Von Bories v. United Life, Fire, & Marine Insurance

71 Ky. 133, 8 Bush 133, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 18, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 71 Ky. 133 (Von Bories v. United Life, Fire, & Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Von Bories v. United Life, Fire, & Marine Insurance, 71 Ky. 133, 8 Bush 133, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 26 (Ky. Ct. App. 1871).

Opinion

JUDGE LINDSAY

delivered the opinion oe the court.

Oh the 15th of November, 1867, Shea & O’Connell obtained from the United Life, Fire, and Marine Insurance Company a five-thousand dollar policy of insurance upon their stock of merchandise and fixtures in the city of Louisville. On the following day they obtained further insurance on the same fixtures and merchandise for the further sum of five thousand dollars in the Kenton Insurance Company. Both policies were issued by one George S. Moore, who was the general agent at Louisville for both companies. .

On the 23d of the following January a considerable portion of the fixtures and goods so insured were destroyed by fire, and Shea & O’Connell at once took such steps as they deemed proper to secure from the insurers the adjustment and payment of their loss. Before, however, the loss had been adjusted with the appellee, Yon Bories & Co. and Klien, Graves & Enneking, who were judgment creditors of Shea & O’Connell, and whose executions had been returned nulla bona, brought their suit in the Louisville Chancery Court, making the United Life, Fire, and Marine Insurance Company a party defendant, and seeking to have the claim of their debtors against that company applied to the satisfaction of their judgment. Appellees, among other defenses, relied upon the violation of the following condition in their policy as a bar to a recovery against them: If there is or shall hereafter be made any further insurance on the property hereby insured, or any part thereof, without being notified to this company, and its consent thereto written hereon, then and in that case this policy shall be of no binding force on this company.” The consent of appellee to the second insurance was not indorsed on their policy, and it does not appear that formal notice [137]*137thereof was given by the agent, Moore, to the officers at Covington.

It can not be insisted, however, that in law the company did not have notice of the second insurance. Both policies were issued by the same person, who, with the knowledge and assent of appellee, was at the time acting as general agent in Louisville for both companies.

The second insurance did not, according to the terms of the policy, render the contract with appellee absolutely void. It was only agreed that it should render the “policy of no binding effect upon the company.” The insurer had the election, after notice of the violation of the contract, to cancel the policy by returning a proper proportion of the premium, or to retain the premium and permit it to remain in full force. Good conscience and fair dealing required the company, in case it was intended to enforce the forfeiture, to take the necessary steps within a reasonable time after notice of the second insurance. This notice it had from the very moment its general agent issued the policy in the Kenton Insurance Company, and yet no action was taken in the premises, and nothing indicating an intention to insist upon the stipulated forfeiture was done until after the loss occurred. It has been held by this court that insurance companies may in such cases, “by contract or conduct, waive the right to exoneration, and become estopped from enforcing [a] conventional condition of forfeiture.” (Baer v. Phœnix Insurance Company, 4 Bush, 247.)

In this case Shea & O’Connell had the right to expect that if the company disapproved the action of its agent' it would within a reasonable time take the necessary steps to cancel their policy, or at least notify them of such disapproval. No such steps were taken, and it seems to us that under the circumstances the company has waived the right to exoneration. Much stress is laid upon the fact that Moore did not notify [138]*138the officers of the company of the second insurance. His failure to do so was a violation of his duty to his principal, which can not and ought not to prejudice the rights of the insured. This conclusion accords with the doctrine laid down by this court in the case of the Kenton Insurance Company v. Shea & O’Connell, 6 Bush, 177, in which case substantially the same question was involved.

As the judgment of the chancellor was based alone upon this ground of defense, we do not deem it necessary upon this appeal to inquire into the sufficiency of the other defenses presented by the pleadings. Many of them involve questions of fact which ought properly to be passed upon by a jury, and we suggest to the chancellor the propriety, upon the return of the cause, of ordering an issue out of chancery for the trial of such questions of fact as he may deem necessary and proper.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Ky. 133, 8 Bush 133, 1871 Ky. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-bories-v-united-life-fire-marine-insurance-kyctapp-1871.