Court Opinion

ID: 8187853
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:10:36.130363+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:29.352412
License: Public Domain

Maeshaul, J.
A decision in appellant’s favor of one or more of these questions would require a reversal: (1) Was the person who procured the policy for respondent, delivered the same to him, received the premium therefor and paid it to appellant through its agents, Loney & Peekham, its general agent under the laws of this state ? (2) If he was such agent, so that his knowledge of the true character of respondent’s title must' be deemed equivalent to knowledge thereof' by appellant, can the latter yet defeat his claim because of the forfeiture clause respecting the title to the subject of insurance being other than absolutely vested in him, and the *460prohibition of any change in the insurance contract by any ■representative of appellant except by agreement indorsed thereon or added thereto ? (3) Did failure to furnish proofs ■of loss within the time stipulated in the policy terminate appellant’s liability ?
The first question is covered by the statute (sec. 1917, Stats. 1898). It provides:
“Whoever solicits insurance on behalf of any . . . person desiring insurance of any kind, or transmits an application for or a policy of insurance, other than for himself, to •or from any such corporation, or who makes any contract for .insurance, or collects any premium for insurance, or in any manner aids or assists in doing either, or in transacting any business of like nature for any insurance corporation, . . . shall be held to be an agent of such corporation to all intents and purposes unless it can be shown that he receives no compensation for such services.”
No argument is needed to demonstrate that the acts of Eo-wler in reference to the policy in question satisfy some -one of the circumstances mentioned in the statute, fixing his status, to have been that of a general agent of appellant. It is contended that, as he acted in the capacity of broker, Toney & Peckham being the regular agents of appellant, whatever business he did was either for such agents or for the assured, hence that the statute does not apply. That is -clearly ruled otherwise by John R. Davis L. Co. v. Hartford F. Ins. Co. 95 Wis. 226, 70 N. W. 84; Schomer v. Hekla F. Ins. Co. 50 Wis. 575, 7 N. W. 544, and other cases, in which it is held that a person who procures a policy of fire insurance for another from the agent of the insurance company issuing the same, acts in a twofold capacity; that of agent for the insured, and, by force of the statute, agent for the insurer; and that his knowledge at the inception of the contract is deemed to be that of the company the same as if he were regularly employed by it as its general agent.
Upon the second question submitted, it appears that, unless *461the ruling should be different under the standard policy law,, then independently thereof, it must be conceded that the as-surer cannot defeat respondent’s claim because of any defect-in the title to his property known to Eowler when the contract was made, regardless of the terms of such contract. In Roberts v. Continental Ins. Co. 41 Wis. 321, after citing a long line of decisions in this court, it was said, in effect, that if, when the agent of an insurance company delivers a policy of insurance, he has knowledge of the facts as regards the subject of the insurance inconsistent with the terms of the policy, the assurer, by accepting the premium, is estopped from declaring the policy void because the terms thereof were not so changed in writing as to conform to the facts. There have been many subsequent decisions to the same effect. Renier v. Dwelling House Ins. Co. 74 Wis. 94, 42 N. W. 208; Zell v. Herman F. M. Ins. Co. 75 Wis. 521, 44 N. W. 828; Stanhilber v. Mut. Mill Ins. Co. 76 Wis. 285, 45 N. W. 221; Bourgeois v. N. W. Nat. Ins. Co. 86 Wis. 606, 57 N. W. 347; Goss v. Agricultural Ins. Co. 92 Wis. 233, 65 N. W. 1036; Schultz v. Caledonian Ins. Co. 94 Wis. 42, 68 N. W. 414; Johnston v. N. W. Live Stock Ins. Co. 94 Wis. 117, 68 N. W. 868; De Witt v. Home Forum, 95 Wis. 305, 70 N. W. 476; St. Clara Female Academy v. N. W. Nat. Ins. Co. 98 Wis. 257, 73 N. W. 767; Hobkirk v. Phoenix Ins. Co. 102 Wis. 13, 16, 78 N. W. 160. These' propositions, independently of statutory change; are therein firmly established: (1) Knowledge of an agent of an insurance company at the time of delivering one of its policies, of facts regarding the subject of the insurance inconsistent with the stipulations in the policy in respect thereto, is in legal effect knowledge of the company. (2) A person who delivers the policy and receives the premium, though acting as a broker, is also agent for the company within the foregoing-rule by force of the statute. (3) If an insurance company delivers one of its policies and receives the premium therefor *462with knowledge of facts rendering it void when its terms are applied to such facts, in legal effect it thereby assures its •customer that as regards the contract the condition of the property shall be considered in all respects according to the calls of such contract, regardless of the truth of the matter, •and invites him to rely thereon; and such invitation being-accepted, the company is estopped from thereafter changing its position to the prejudice of the assured, though the policy •declares that no condition thereof is subject to waiver except by written agreement indorsed thereon or added thereto. ■(4) The doctrine of waiver, strictly so called, is not involved in the last foregoing rule. It rests solely on the principle of •estoppel in pais, — the principle that one person cannot as•sume a position in his business relations with another in respect to a transaction of a pecuniary nature upon which such other, acting reasonably, has a right to rely, and after such •other has so acted change his position to that other’s prejudice and obtain judicial aid to enable him to effectuate his fraudulent -purpose.
It is confidently insisted in appellant’s behalf that the standard policy law has changed the foregoing judicial rule, and that this court has so held. There is some warrant therefor, though a careful examination of all the decisions bearing on the subject shows that the court has not committed itself to the extent claimed by counsel. There are three classes of cases to be considered: (1) Those involving policies made after ch. 195, Laws of 1891, was passed, and when it was supposed to be valid; (2) those decided after such law was condemned as unconstitutional, but wherein it was referred to in a way to indicate that the decisions might have been otherwise had the attempted legislation been effective; (3) decisions made as to policies governed by the present valid policy law. The provisions under the first law, as regards the questions involved here, are similar to those in the later law except for an additional clause which will *463be refered to at length later. So far as declarations were made in the decision respecting the effect of such provisions upon the precise question now here, they should be considered authoritative and followed unless clearly wrong.
The only case of special significance in the first class above mentioned is Bourgeois v. N. W. Nat. Ins. Co. 86 Wis. 606, 57 N. W. 347. Language was there used to the effect that the legislative purpose was to have but one form for insurance contracts, to require it to be in -writing, and to confine all inquiries as to the legal right of the parties to the statements therein. The only application of that embodied in the decision was this: It was held that a verbal promise by an agent at the time of delivering the policy, that the assured might thereafter do things respecting the subject of the insurance inconsistent with the terms of the policy, is within the prohibition of any agreement respecting the subject of the insurance other than one indorsed upon the policy or added thereto and within the prohibition respecting waiver by agents. The doctrine of waive.r, strictly so called, was what was in the mind of the court. That of estoppel preventing the company from breaching good faith with its patron by issuing to him a policy and taking his money therefor with knowledge of conditions rendering it at once void, was not suggested or involved.
Dowling v. Lancashire Ins. Co. 92 Wis. 63, 65 N. W. 738; Goss v. Agricultural Ins. Co. 92 Wis. 233, 65 N. W. 1036; McDonald v. Fire Asso. of Phila. 93 Wis. 348, 67 N. W. 719; Hobkirk v. Phoenix Ins. Co. 102 Wis. 13, 78 N. W. 160, are in the second class referred to. The reasoning in each of them is that there was an effectual waiver of a condition contained in the policy under the judicial rule, that not having been abrogated by the law of 1891 since such law was void. It is fair argument to say from those decisions that had the law been regarded as binding, they would have been to the effect that the standard policy law did abrogate *464the judicial rule declared aud applied iu Renier v. Dwelling House Ins. Co. 74 Wis. 94, 42 N. W. 208, aud similar cases, though the court stopped short of saying that. The strongest language on the subject is in Hobkirk v. Phoenix Ins. Co. as follows:
Ch. 195, Laws of 1891, was enacted for the purpose of prescribing a written form of policy which would prevent any waiver of any conditions therein, except as therein prescribed. On the assumption that that act was valid, this court held, in effect, that the conditions and provisions of such standard policy were binding, and could not be changed or waived, except in the manner indicated, referring to Bourgeois v. N. W. Nat. Ins. Co. supra.
The law of 1891 being void, no decision upon the point here involved was necessary, nor was in fact made in any of such cases. The nearest approach thereto was in Bourgeois v. N. W. Nat. Ins. Co. supra, decided before the invalidity of the law was discovered, which went on the doctrine of waiver, strictly so called, and the effect of the statute in respect thereto.
Straker v. Phenix Ins. Co. 101 Wis. 413, 77 N. W. 752, had to do with a policy issued under the present law, and the effect of knowledge of the agent of acts of the assured during the life of his contract increasing the fire hazard, as regards waiving the condition of the policy rendering the same void in case of any such increase unless permitted by agreement with the company indorsed upon the policy or added thereto. While the standard policy law was referred • to as vital to the question in the case and the decision was largely based on what wras said in Bourgeois v. N. W. Nat. Ins. Co. it is apparent that not only was the turning question governed by the law of waiver, strictly so called, but the decision could not have been different had there been no statutory policy law. The court has never held, in the face of a policy provision forfeiting the contract for a violation of its *465provisions by tbe assured after the issuance thereof, such provision being accompanied by a stipulation that it shall not be deemed waived other than by a writing indorsed thereon, that a waiver could take plaoé in any other manner. The court has often held to the contrary. Hankins v. Rockford Ins. Co. 70 Wis. 1, 35 N. W. 34; Carey v. German Am. Ins. Co. 84 Wis. 80, 54 N. W. 18; Burr v. German Ins. Co. 84 Wis. 76, 54 N. W. 22. The principle involved, however, has little if any analogy to that of estoppel as applied in Benier v. Divelling House Ins. Co. and similar cases, though it is true that the term “waiver” has been commonly used in such a way as to indicate to the contrary. In Matthews v. Capital F. Ins. Co. 115 Wis. 272, 91 N. W. 675, a clear distinction was drawn between the two principles. Although it was there said that waiver is commonly applied to acts going to the validity of the contract rather than those in regard to establishing liability thereon after the happening of a loss, it is made clear that the acts going to such validity which were in the mind of the court, were those occurring after the making of the contract and before a loss; not those involved in its inception. It cannot be doubted that,' in the absence of any legislative regulation to the contrary, an insurance company may be guilty of such conduct in the making of an insurance contract as to estop it from successfully pleading the truth as regards the condition of the subject of the insurance inconsistent with the terms of the policy, to avoid paying a loss to the policy holder occasioned by an injury to or destruction of such subject.
"After a careful consideration of the matter we are un-áble to discover any very good reason for holding that it was intended by the legislature, in enacting the standard policy law, to abrogate the judicial rule so firmly established, as above indicated. It is quite apparent that the contrary was intended. In the closing paragraph, sec. 1941 — 62, Stats.. 1898, occurs this significant language, following the dis*466ability clauses upon which, appellant relies as indicating an intention to change the judicial rule:
“Up to the time of the delivery of the policy to assured, in all transactions relating tp this policy or to the property herein insured, between the assured and any agent of the company, knowledge of the agent shall be knowledge of the company; and in all transactions relating to the subject of insurance, between the insured and any agent of the company after loss, knowledge of the agent shall be knowledge of the company.”
It must be presumed that the word “agent” was there used in the same sense as in sec. 1977. Why was that clause framed so perfectly voicing the foundation principle of the doctrine in Renier v. Dwelling House Ins. Co. and similar cases, if it were intended to abrogate the judicial rule, as we have termed it, as regards estopping the company by occurrences characterizing the making of the contract, or the further rule in respect to estoppel by conduct of the company acting by its’ agent after loss, referred to in Matthews v. Capital F. Ins. Co. supra, and well established in the law of insurance, at the time the policy law was enacted? Oould there have been áüry other purpose than to extend to policy holders, by legislative enactment, the same protection they had theretofore enjoyed when the making of their contracts was wholly under the control of the parties thereto ? What object was there in embodying the clause under consideration in the law at all if it were not to be treated as an exception to that part immediately preceding it, the disability pro-' visions upon which appellant relies ? If the two clauses are not to stand together, the latter being an exception in a sense, to the former, then the latter would seem to be clear surplus-age. The latter clause was not in the policy prepared by the insurance commissioner under the law of 1891, which was in part construed by the court in Bourgeois v. N. W. Nat. Ins. Co. while that part of sec. 1941 — 62 preceding it is a verbatim copy of the commissioner’s form. That circum*467stance renders it well-nigb, if not decidedly beyond reasonable controversy, that the added .language was used to incorporate into the statute, in effect, existing law as found in the ■decisions of this court.
If we were to entirely overlook the latter part of the standard policy above discussed, and yet give effect to the judicial rule, as in Renier v. Dwelling House Ins. Co. it would not •seem to violate the disability clause thereof on the subject •of waiver, since, as we have seen, it does not deal with that subject in any proper sense. Such giving effect works no change in the policy, strictly speaking. It only estops the assurer, by reason of its conduct, from successfully alleging that the situation of the subject of insurance is not as indicated therein. In other words, the rule stands guard over the rights of the policy holder, protecting him from loss by reason of the assurer assuming one attitude with knowledge •of all the facts, for the purpose of making a policy contract, and then assuming another and inconsistent attitude to avoid "it. If the doctrine is right independently of the standard policy law, it seems that nothing therein on the subject of waiver condemns it, while in connection with such subject, as we have indicated, there seems to have been an attempt made to make such doctrine a part of the statute. It could not be successfully contended that it was the purpose of the 'legislature to enable insurance companies to profit by what was regarded at the time of its enactment as a fraud, with-" •out some clear, unmistakable language to that effect. Certainly, in the face of plain indications to the contrary, such •a contention can find no favor here.
It is well understood that the judicial rule here discussed "is peculiar to insurance contracts, and significantly exceptional in that it ignores the familiar principle applied to written obligations generally, that he who becomes a party to such an obligation is presumed to have knowledge of its contents and is bound thereby, unless by some artifice resorted *468to by the other party thereto, reasonably-calculated to prevent or deter him from obtaining such knowledge, he is so. prevented or deterred. Bostwick v. Mut. L. Ins. Co. 116 Wis. 392, 89 N. W. 538, 92 N. W. 246. As an original proposition it would be difficult to justify that special favor-to policy holders in actions to recover losses sustained. The-long line of decisions in this state supporting it, however,, precludes any change thereof other than by legislative enactment. The authorities elsewhere are not all in harmony with it. A very few condemn it. Northern Assur. Co. v. Grand View B. Asso. 183 U. S. 308, 22 Sup. Ct. 133, is a significant instance thereof. In that case the departure from general principles is most vigorously condemned in this language:
“It is manifest that the theory that such parol evidence, though it may not be competent to change the written contract, may be received for the purpose of raising an estoppel in pais, is a mere invasion of the rule excluding parol testimony when offered to alter a written contract. A party suing on a contract in an action at law must be conclusively presumed to be aware of what the contract contains, and the legal effect of his agreement is that its terms shall be complied with.”
The court said further, in effect, the only exception to. that is where, by fraud, a person is induced to accept a contract different from the one agreed upon, in excusable ignorance of the variance. The exception thus condemned has the-sanction of some forty years of our judicial history and of the general run of authorities. Under the circumstances we do not feel warranted in overturning it or seriously questioning the wisdom of it.
The conclusion to -which we have arrived is supported by the courts generally where a policy law exists. That is amply shown by citations in the brief of counsel for respondent, and the absence of authorities to the contrary in that of appellant, and our own inability to discover any. In the sup*469porting authorities it appears that there was no judicial hesitation in holding that a policy like purs does not, in letter or in spirit, affect the established rulp that an insurance company, barring fraud upon it, participated in by the assured ■and its agent (Koerts v. Grand Lodge, Hermann's Sons, 119 Wis. 520, 97 N. W. 163), cannot avoid the effect of the law •charging it with knowledge which its agent has at the time of delivering its policy of insurance, respecting the condition ■of the subject thereof. In all cases, or most of them, waiver is sharply distinguished from estoppel. Forward v. Continental Ins. Co. 142 N. Y. 382, 37 N. E. 615; Wood v. Am. F. Ins. Co. 149 N. Y. 382, 44 N. E. 80; Robbins v. Springfield F. & M. Ins. Co. 149 N. Y. 477, 44 N. E. 159; Skinner v. Norman, 165 N. Y. 565, 59 N. E. 309; Hadley v. New Hampshire F. Ins. Co. 55 N. H. 110; Spalding v. New Hampshire F. Ins. Co. 71 N. H. 441, 52 Atl. 858; Clawson v. Citizens’ Mut. F. Ins. Co. 121 Mich. 591, 80 N. W. 573.
Counsel for appellant cites the Minnesota supreme court as holding contrary to the foregoing in Anderson v. Manchester F. Assur. Co. 59 Minn. 182, 60 N. W. 1095, 63 N. W. 241. We do not so understand that case. Two points were there involved; one being that discussed here, and the other the constitutionality of the standard policy law. Both were at first decided in favor of the company, one justice expressing doubt and favoring a rehearing, and another dissenting particularly on the first point. A reargument was ordered, and on the final disposition of the case the justice who. dissented at first wrote the opinion, by which the decision was rested solely on the unconstitutionality of the law. The other point was entirely omitted from the case.
Appellant’s last point is ruled in favor of respondent by Flatley v. Phenix Ins. Co. 95 Wis. 618, 70 N. W. 828. That is in accordance with the general rule laid down in the textbooks and supported by an abundance of authority, that a re*470quirement in a policy of insurance as regards furnishing the-proofs of loss within a specified time, not coupled with any provision mating failure to comply therewith a cause of forfeiture, at the most only affects the maturity of the claim. Joyce, Ins. § 3282. That was the doctrine of this court, when the standard policy law was framed, and in harmony therewith 'no forfeiture clause was incorporated therein in connection with the requirement for proofs of loss, but this-language was so incorporated:
“The loss shall become payable sixty days after notice and proofs of loss herein required have been received by this company.” Sec. 1941 — 51, Stats. 1898.
The fundamental principle involved is that forfeitures are-not favored and will be held not to have been intended in the-absence of language clearly indicating the contrary. That applies as well to a law as to a contract. So, though in Flatley v. Phenix Ins. Co. the question was raised as regards a contract which at its inception was wholly under the control of the parties thereto, it having been issued before we had a valid policy law, it applies just as strongly in this case. Moreover, the doctrine of the court, as indicated, was in, effect incorporated into the policy.
By the Gov/rt. — The judgment is affirmed.