Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. Dickey

1918 OK 199, 174 P. 235, 73 Okla. 57, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 9, 1918
Docket8827
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1918 OK 199 (Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. Dickey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance v. Dickey, 1918 OK 199, 174 P. 235, 73 Okla. 57, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 39 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

SPRINGER, C.

For convenience the plaintiff in error will be referred to in this opinion as the insurer, and the defendant in error will be referred to as the insured. The insured instituted several suits in thei district court of Bryan gounty, Okla., upon the various fire insurance policies below : Policy issued by Phoenix Insurance Company, dated March 4, 1912, for the sum of $4,000, $500 of which was insurance on store and office fixtures. Policy of Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Company, dated March 4, 1912, for the sum of $4,000, $500 of which was on the store and office fixtures. Policy issued by the Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company, dated December 2, 1912, for the sum of $5,000. Policy issued by the Home Insurance Company, dated July 5. 1912, for the sum of $3,500. Each of the policies ran for a period of one year from the date of their respective issue. These several policies of insurance were issued upon a stock of merchandise and a store building and office fixtures. The several causes of atcion were consolidated and tried in the court below, and judgment was rendered in favor of the insured in two cases and in favor of the insurers in the other two cases, and an appeal was taken to this court, and in 1916 Commissioner .Collier of this court rendered an opinion affirming the judgment in thb two companion cases against the insurers *58 and reversed the judgment of the lower court in the two eases that are now before us, and remanded them for a new trial. These cases were consolidated in the lower court and trial had on the 7th day of July, 1916, and judgment rendered in favor of the insured. In due time a motion for a new trial was filed and presented to the court, which' was overruled and denied and exceptions saved, and time given within which to make and serve a case-made, and the same is now properly before this court for review. The two cases will be consolidated in this opinion.

' The question presented by this appeal is somewhat unique, as well as a very interesting one. Does a rider attached to a standard statutory fire insurance policy, commonly known as a three-fourths value clause, permitting concurrent insurance, prevail over a provision in the policy against other insurance and consequently completely - nullify if?

Revised Laws 1910, § 3482, sets forth the siandard form of fire insurance policy, and in it is contained this provision:

“This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed thereon or added hereto, shall be void if insured now has or shall hereafter make or procure any other contract of insurance, whether valid or not on property covered * * * by this policy.”

The policies in the suit here contain the above provision. Onto the policies in suit here was indorsed a rider containing the following provision:

“In consideration of the rate of premium at which this policy is written, it is a condition of this insurance, that in event of loss or dajnage by fire to the property described herein, this company shall not be liable for an amount greater than three-fourths of the cash value of each item of the same — not exceeding the amount of said policy — at the time immediately preceding such loss or damage ; and in the event of other insurance on the property described herein, then this company shall be liable only for its proportion of three-fourths of such cash value at the time of the fire. Other concurrent insurance permitted, but total insurance. shall at no time exceed three-fourths of the cash value of each item of the property described herein.”

Section 3481, Rev. Laws 1910,’ in part, provides:

“No fire insurance company shall issue fire insurance policies on property, in this state other than those of standard form herein, set forth, except as follows: * * * (6) A company may write upon the margin or across the face of the policy, or write or print, in type not smaller than six-point, upon separate slips or riders to be attached thereto, provisions adding to or modifying those contained in the standárd form, and all such slips, riders, and provisions must be signed by the officers or agent of the company so using' them.”

On the trial of the case the court found the sound value of the stock of goods to be $10 275, and there was upon this item alone insurance amounting to the sum of $15,500, or excessive insurance to the amount of more than 50 per cent.

In suits at law involving fire insurance policies, there are two well-recognized lines of authorities.

Where a fire insurance policy is issued on property that has a fixed and determined value, courts generally recognize that over-insurance avoids a policy. The reason for such a- provision in an insurance policy, and also its legal enforcement by the courts, is for the ■ purpose of diminishing the risk cf incendiary fires and losses "due to carelessness and negligence. If the property is greatly overvalued or if overinsurance is taken out on property that has a fixed and determined value, where the policy xjrovides against overinsurance, and further provides that the policy shall be void if insurance contracts in excess of a stipulated amount are entered into, the courts have uniformly held that overinsurance avoids the policy.

“A prohibition in an insurance contract against concurrent insurance on the property covered beyond a designated limit is enforced. 2 May, Insurance (4th Ed.) § 364; Barnard v. Insurance Co., 27 Mo. App. 26. * * *
“If the property is largely overvalued in taking out a policy which provides for other insurance not to exceed a named percentage of its value, it is plain the way is open to obtain insurance beyond the limit which the first policy contemplated, thereby violating the spirit of that contract. If this is intentionally done, or done to a considerable degree, whether intentionally or not, generally speaking, in the absence of legislation to the contrary, it avoids the insurance if the property is of a permanent character and expected to remain intact during the life of the policy. 2 May, Insurance, § 373 et seq., and citations.” Burge Bros. v. Greenwich Ins. Co., 106 Mo. App. 244, 80 S. W. 342.

But courts and text-writers have generally recognized a different rule with reference to insurance policies that are issued upon a property that has a fluctuating value. A stock of merchandise which is constantly changing in value by adding to and selling therefrom furnishes an exception to the *59 rule. An insurance policy or several insurance policies covering a stock of merchandise may be entirely adequate at the time they are issued, and by the addition of a targe invoice subsequent thereto may be wholly insufficient for proper protection, and in that event the insured would not be justified in hazarding a loss by failure to.take out concurrent insurance on the same stock of merchandise on the theory that the constantly diminishing stock would render over-insurance several days later.

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 199, 174 P. 235, 73 Okla. 57, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-fire-marine-insurance-v-dickey-okla-1918.