Royal Insurance v. Ries

80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 272
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1909
DocketNo. 11173
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 272 (Royal Insurance v. Ries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Royal Insurance v. Ries, 80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 272 (Ohio 1909).

Opinion

Summers, J.

In Phoenix Insurance Company v. Carnahan, 63 Ohio St., 258, it is held that, “A condition in a policy of insurance against fire, that in case of loss and a disagreement or difference between the parties as to the amount of the loss, that amount shall be ascertained by arbitration or appraisal, is a proper and valid condition; and where it is also provided that the condition as to arbitration or appraisal must be complied with before a suit can be brought against the insurer, the condition is thereby made a condition precedent, and to entitle the insured [282]*282to maintain an action to recover under the policy, he must show that he has either performed the condition or has a legal excuse for non-performance thereof.” To the same effect is Graham v. The German American Insurance Company, 75 Ohio St., 374.

The provision in the policy in the present case is identical. It does not appear by the petition that the parties disagreed as to the amount of the loss, but the plaintiff, as he may do under the code, Section 5091, Revised Statutes, averred , that he had performed all the conditions on his part, and when the defendant pleaded the disagreement as to the amount of the loss, the submission to and the determination of that question by the appraisers, and the provision of the policy as to concurrent insurance, in the absence of a reply, the amount that plaintiff might recover was limited to a proportionate amount of the loss so determined by the' appraisers, and he could not recover a larger amount until he got rid of the appraisement. This he might do, if it was void, by a reply pleading its invalidity; but if the plaintiff could not -aver facts that made the appraisement void, but only facts that made it voidable, he should in his petition have united a cause of action to set aside the appraisement. Perry v. The M. O’Neil & Co., 78 Ohio St., 200.

The plaintiff in his reply avers that the appraisal- is illegal, void and of no effect, but as this is not based upon a statement of facts it is merely a legal conclusion, and the many facts thereafter averred would, if proven, only make the appraisement voidable.

The reply tendered a new issue and was a departure. No objection, however, was made and, after the evidence was in, the trial judge properly [283]*283held that this issue was not for the jury but for the court.

The remaining contention is, that the policy of insurance does not provide for an arbitration, but only for an appraisal of the property to determine the amount of the -loss, and that it was not the duty of the appraisers to hear evidence, but that they might each for himself and in his own way, ascertain the value of the property destroyed, and that the court erred in setting aside the award.

Since the decision in the leading case Scott v. Avery, 5 H. L. Cases, 811, followed in Hamilton v. The Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Company, 136 U. S., 242, and Hamilton v. Home Insurance Company, 137 U. S., 370, it has been settled that a provision in a policy of insurance that the amount of damage or loss- shall be submitted to arbitration or appraisement and that suit shall not be brought until after an award has been made is valid.

The distinction between an agreement for appraisement and an agreement to submit to arbi- i t'ration may not always be plain. But when the question of the liability of the company under the policy, and every other question is reserved, and the only submission provided for is an appraisal of the property at and after the time of the fire to determine the single question of the amount of the loss, it would seem to be an agreement for an appraisement and not an arbitration. In Fleming v. Phoenix Assurance Company of London, 75 Hun, 530, where the policy contained an identical provision, Dykman, J., says: “They are appraisers and not arbitrators. Their function is to estimate and appraise the loss by personal examination and observation. They have [284]*284no power or authority to take testimony, and their doing so is not contemplated.” We' think this must have been what the parties contemplated, and if ■ it was intended that the single question of the amount of the loss should be determined by an arbitration, and not by appraisal by appraisers, that the agreement should have so provided.

In Wadsworth v. Smith, L. R., 6 Q. B., 332, where the question was, whether a stipulation, that the certificate of an architect as to a particular matter should be final was an agreement for a submission to arbitration, Blackburn, J., says: “Where by an agreement the right of one of the parties to have or do a particular thing' is made to depend on the determination of a third person, that is not a submission to arbitration, nor is the determination an award; but where there is an agreement that any dispute about a particular thing shall be inquired of and determined by a person named, that may amount to a submission to arbitration, and the determination, though in the form of a certificate, be an award.” In Kelly v. Crawford, 5 Wall., 785, where some^ thing was owing from an agent to his principal, it was agreed that an accountant, named, should ascertain from the books of- the agent the exact amount, and that the amount so ascertained should be final, it is said by. Mr. Justice Field: “The principal objections urged for a reversal of the judgment rest upon the idea that the agreement of September 13, 1861, was a submission to arbitration and the report or statement of Quigg was the award of an arbitrator; and that both are to be judged by the strict rhles applicable to arbitrators and awards. This is, however, a mistaken view of the agreement and report, As observed by counsel, there was no dispute [285]*285or controversy between the parties to be submitted to arbitration; nor was anything to be submitted to the judgment or discretion of Quigg. The books of .account of the defendants were to determine the amount due; about these there was no controversy. The only duty of Quigg was to examine them as an accountant and to state what they exhibited.” The mere fact of a difference between the parties as to the amount of the loss we do not think makes the submission an arbitration, if an agreement to submit that question to appraisers in the absence of a difference between the parties as to the amount of the loss would not have amounted to an agreement for a submission to arbitration.

In DeGroot v. Fulton Fire Insurance Company, 4 Rob. (N. Y.), 504, where there was an agreement that two persons named, with a third person to be appointed by them, should appraise and estimate at the true cash value, the damage by fire and water to the property insured and that the appraisement and estimate of any two of them in writing as to the amount of such damage should be binding on both parties, without reference to any other matters of difference between them, it is held that, “The value of articles insured may be determined by appraisers appointed under a policy of insurance merely to estimate the damage by a peril insured against in such mode as they think proper. They are not bound by the same rules of strict judicial investigation as arbitrators.”

This case and Fleming v. Phoenix Assurance Company of London, 75 Hun, 530, supra, are cited with approval in Strome v. London Assurance Corp., 20 App. Div. (N.

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Related

Kelly v. Crawford
72 U.S. 785 (Supreme Court, 1867)
Hamilton v. Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance
136 U.S. 242 (Supreme Court, 1890)
Hamilton v. Home Insurance
137 U.S. 370 (Supreme Court, 1890)
Fleming v. Phoenix Assurance Co.
27 N.Y.S. 488 (New York Supreme Court, 1894)
Zallee v. Laclede Mutual Fire & Marine Insurance
44 Mo. 530 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1869)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 Ohio St. (N.S.) 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-insurance-v-ries-ohio-1909.