Moore v. Bestline

Opinion bt

Morrison, J.,

The Iron City Mutual Fire Insurance Company issued to the defendant, Bestline, a policy of fire insurance dated and delivered on June 14, 1892, which referred to the application and made the same a part of the contract. The application was not attached to the policy, which contained a clause wherein the defendant waived the benefit of the act of May 11,1881. The case being at issue and on trial, the plaintiff’s counsel made the following offer: “We offer the policy sued upon, No. 4,151, as identified by the witness, as being the original policy issued, for the purpose of showing the liability of the defendant, to be followed by other evidence showing the assessment levied under the decree of the court of Dauphin county.” This offer was objected to by the defendant’s counsel, and the sustaining of the objection and rejection of the offer constitutes the first assignment of error. The court below said: “ The policy offered contains this clause : reference being had to application of assured, which is made a part hereof, and a warranty on part of the assured. The application referred to does not accompany the policy, therefore, the paper offered is not the whole of the contract between the parties, but only a portion thereof. Under the rules of evidence it consequently cannot be received. The fourth objection is sustained and an exception noted for the plaintiff.” The plaintiff’s declaration averred that the company on June 14,1892, issued and delivered to the defendant an assessable policy of fire insurance, which policy remained in force until-June 14, 1897. During the life of this policy the company became liable for expenses incurred and fire losses suffered by its members, which remained unpaid at the time *10plaintiff was appointed receiver. In accordance with the decree of the court of common pleas of Dauphin county, the plaintiff levied an assessment upon defendant’s policy for his proportionate amount of the liabilities incurred by the company during the life of said policy and remaining unpaid. The defendant having refused upon demand to pay the same, this suit was brought to recover the amount assessed. The leading question necessary to be decided is, did the court err in excluding the policy because the application referred to in it was not attached to the policy and did not accompany it ?

Unless the waiver by the assured, the defendant, of the provisions of the Act of May 11, 1881, P. L. 20, will permit the application for insurance to be put in evidence, where it is not attached to the policy, it cannot be claimed that the court committed any error in excluding the application. But the act of 1881 will not bear the construction that a failure to attach the application to the policy furnishes ground for excluding the policy itself. In Imperial Fire Ins. Co. v. Dunham, 117 Pa. 460, the effect of the act of May 11, 1881, was considered and construed by the Supreme Court. In that case “ the policy of insurance contained provisions and covenants on the part of the assured, that the application should be considered a part of this contract, and a warranty by the assured, and that any misstatement of the condition, situation or occupancy of the property insured, or the building or premises containing the same, or any concealment or omission to make known every fact material to the risk or any overvaluation or any misrepresentation whatever, either verbal or in writing, shall render this policy void.” On page 478, Mr. Justice Clabk, speaking for the court, said: “ The application was rightly excluded from the testimony. The provisions of the Act of May 11, 1881, P. L. 20, are conclusive on this point. No copy of the application or of the bylaws of the company was attached to the policy as that act requires ; it constituted, therefore, no part of the policy or of the contract between the parties, and was not receivable in evidence. The case is to be considered as if no such paper existed.” This was a case against the insurance company, and the plaintiff was allowed to recover upon the policy excluding the application and by-laws notwithstanding the fact that the policy provided that the application should be considered a part of the *11contract. This case was cited and approved in Norristown Title, etc., Co. v. Hancock Ins. Co., 132 Pa. 885. This doctrine is again affirmed in Hebb v. Ins. Co., 138 Pa. 174. To the same effect is Morris v. State Mnt. Life Assurance Company, 183 Pa. 563. This rule has been applied in many other cases by our Supreme Court, and we are not aware that it has ever been questioned. In Mahon et ux. v. Ins. Co., 144 Pa. 409, it is squarely decided that where the application was not attached to the policy as required by the act of 1881, it forms no part of the contract, and cannot be received in evidence. “ The case is to be considered as if no such paper existed.’ ’ In that case the policy was admitted in evidence. The law seems to be well settled that where the application is not attached to the policy the case is to be considered and disposed of as if no such paper existed. In other words the failure to comply with the act of 1881 renders the application void. It is true that these decisions are in cases where the suits were against the insurance companies, but if the application is to be treated as if it never existed, we are unable to see how it is to be used as a reason for excluding the policy in a case like the one under consideration. “ The essential principle on which mutual companies are organized, is that each member will pay his proportionate share of expenses incurred, and losses which happen during the period of his membership : ” People’s Fire Insurance Company v. Hartshorne, 90 Pa. 465. By the very terms expressed therein the defendant held his policy in consideration of acknowledged liability to assessments. The company issuing the policy being a mutual company, the policy under the law was liable to assessment levied under the direction of the board of directors, or the court, for its proportion of the losses and expenses accruing during its life. Kramer v. Boggs, 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 394;. Schofield v. Leach, 15 Pa. Superior Ct. 354; Schofield v. Hayes, 17 Pa. Superior Ct. 110. It does not appear that it is necessarjr for the plaintiff in makng the assessment in suit to refer to either the application of the defendant or the by-laws of the company in order to determine the liability of the defendant. But one element of the contract not contained in the policy was needed in order to ascertain the defendant’s obligation under the same, viz: the basis rate of assessment, and that, as we understand, was contained neither in the application nor in *12the by-laws. The basis rate was entered on the books of the company at the place where the record of the particular policy was kept. This practice of the company not being regulated by any by-law, and the basis rate not having been written in the application, the proof of the same was not governed by the provisions of the act of 1881. Why then was it not competent for the plaintiff after putting the policy in evidence to prove by oral testimony, and the records of the company, both the general method of fixing the basis rate and the particular basis rate of the policy in suit? Lenox v. Greenwich Ins. Co., 165 Pa. 575, fully authorizes oral proof of such portions of the contract of insurance as are not in writing.

Now then, if the effect of the insurance policy issued by the company, and accepted by the defendant, was to constitute him a member of this mutual fire insurance company, and to render him legally liable for assessments, and if the company had become insolvent, and a receiver appointed and lawful assessments made by authority of the court of common pleas of Dauphin county, and if the basis rate of these assessments was a matter of oral proof, then we cannot see why the plaintiff was not entitled to have the policy go in evidence, and proceed'to make out a case if he could in accordance with his several offers. The grave error committed by the court below was in excluding the policy because the application was not attached to it. But the law only requires that the application shall be excluded. It has no reference to the policy, and we know of no decision which will in any degree sustain the court in excluding the policy. It was excluded on the ground that the policy and the application together constituted tbe contract, but the decisions of the Supreme Court, supra, clearly show that tlie application, not being attached to the policy, was void and constituted no part of the contract. As was said in one of the cases, it was as if it never existed. Such being the law, how can a paper which never existed, in law, be used as a basis for the exclusion of the contract, which was executed and delivered between the company and the assured ?

We have thus far considered this matter as if there had been no waiver or attempted waiver by the assured of the benefits of the act of May 11, 1881. But the policy shows that he waived the right to have the application attached to the policy. *13While it is urged that it would be against public policy to sustain this waiver, we are not convinced that any principle of public policy goes so far as to render void a waiver of this character. We do not see how anybody is injured by the assured stipulating in writing that the application or a copy of it need not be attached to his policy. But we are so clearly of the opinion that in rejecting the policy as complained of in the first assignment of error, the court below committed reversible error, that it becomes unnecessary to consider the other assignments of error, and taking this view of the case we do not decide that the defendant is or is not bound by the waiver of the benefit of the act of 1881. And inasmuch as the case will go back for retrial, we deem it unnecessary to pass upon any of the assignments of error except the first. The plaintiff’s declaration avers that the defendant was a member of this mutual insurance company at least from June 14,1892 to June 14,1897, and that he paid five several assessments upon his policy. If this is so, perhaps a large number of persons became members of the company during the time that he was a member, and some of them may have been influenced by the fact that he was a member of the company and his property insured therein. If all this is true, and we ought now to assume that it can be proved, then manifestly this defendant should not escape paying his share of the losses incurred by his company because his application was not attached to his policy. It would seem that he was as much bound to know the law as the officers of the company, and if he was willing to accept the policy and enjoy its protection for five years or more, it does not seem to us that he can escape paying his share of the losses for the reason alleged. It may be that there are other legal reasons why no recovery can be had against him, but we are of the opinion that the policy should be admitted in evidence, and it will be time enough to determine that the plaintiff cannot recover when all of the legal evidence is admitted.

The first assignment of error is sustained, the judgment reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.