DocketNumber: No. 2378
Judges: Gordon
Filed Date: 12/18/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/16/2024
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action upon a policy of insurance issued by appellant insuring respondent
1. The first contention is that the court erred in overruling a demurrer to the complaint. The ground upon which this objection proceeds is that the complaint does not anywhere show that the insured and the company had reached an adjustment regarding the amount of the loss, or that there had been an appraisement thereof as provided by the terms of the policy. And it is argued in support of the demurrer that the contract of insurance arising upon a policy containing the terms and conditions included in the policy in question is not an agreement on the part of the insurance company to pay any fixed sum, but merely to pay such sum as may be found to be due
2. It is next contended that the court erred in overruling the objection of the defendant to the introduction of any evidence and denying defendant’s motion for a judgment upon the pleadings. This contention is that, inasmuch as the pleadings disclose that an award had been made, such award was binding and conclusive on the parties until it was set aside by a competent court. We cannot agree with the claim of appellant that the pleadings show that an award was
3. The sufficiency of the evidence to entitle the plaintiff to recover upon the issue submitted to the jury is also made a ground of contention. In substance the record shows that the insurance companies having the insurance upon the property in question attempted, through their adjusters, to agree with respondent upon the amount of loss sustained by him, and, being unable to agree, an appraisement was demanded by them. Respondent acquiesced in this demand and appointed one Confare as his appraiser, and the companies selected one George Gosten as their appraiser. Thereupon the plaintiff furnished these appraisers with a list of the property upon which he claimed to have sustained loss. Thereafter, being unable to agree upon some of the items, the appraisers agreed upon one Jager as umpire. The agreement for arbitration was contained in a printed blank furnished by the adjuster of the appellant. This blank contained provisions which were at variance, and not in accordance, with the terms of the policies. Each appraiser kept a separate list of the items and the amount of the loss. In the main they were able to agree upon the items without appealing to the umpire. The items of losses so kept by the appraisers were
“Touching this defense you are instructed, that the arbitration award for nineteen hundred dollars was ineffectual to bind the parties because of the admitted fact that the wrong amount was stated therein; and the arbitrators failing thereafter to make any award, and the parties never having proceeded to a new arbitration, the question here for your determination is as to whose fault was it that no new arbitration was entered upon. If it was by fault of the plaintiff, then he is without right to maintain this action here; but if it was by fault of the defendant company, then the plaintiff may rightfully maintain his action.
“ When the plaintiff and defendant company ascertained and knew that the award made by the arbitrators selected was ineffectual, and that no agreement could be reached by them, it was the duty of the defendant as well as the plaintiff to disclaim right thereunder and proffer readiness to proceed with a new arbitration. If you find from the evidence that the defendant company insisted on holding plaintiff to the terms of the award, after knowing the said fact of a wrong amount therein, and did not disclaim right to hold plaintiff thereto, then the plaintiff had a right to commence and maintain this his action in the court here for the recovery of whatever damage he had sus*238 tained by loss or injury to the property described in the policy; but if you find that the defendant company is clear of fault in this respect, then the plaintiff is without right to maintain this action, and your verdict will be for the defendant company.”
From the verdict arrived at we are bound to presume that the jury found that it was the fault of the company that no new arbitration was entered upon, and we are unable to say that such finding is not without sufficient evidence to support it.
4. Instructions Nos. 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 11 requested by appellant were properly refused, because the condition of the record did not justify their submission. Nor did the court err in refusing to give instructions Nos. 13 and 14 requested by the defendant. This leads to an affirmance of the judgment.” But there is another reason why the judgment should be affirmed. The agreement for submission, being in terms materially different from that provided by the policy, constituted a waiver of the right to demand a new appraisement pursuant to the terms of the policy.
“ When defendant elected to take an appraisement which was not such as its policy gave it a right to demand and insist upon, it waived whatever right it might otherwise have had to insist upon the appraisement provided for in the policies.” Harrison v. German-American Fire Ins. Co., 67 Fed. 577; Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Alvord, 61 Fed. 752; Adams v. N. Y. Bowery Ins Co., 85 Iowa, 6 (51 N. W. 1149).
In the case last cited, the supreme court of Iowa say:
“ By entering into an agreement of submission not in accord with the provisions of the policy, and standing on the validity of an award made under such submission, the defendant must be held to have waived the right (if it had any) to insist that an award must*239 be made in accordance with the terms of the policy before suit could be commenced thereon.”
Affirmed.
Dunbar and Scott, JJ., concur.