Court Opinion

ID: 6624162
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:33:37.267326+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:48.967036
License: Public Domain

NIXON, P. J.-
Susan Hilburn, the respondent, on the 14th day of June, 1906, was living at Minden Mines, Barton county, Missouri. One H. C. Chancellor was the local agent of The Phoenix Insurance Company at that place. The appellant through its said agent issued the respondent a policy of insurance against fire for a period of three years from that date, whereby, in consideration of the payment by respondent of a premium and policy fee, respondent was insured against fire in an amount not to exceed five hundred dollars upon household and other goods while contained in a building specified in the policy in the town of Minden Mines.
The petition alleges the taking out of the policy, the payment of the premium, the amount of the policy — five hundred dollars — a description of the property insured, and that the building in which the articles insured were *360kept was a shingle roof frame building; that the articles insured were of the value of eight hundred dollars, and that the insurance was to run for a period of three years from June, 1906. Further, that at the time the policy was issued, she was the sole and unconditional owner of the property insured; that in August, 1906, after the policy was issued and while it was in force, the property was totally .destroyed by fire, and that respondent's damage and loss amounted to the sum of eight hundred dollars, the value of the goods on that date. That within six days after the loss by fire, she gave the defendant notice in writing of the loss, and within thirty days from the date of the fire, rendered a particular and specific account of such loss which was signed and sworn to by her stating that there was no other insurance on the property and gave the written portion of such policy thereon; that she also gave thereon the actual cash value of such property, specifically stated, and her interest therein, and that it was not incumbered, and when and how the fire originated. Respondent further alleged that at the request of appellant, she submitted to an examination under oath by agents and representative's of the appellant and subscribed to such examination when reduced to writing, and that she exhibited to the agents of appellant all that remained of the property that was covered by the policy for their examination. That she and the appellant failed to agree on the value of and damage to the property covered by said' policy, and that she afterwards offered to submit the amount of loss or damage to competent arbitrators, as provided for in said policy, but that appellant refused.That she had performed fully all the conditions of the policy in due time after the fire. She asked judgment for five hundred dollars with interest at six per cent from the 19th day of September, 1906.
A general demurrer was filed to this petition, which was by the court overruled.
Subsequently, the defendant below filed a motion-*361to strike out parts of tbe petition on the ground that the matter sought to be stricken out was irrelevant and frivolous and was merely an effort to create prejudice against the defendant. The language sought to he stricken out is as follows: “The plaintiff further states that she has submitted, at the request of the defendant, to examination under oath by agents and representatives appointed by the defendant and subscribed to such examination when reduced to writing and exhibited to the agents and representatives of the defendant all that remained of the property that was covered by this policy, damaged or not damaged, for their examination for this defendant. Plaintiff further states that she and the defendant failed to agree upon the amount of sound value and of damage to the property covered by said policy and she afterwards offered to submit the amount of loss or damage to competent and impartial arbitrators, as provided for in said policy, but that the defendant has failed, refused and neglected to submit to such arbitration the amount of loss or damage to the property covered by said policy.” This motion was by the court overruled.
The answer filed by the appellant pleaded seven separate defenses — after setting up a general denial— which are briefly stated as follows:
1. That whereas the policy covered the goods “while situate on and confined to, premises actually owned and occupied by insured,” she never owned the premises, but was tenant only.
2. That plaintiff was not the sole owner of the goods, her husband having an interest therein.
3. That in her oral application she had misrepresented as to previous fires, stating that she had had none, whereas she really had had three.
4. That in her application she had grossly misrepresented as to the value of the goods she wanted insured.
*3625. That tbe day before tbe fire sbe bad purchased and taken borne a gallon of gasoline, in violation of tbe policy, sbe baying no gasoline stove.
6. That in her alleged proof of loss, sbe grossly misrepresented tbe value of tbe property destroyed, to mislead defendant.
7. That in her previous examination under oath, sbe falsely testified that among tbe articles lost were a steel range of tbe value of $65 and one organ of tbe value of $125, and many other articles, whereas they bad been lost in her previous fire at Springfield.
Defendant tendered back tbe premium with interest and asked that tbe policy be cancelled and for naught held.
The plaintiff below filed a replication, being a specific denial of tbe new matter set up in tbe answer.
Plaintiff obtained judgment in tbe trial court for five hundred and seventy dollars and costs, and tbe defendant perfected its appeal to this court in due form.
After a former trial, this case was appealed to thev Kansas City Court of Appeals and decided at tbe October term, 1907, tbe decision appearing in 129 Mo. App. at page 670, 108 S. W. 576. Tbe judgment for plaintiff Avas there reversed and tbe cause remanded for a new trial. Tbe plaintiff amended her petition to meet tbe requirements of tbe decision of the Kansas City Court of Appeals. The answer of tbe defendant tenders practically tbe same issues as the answer in tbe former case, with the addition of tbe first special defense that tbe goods were in a building not owned by tbe plaintiff and in which sbe was only a tenant.
OPINION.
I. Tbe trial court did not commit an error in overruling appellant’s motion to strike out part of tbe amended petition. Tbe part sought to be stricken out alleged that plaintiff bad submitted to an examination *363under oath by tbe agents and representatives of the defendant and that she had offered to arbitrate the amount of the loss or damage. The policy issued to plaintiff required her to submit to such examination and it also provided for an arbitration. These allegations were not self-serving acts, but the fulfillment of the conditions required by the contract and the appellant should not be allowed to object to the fulfillment of the conditions imposed upon respondent by the policy. The appellant waived this error, if any there was, by answering to the petition after its motion to strike out parts of the petition had been overruled, and going to trial. [Walser v. Wear, 141 Mo. loc. cit. 462, 42 S. W. loc. cit. 932; Scovill v. Glasner, 79 Mo. 449; Davis v. Boyce, 73 Mo. App. loc. cit. 565; School District v. Wallace, 75 Mo. App. loc. cit. 322.] Besides this, the answer of the appellant subsequently sets up the same matter as to the examination under oath. At any rate, it would not be material error after trial and judgment.
II. The appellant claims that when parties in good faith make offers of compromise but fail to effect a settlement, the evidence of such offers of compromise was incompetent and that the trial court committed material error in allowing evidence in this case as to an offer of compromise.
The objectionable evidence was given at the trial by plaintiff as to a conversation with M'r. Thomas who was admitted by the appellant company to be their State agent. The following appears in the record:
“Q. Did he (meaning Thomas) come to see you with reference to that fire? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you and Mr. Thomas come to any settlement about the fire? A. No, sir. He made me an offer, but we didn’t settle.”
The rule as to the receipt of evidence of this character is well stated in the case of Moore v. Gaus, 113 Mo. 98, 20 S. W. 975, as follows: “The rule excluding offers of compromise is stated by Greenleaf, sec. 192, ‘that *364confidential overtures of pacification and any other offers or propositions between litigating parties, expressly stated to be without prejudice, are excluded on grounds of public policy.’ £But in order to exclude distinct admissions of facts it must either appear that they were expressly made without prejudice, or, at least, that they were made under the faith of a pending treaty and into which the party might have been led by the confidence of a compromise taking place.’ The rule has always been recognized and enforced in the practice of our courts, but is not applicable to this case. There was no negotiation for a compromise.” So, in this case, there is no proof of an offer to buy peace or any negotiation for peace. The answer of the witness was merely the recital of a particular fact and admissible.
The action of the trial court in overruling the motion to strike out the answer of the witness might well be sustained on another ground. The motion was, in effect, to strike out the whole answer, not a part of.it. If a part of. the answer was admissible and a part inadmissible, the motion should have been directed to the incompetent part only, and not against both the competent and the incompetent evidence. The statement of the witness that there had been no settlement was competent.
We do not think there was any error committed by the court in overruling this motion.
III. Appellant contends that there is a warranty in the policy of insurance held by respondent that no gasoline will be kept within the building, and that this warranty was violated. Unfortunately for this objection there is no evidence in the record to sustain it. The respondent’s testimony on this point is undisputed. It was as follows:
“Q. The day before the fire you had bought a gallon of gasoline at Usher’s store, had you not? A. Yes, sir.
*365“Q. Took it borne with you? A. I didn’t take it.
“Q. Who took it? A. My little boy.
“Q. You sent for it? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. He brought it, did he? A., He brought it in a little wagon. You knoAv what I told you, Mr. Moore, 'the other time, what that was for — to kill bed bugs.”
On-direct examination, she testified:
“Q. Mrs. Hilburn, you were asked about whether you bought some gasoline, on your examination — cross-examination, Saturday evening. Did you take that gasoline in the house? A. No, sir; I never had it in the house.
“Q. Where did you put it? A. I had it in the old tool-box where there were some tools kept out behind the house, quite a little distance from the house.
“Q. What did you get that gasoline for? A. I got it is a preventative from bed bugs.”
IV. The policy required that proof of loss be submitted within thirty days. The petition alleged compliance and there was a general denial in the answer. It is claimed by appellant that the general denial put in issue the question whether the proof of loss required by the terms of the policy had been made within that time. This seems to be a misapprehension of the law governing cases of this kind. The failure to make the proof of loss according to the terms of the policy was a matter of defense and should have been pleaded in the answer specially to have made it issuable. [Burgess v. Insurance Co., 114 Mo. loc. cit. 188, 89 S. W. loc. cit. 574; Hester v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 69 Mo. App. loc. cit. 194; Stephens v. Fire Association of Philadelphia, decided at this term of court.]
The appellant waived the necessary proof of loss by denying all liability and refusing to pay. It pleaded seven special defenses, but did not specify the failure to furnish proof of loss as one of them. The general denial did not put in issue the allegation in the petition that respondent had complied with the condition requiring *366proof of loss to be furnished in a certain manner or within a certain time.
But aside from the matter of pleading, the evidence tended to show that respondent did in fact furnish a proof of loss in strict compliance with the terms of the policy; that she had put it in an envelope with the company’s address on it, stamped it and deposited it in the postoffice. The envelope used was furnished by the agent and was one which had been furnished by the company to him. Besides, the proof of loss was in appellant’s possession thereafter. Not only is all this true, but the answer filed in the case concedes that a proof of loss was furnished, but objects to it and complains that it exaggerated the value of the goods destroyed. There is no substance in this objection and it borders on the frivolous.
V. Another contention of appellant is that the respondent was not the absolute owner of the property insured. There was evidence tending to prove that respondent bought' the property with money inherited from her father and mother and from money paid to her by an insurance company in an amicable settlement for a previous loss. There was sufficient evidence to take this question to the consideration of the jury and the question is not now open for review in an appellate court.
VI.' It is contended that the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained because of the respondent’s false and contradictory swearing. There was evidence to show that she made contradictory statements, and the question as to the sufficiency of the evidence was for the determination of the jury. They were the sole judges of the weight and credibility of the testimony and it was their province to give the evidence such weight as they thought it was entitled to. As we have said, the appellate court cannot reconsider it; the finding of the jury as to the facts is conclusive on us.
*367VII. Objection is also made to the instructions given by the court. We have examined the instructions carefully and find that no just criticism can be made against them. They fairly and fully submitted the issues to the determination of the jury.
VIII. It is contended that the court erroneously instructed the jury that although the property insured was in a house of which the plaintiff was not the actual owner, such facts would not constitute a defense if the agents of the defendant at the time of taking the risk knew such facts. The evidence in regard to the extent of the knowledge of the company’s agent appears from the following testimony of H. C. Chancellor, the agent who issued the policy.
“Q. This defendant company has applications for insurance in some cases, have they not? A. Certain class of risks they have.
“Q. These applications when .they are made are signed by the insured or parties applying for the insurance? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did Mrs. Hilburn sign any application for this insurance? A. No, sir. . . .”
“Q. You knew whose house she was living in? A. Well, I knew who it' was supposed to belong to, but I didn’t know anything positive about it.
“Q. Who? A. Williams.
“Q. You knew it wasn’t her house, did you? A. No, I didn’t know it wasn’t hers.
“Q. That was your understanding when you were there, that it belonged to Williams? A. Yes, sir, I understood it was Williams’ house; I didn’t understand it was her house.
“Q. When you wrote the daily report and wrote the policy you didn’t understand that Mrs. Hilburn owned the house? A. No, sir.
“Q. You wrote it with the understanding she was renting it? A. Yes, sir.”
*368Knowledge of or notice to an agent acquired by the agent during his agency and referring to a transaction within the scope of his agency is knowledge and notice ■to his principal. [Hayward v. Insurance Co., 52 Mo. 181; Hedrick v. Beeler, 110 Mo. 91, 19 S. W. 492; Thompson v. Traders’ Insurance Co., 169 Mo. loc. cit. 25, 68 S. W. loc. cit. 892; Kenneth Inv. Co. v. Bank, 96 Mo. App. loc. cit. 142, 70 S. W. loc. cit. 178; Columbia Planing Mill Co. v. Insurance Co., 59 Mo. App. 204; Hamilton v. Insurance Co., 94 Mo. loc. cit. 368, 7 S. W. 267; Mers v. Insurance Co., 68 Mo. 127; Riley v. Insurance Co., 117 Mo. App. 229, 92 S. W. 1147.]
Appellant’s instruction number one was therefore properly modified by the court. As it was originally written, it left out and ignored a fact that the evidence tended to establish — that at the time of issuing the policy the agent of the company knew that respondent was a tenant, renting the house in which she lived, and that the household goods were not in a house belonging to her, and the policy was issued and the money received with the understanding that the property insured was in a house in which the plaintiff was a tenant and not owner. The appellant, with that knowledge and that understanding, cannot now be heard to say that the respondent made any misrepresentation or warranty by accepting the policy and that she represented that she owned the premises which she occupied. This point must also be ruled in respondent’s favor.
IX. The further contention is made that there is no proof of the value of the property insured. Where an insurance company takes a risk on property in this State and the value is fixed by the policy and the risk is taken on a given amount, that sum can not be questioned in any proceeding. [R. S. 1899, sec. 7979; Gibson v. Insurance Co., 82 Mo. App. 515; Gragg v. Insurance Co., 132 Mo. App. 405, 111 S. W. 1184; Crossan v. Insurance Co., 133 Mo. App. 537, 113 S. W. 704.] Section *3697979 of the Revised Statutes of 1899 applies to personal property, and a policy covering personal property is a valued policy. [Gibson v. Insurance Co., supra; Howerton v. Insurance Co., 105 Mo. App. loc. cit. 582, 80 S. W. loc. cit. 29; Burge v. Insurance Co., 106 Mo. App. 244, 80 S. W. 342; Hanna v. Insurance Co., 109 Mo. App. loc. cit. 158, 82 S. W. loc. cit. 1116; Gragg v. Insurance Co., supra; Crossan v. Insurance Co., supra.] There was no evidence of any depreciation of the value of the goods insured so that it was not necessary to incorporate the value of the goods in respondent’s instructions.
There are some other errors assigned by appellant, but upon careful examination we find them to be without merit.
We find no error committed by the trial court materially affecting the merits. The judgment is therefore affirmed.
All concur.