The policy contained conditions that in case of loss the insured shall forthwith give notice thereof to the secretary of the company, and within thirty days after the loss shall also deliver to the secretary a particular account of the loss. It is claimed on the part of the defendant that neither of these conditions was complied with.
The defendant was a Pennsylvania company, and in 1869 *Page 276 Strand Brown were its local agents at Montrose in that State. They gave Nichols, who did business at Elmira, in this State, authority to receive applications for insurance for them, and for that purpose furnished him with blank applications. Oakley, Clapp Co., to whose rights plaintiffs have succeeded, delivered their application for insurance to Nichols, and he forwarded it to Strand Brown, and they forwarded it to the company. It then issued the policy and sent it to Strand Brown, and they delivered it to Nichols, and he to the insured, Oakley, Clapp Co. The policy took effect April first. They retained the policy until June, when desiring to make some alterations in the insured property, they made application to Nichols for the consent of the company, and delivered to him their policy to have the consent indorsed thereon. The policy was forwarded to the company, and it retained the policy and canceled it. The insured several times applied to Nichols for the policy and it was not returned to them, and they had no notice that it had been canceled. On the 20th of January, 1870, the property was destroyed by fire. Shortly before the fire, Baldwin Wells had been appointed local agents of the defendant near the property insured, and the insured gave them notice of the fire in a day or two after its occurrence and the general agent of the company, who received information of the fire, shortly thereafter visited the location of the insured property and had an interview with one of the insured about the loss. The insured, not having possession of the policy, had no knowledge that any other or further notice was necessary, and first learned that they were required to give the notice to the secretary of the defendant on the fifteenth of February after the fire. They then called at the office of the company and asked to see the policy which had been issued to them, and being refused, they asked for a blank policy like the one which had been issued, and that being furnished, they first learned that the notice was required to be given to the secretary, and they immediately gave it. This notice was given on the twenty-sixth day after the fire; and the question is, whether, *Page 277 under all the circumstances, it was given "forthwith," within the meaning of the policy. The word "forthwith" does not here mean immediately or instantaneously after the fire. It means, and has been held to mean, within a reasonable time or with reasonable diligence after the fire. (N.Y. Cen. Ins. Co. v. Nat.Protection Ins. Co., 20 Barb., 468; Inman v. Western FireIns. Co., 12 Wend., 452.) What is a reasonable time depends upon all the circumstances of the case. Here the notice having been given to the defendant's agents and no suggestion made by them that any other notice was required, and the general agent and adjuster of the defendant also having had notice of the fire, and having visited the locality and conversed with one of the insured about the loss, the insured had no reason to suppose that any other notice was necessary; and the policy being, without their fault, out of their possession, they did not know what it required. Hence the giving of the notice to the secretary as soon as they learned, by the exercise of reasonable diligence, that it was necessary, was, under the circumstances of this case, within a reasonable time, forthwith, within the meaning of the policy.
It is true that the judge at the Circuit held, as matter of law, that the notice had not been served within a reasonable time, and left it to the jury to find that the notice had been waived. The only facts of which a waiver could be predicated are that when the notice of loss was given to the secretary on the twenty-sixth day after the fire, he claimed that the company had no risk upon the property destroyed and did not take the ground that the notice was too late. These facts do not show a waiver of notice. The secretary, believing that the policy had been properly canceled and that the risk had been thus terminated, took that ground and said nothing about any other. No other ground of defence was waived. The insured were not misled. If the notice, when served, was too late, there was no way in which they could remedy it. The sole question was whether the notice was served in a reasonable time, and the facts being undisputed, that was a question of law which the judge should have determined in favor of *Page 278 the plaintiff. (Roth v. The Buffalo and State Line R.R. Co.,34 N.Y., 548; Hedge v. The Hudson River R.R. Co., 49 id., 223; Witbeck v. Holland, 45 id., 13.) No harm, therefore, was done to the defendant by the disposition of this question of notice at the Circuit.
The proofs of loss were furnished to the company on the thirtieth day after the fire. The fire occurred on the twentieth day of January and the proofs were furnished on the nineteenth day of February, and, hence, the claim that they were not furnished in time is unfounded.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.