Scottish Fire Insurance v. Stuyvesant Insurance

76 S.E. 728, 161 N.C. 485, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 76 S.E. 728 (Scottish Fire Insurance v. Stuyvesant Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scottish Fire Insurance v. Stuyvesant Insurance, 76 S.E. 728, 161 N.C. 485, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 263 (N.C. 1913).

Opinions

This action was brought by the plaintiffs, the Scottish Fire Insurance Company and the Monongahela Fire Insurance Company, against the defendant, the Stuyvesant Insurance Company, to recover of the defendant, under policies of reinsurance, $702.87 and interest, money claimed to have been paid by it to Jasper Miller Sons Company, the insured in the original policies. The plaintiff Scottish Fire Insurance Company had issued to Jasper Miller Sons Company its policy No. 12109, for $1,400, on certain fixed and movable machinery, tools, implements and utensils, electrical equipment, motors and dynamos, while contained in their one-story metal-roof brick building, situated at No. 210 1/2 south side of East Fifth Street, Charlotte, N.C. and also its policy No. 12102, for $500, on cotton in bales or bags, and other material, while *Page 396 contained in the same building. Thereafter this business of the Scottish Insurance Company was taken over by the Monongahela Insurance Company, but prior thereto the Scottish Insurance Company had reinsured with the defendant in an amount not to exceed $1,150 against loss by reason of its liability as insurer under its policy No. 12109, and in an amount not to exceed $250, against loss by reason of its liability as insurer under its policy No. 12102, the defendant's policies being numbered 63689 and 63690. The defendant accepted notice of the assumption of the Scottish Insurance Company's business by the other plaintiff, the Monongahela Insurance Company, and agreed to become and remain bound to the Monongahela Insurance Company, upon the same terms and conditions as they had theretofore been bound to the Scottish Insurance Company. The latter transaction was on 27 January, 1910. Attached to both of defendant's policies of reinsurance was the following written condition:

"It is a condition of this reinsurance that the reinsured company is to retain an amount of insurance on the identical property herein described, and failing so to do, this company shall not be liable for (487) any loss which may occur under this policy.

"Scottish retains $750 on same property."

The whole of this condition, in both instances, was typewritten, except the figures following the dollar mark in the last line, these figures being written in ink at the time the policies of reinsurance were issued.

The plaintiffs, as a matter of fact, did not retain $750 insurance on the identical property in either instance, but, on the contrary, only retained and kept in force $250 insurance in each instance, on the identical property. The plaintiffs, however, did have in force at that time, and at the time of the fires hereinafter mentioned, other policies of insurance issued by them to Jasper Miller Sons Company on other property in the building, and upon the building itself.

Thereafter, in the months of February and April, 1910, certain of the property located in the brick building was destroyed by fire, and the plaintiffs paid Jasper Miller Sons Company certain sums of money, aggregating more than the amount sued on in this action, upon the various losses; the evidence offered by plaintiffs going to show a payment of $480 under policy No. 12102, $104.77 under policy No. 12109, and $442.65 under policy No. 12109.

Speaking generally, the plaintiffs' contentions are that by reason of the fact that they had policies in force with Jasper Miller Sons Company covering other property in the brick building and covering the building itself, that, therefore, they retained ample insurance to cover the condition and agreement in the policies of reinsurance in regard to retaining $750 on the same property; that even if they did not have *Page 397 and retain $750 of insurance on the identical property in each case, the defendant had waived the condition. The defendant, on the other hand, contending that it was expressly agreed in and as a condition of both the policies of reinsurance that it should not be liable for any loss which might occur under its policy of reinsurance, if the plaintiff companies failed to retain in each instance $750 of insurance on the identical property reinsured in these policies of reinsurance; that the language of the contract was plain and unequivocal and could (488) mean nothing else.

These issues were submitted to the jury, and answered as follows:

1. Were special contracts of insurance, mentioned in the complaint, issued by the defendant and delivered to the plaintiffs? Answer: Yes.

2. Did the defendant accept notice of reinsurance contract between the plaintiffs and continue in force all contracts of reinsurance previously issued to the Scottish Fire Insurance Company, in the name of and for the benefit of the Monongahela Insurance Company, according to the terms of said contracts? Answer: Yes.

3. Did the fires occur and were payments made to the original assured named in the Scottish Fire policies, as alleged in the complaint under these policies, Nos. 12102 and 12109? Answer: Yes.

4. Were the special contracts of insurance mentioned in the complaint voided by reason of any misrepresentations or breach of warranty on the part of the plaintiffs, as alleged in the answer? Answer: No.

5. Is the defendant indebted to the plaintiff? If so, in what amount? Answer: $475.83.

Judgment was entered upon the verdict, that plaintiffs recover of defendant the sum of $475.83 and interest, and both parties appealed. DEFENDANT'S APPEAL. This appeal raises the question whether the policies of the defendant were void by reason of the fact that the plaintiff the Scottish Fire Insurance Company failed to retain $750 of insurance on the identical property insured by the defendant. It is plain, as it appears to us, that defendant must have known all along that the plaintiff had not retained $750 of insurance in each case or in either case. We do not see how it was possible to do so, as the total insurance (489) was only $1,900, whereas if plaintiff had complied with the provision as to the retention of insurance, it must have amounted to $2,900 under the two policies, as the clause was inserted in each of the policies. It may be that the amount to be retained was intended to be $250, *Page 398 instead of $750, but it makes no difference how this is, as the defendant is charged with notice that the plaintiff had not complied with the stipulation. This is a waiver of it. It was held in Hornthal v. InsuranceCo., 88 N.C. 71, that a material fact stated as to additional insurance on the same property insured by defendant, with knowledge of its agent that the fact was not truly stated, was a waiver of the requirement prohibiting other insurance without the written consent of the company, citingInsurance Co. v. Wilson, 13 Wall. (U.S.), 222. And in a case where there had been a substitution of one company for another as an insurer, or one of the insurers, with the knowledge of the defendant, through its agent, of the fact, and without any objection thereafter, it was held to be a waiver of the change in the insurance and the requirement that it should have notice thereof (Collins v. Insurance Co., 79 N.C. 279), the Court saying, by Justice Reade: "The breach of any condition in the policy as against an increase of risk or the keeping of certain hazardous goods, or indeed the violation of any of the conditions of the policy may be waived by the insurer, and a waiver may be implied from the acts and conduct of the insurer after knowledge that such conditions have been broken." Argall v.Insurance Co., 84 N.C. 355

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.E. 728, 161 N.C. 485, 1913 N.C. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scottish-fire-insurance-v-stuyvesant-insurance-nc-1913.