Sutherland v. Old Dominion Insurance

31 Va. 176
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 12, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Va. 176 (Sutherland v. Old Dominion Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sutherland v. Old Dominion Insurance, 31 Va. 176 (Va. 1878).

Opinion

Anderson, J.

The plaintiff had a policy of fire insurance la two companies on the same property—one in Old Dominion Insurance Company, and the other in the Connecticut Hartford Insurance Company. In both policies there was a condition against other insurance, prior or subsequent, except with the consent of the company written oh the policy. A part of the property was destroyed by fire soon after the second policy was issued; and this suit was brought against the Old Dominion Company, which issued the first policy, to recover the loss.

Ho objection is made to that policy in its inception. It was valid and operative until it was rendered void, if it were so rendered void, by issuing the second policy. And if it is rendered void thereby, it is because the plaintiff' effected insurance by the second policy on the same property without notice to the defendant company, and without its consent written on the policy. The defendant relies on that as rendering his policy declared on in this suit void. Hut the instrument of evidence on which it relies shows upon its face that it was void if the insured had a prior insurance upon the same property, because no notice of it, nor assent of the second insurer, is written on the policy, as one of its conditions required'. And the very plea of the defendant is an admission that the second insurance is subsequent, and is an insurance on the same property. And that being admitted, the policy shows upon its face, by the terms of the condition on which it was issued, that it is void. Being a void policy, can it annul and render void thejarior policy of the defendant ? Is the condition of the prior policy against subsequent insurance which was to work a forfeiture, a condition against an abortive attempt to effect a subsequent insurance, or an incomplete "and unperfected contract of insurance, which is invalid ? Or, is it a condition against a valid subsequent insurance ? That [181]*181is the subject of inquiry in this case; and upon it there is some contrariety of opinion.

Some hold that it does not mean insurance, but only, what the subsequent underwriter regarded and treated at the time as insurance. Others hold that the terms of the condition import that a prior policy shall be void if the assured shall make subsequent insurance, which means indemnity, not what he and the underwriter might suppose was insurance, when it was not. The language of the policy is: “ If the assured shall have insurance, or shall hereafter make any other insurance.” Any other insurance than what ? Than that which he is in the act of receiving from the defendant, which was insurance in fact. It was indemnity against loss, and any other insurance means any other indemnity against loss. I think this is the plain and obvious meaning of the language; and that it imports what was the intention of this company I think further appears from the fcrtysecond article annexed to the policy; which is as follows: In case of any other insurance upon the property hereby insured, whether made prior or subsequent to the date of this policy, the insured shall be entitled to recover of this company no greater proportion of the loss sustained than the sum hereby insracd bears to the whole amount insured thereon,” &c. There is no question that the insured might effect other insurances. The language is not other valid insurances, but simply other insurances; which must have been understood to mean valid, inasmuch as it is provided that there shall be a proportionable abatement from the first policy, if it should be effected. And the insurer must be presumed to have used the term insurance, or other insurance, in the same sense in the former clause in which it uses it in this clause.

The defendant, in stipulating against subsequent insurance upon the pain of forfeiture, cannot be understood as stipulating against any mere attempt to make insu[182]*182ranee; or what the assured and the subsequent insurer believed to he insured, though it was not such; or an and unperfected contract of insurance. To give it that construction would make it a stipulation, not that the assured was to forfeit his policy if he obtained additional insurance, but should be punished for attempt-big such a thing. It would require a very latitudinous construction to make the language mean that.

Upon what rule of construction can we wrest the language from its natural legal and ordinary import in order to subject the assured to a forfeiture of his indemnity for loss for the benefit of the maker of the policy ? All conditions or exceptions are to be construed most strongly against those in whose favor they are made is an established rule of construction. Why should it be departed from in this case ? It seems to me that there is a peculiar fitness in its application to policies of insurance. The policy is framed by the insurer in the absence of the assured, who inserts the condition for his own benefit without consulting the assured, who drafts it, with all its multifarious conditions and restrictions, to suit itself; and though it be “ an institution necessary for the protection of vast interests embarked in manufacturing and on consignment of goods in warehouses,” and therefore should be upheld, I am not aware of any rule, or respectable precedent, that would warrant a court by construction so to alter, or enlarge, or restrict the meaning of its terms in favor of the insurer—to give to the contract the meaning hereinbefore indicated—not even for the attainment of so desirable an object as to secure diligence, and care, and honesty on the part of the assured in the protection of his property against destruction by fire. And in this case it would seem that such a motive could not have operated in the insertion of the condition in question, inasmuch, as by the forty-second clause, before recited, the effecting other insurances by the assured [183]*183could be no inducement to carelessness and negligence in the protection of his property against destruction by fire, or to the destruction of it by his own criminal agency.

I am of opinion, therefore, that the condition made by the defendant in the policy which is the foundation of this suit against further insurance is not applicable to an invalid contract for other and additional insurance, and that the policy of the defendant is not avoided by an abortive attempt to make other assurance, which was never completed or perfected.

And in this position I think I am sustained by the overwhelming weight of authority.

Parsons in his work on Maritime Law says: “ Some policies provide that in case of any other insurance on the same property the contract shall be null and void. But the obtaining a policy from another underwriter will not have this effect, if it be void for any cause, although it be on account of the fault of the insured, as by his misrepresentations.” 2 Pars, on Marit. Law, pp. 100-101. .

Flanders on Fire Insurance, pp. 49-50, states the doctrine to be well settled, that if the second policy, against which the contract stipulates, is itself a void one, or one that cannot be enforced, it does not avoid the first, notwithstanding the clause of forfeiture.

May in his work on Insurance, p. 439, states the general principle to be, that subsequent insurance, void by its own terms, because it is additional and without notice of prior insurance, is no insurance within the meaning of the usual condition against other insurances.

Wood on Fire Insurance (the most recent work on this subject), p.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Va. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutherland-v-old-dominion-insurance-va-1878.