App. 276, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-home-insurance-moctapp-1911.