— The petition alleges, in substance, that on tbe fifteenth day of June, 1891, the plaintiff entered into an oral contract of insurance with one of the defendant’s local agents, who had authority to make contracts of insurance and to issue policies, by which the defendant, through its said agent, agreed to insure against fire the plaintiff’s “stock of drugs, candies, nuts; etc., and drug house.furniture,” for the space of one year fcr the sum of $800; that the plaintiff paid the premium, and that the agent agreed to deliver to plaintiff one of the defendant’s policies setting forth the terms of the insurance. The averments then follow, that before the policy was issued, to-wit, on the twenty-ninth day of June, 1891, the property insured was totally destroyed by fire, and that the defendant had refused to pay the loss. But there is no express averment, nor any averment by intendment even, that the plaintiff himself had complied with any conditions imposed upon him by the contract or policy of insurance. The answer was a general denial.
On the trial the defendant objected to the intro*357duction of any evidence for the reason that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court overruled the objection, and the defendant excepted. At the close of the plaintiff ’s evidence, and also at the close of all the .evidence, the defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that upon the pleadings and evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, which the court refused to do, and the defendant excepted. The cause was submitted to the jury, and the result was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $800. The defendant has appealed.
Complaint is made in this court as to the sufficiency of the petition; the action of the court in permitting the plaintiff to introduce any evidence thereunder; the refusal of the court to direct a nonsuit; that the plaintiff’s instructions enlarge the issues; that the full amount of the verdict was not authorized by the pleadings; and that the court committed error in rejecting competent evidence offered by the defendant.
We are of the opinion that the petition fails to state a cause of action, and, therefore, the objection to the introduction of any evidence was improperly overruled. For the same reason, and for the further reason that the facts proved were not sufficient to warrant a recovery, the defendant’s instruction for nonsuit ought to have been given.
The validity of an oral contract of insurance was at one time questioned, but the settled opinion now seems to be that such a contract is valid. Mr. May in his work on insurance'says: “On principle it would seem that at common law there could be no objection to an oral contract to make an insurance in future; or to issue a policy at. a time named, or within a reasonable time, holding the applicant insured meanwhile (this is the usual agreement); or to insure nozo, making the full nontract by parol, without any expectation of a policy.” *3581 May on Insurance, section 23 d.
Under the averments of the petition in the case at bar the oral contract was one for present insurance upon the further agreement that a policy should thereafter be issued. Under such a contract the law will imply such conditions and requirements as are contained in policies usually issued by the defendant on similar risks. This is the rule as declared by Mr. May, who says: “The terms of the agreement for a policy not specified are presumed to be those of the ordinary policies issued by the same insurers on similar risks.”' 1 May on Insurance [3 Ed.], section. 23. This test is well supported by the decided cases.
In the case of Eureka Insurance Co. v. Robinson (56 Pa. St. 256), the action was upon a memorandum of insurance, the loss having occurred before the policy was issued. The court held: “There having been no policy issued, and nothing more than the memorandum above quoted entered upon the docket of the insurers, the Contract is to be regarded as made upon the terms and subject to the conditions contained in the ordinary form of policies used by the company at the time.”
The same question arose incidentally in the case of Hubbard v. Insurance Co. (33 Iowa, 325). There the defendant sought to avoid its policy, on the ground that the plaintiff had violated the terms of the policy by taking other insurance without notice to the defendant. Subsequently to the date of the policy in suit, the plaintiff applied to another company for additional insurance on the same property.' The agent gave the plaintiff a receipt for the premium, specifying the property insured and stipulating that a policy would be issued a*s soon as a blank should be received. Speaking of the effect of this receipt as a contract, the court said: “It must be conceded that, if it bound the company at all, and its binding effect cannot be denied, *359it raised a contract of insurance in all respects like the contracts of the company as expressed in the policies commonly issued by them. The agent was not clothed with power to vary or change the policies Of the company, and it cannot be presumed that such a thing was contemplated by either the agent orithe assured, when the receipt was executed. The transaction, then, was a contract for insurance upon the usual terms and conditions, as expressed in the policy which the agent was empowered to issue.”
The same court in a subsequent case, presenting a similar state of facts (Smith v. Ins. Co., 64 Iowa, 716), reaffirmed its decision on the same question. The court also held that the plaintiff was bound to take notice of the terms and conditions of the policy, and, no policy having been issued, it was was his duty to call on the defendant to furnish him with a blank policy in order that he might acquaint himself with its conditions, and, if the defendant had refused to comply with such a request, such refusal could have been treated by the plaintiff as a waiver of all conditions.
The same question was again before the supreme court of Iowa in the case of Barre v. Ins. Co. (76 Iowa, 609). There the premium was paid upon an agreement to issue a policy. Before the policy was issued the property insured was burned. It was said by the court: “In our opinion, the district court rightly directed a verdict for 1 defendant. While the action is not upon the policy of insurance, it cannot be doubted that defendant’s liability must be determined by the terms and conditions of the policy, which also must determine the plaintiff’s measure of damages in case he recovers. The action is on an agreement to issue a policy. Now, it is plain that plaintiff’s damages are just what he would have recovered if the policy had been issued and the suit brought thereon. It is also *360plain that defendant undertook to issue a policy in the usual form of its policies covering like risks. The law will presume that the minds of the contracting parties met upon a contract containing the terms and conditions of the policy usually issued by defendant covering like risks. The contract sued on contained no conditions. But it was not a contract of insurance, but a contract to issue a policy which would be a contract of insurance. But what kind of a policy was to be issued? Plainly just such a policy as defendant usually issued in such cases. Smith v. Ins. Co., 64 Iowa, 716; Hubbard v. Ins. Co., 33 Iowa, 325. Defendant’s policy issued-in cases of this kind required immediate notice of the loss to be given, and a statement of its particulars,- as above stated. No attempt was made to give this notice and the statement. Under the terms of the policy the noncompliance with this condition defeats recovery on the policy.”
To the same effect is the decision of the supreme court of Wisconsin in the case of Fuller v. Ins. Co., (36 Wis. 599). So the supreme court of Minnesota has adopted the same rule. Salisbury v. Ins. Co., 32 Minn. 458. The court of appeals of New York had the same question before it (DeGrove v. Ins. Co., 61 N. Y. 594), in which it was held substantially that an agent of an insurance company had apparent authority-only to make contracts of insurance upon .the conditions contained in his company’s policies in ordinary use, and that, when such an agent delivered to the applicant a receipt for the' premium which contained a statement of the risk insured, such receipt was ■simply evidence'that ■ the assured was entitled to a policy in the usual form, and that such policy was to be looked to, to ascertain the limitations and conditions of the contract.
Now, if the foregoing cases declare the correct *361doctrine, of which we have no doubt, it was necessary to the statement of a cause of action for the plaintiff to set forth in his petition the terms and conditions of such a policy, and aver specifically their; performance, or to aver generally that he had performed all the conditions found in such a policy. These were constitutive facts and under all rules of pleading ought to have been averred. This question of pleading was referred to incidentally in the case of Smith, v. Ins. Co., supra. There plaintiff failed to plead the terms of the policy, but the defendant in his answer did set forth its conditions and limitations, and the case was tried on the issues as made by the answer. Under that state of the pleading, the Iowa court held that it was not necessary for it to inquire whether or not it was necessary for the plaintiff to set out in his petition the form of the policy. In the later case of Barre v. Ins. Co., supra, the plaintiff, by amendments .to¡his .petition, was,.compelled to set forth the terms' of the policy.
Our conclusion is in no way opposed to the decision of the Kansas City court of appeals in the case of Lingenfelter v. Ins. Co. (19 Mo. App. 252). In that case the plaintiff set forth in his petition the contract of insurance; that it was agreed that defendant would, within a reasonable time, after making the contract, issue to the plaintiff a policy in the usual form of policies issued by the defendant, and that he had performed and faithfully complied with all of the requirements of the contract. The court, although deciding that the petition was defective for lack of certainty, and that advantage of such defect ought to have been taken by demurrer or motion, held that it:was good after vprdict —in other words, that there was an' imperfect statement, and not an absolute failure to aver the material fact that the plaintiff had performed all of the conditions of the policy. &
*362We therefore conclude that the plaintiff’s petition failed to state a cause of action, and that the circuit court committed error in overruling the defendant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence.
In view of a probable retrial, we deem it proper to refer to the plaintiff’s evidence as to the value of the goods destroyed. The only testimony on that subject was that of the plaintiff himself. He said that he supposed that his stock of drugs was worth $500 or $600; that he thought the patent medicines were worth $130, and so on through the list. As the plaintiff’s books and papers were consumed by the fire, and no inventory was taken at the time the insurance was made, it was impossible for him to furnish an itemized statement of his stock. But the record shows that he bought the stock for $115, only a short time before the fire, at which time the goods invoiced about $225, which we assume was the cost price. Taking that invoice as a basis, it was certainly within the power of the plaintiff to show the amounts of his subsequent purchases and his average daily sales, thus furnishing some tangible evidence upon which' the jury could approximately determine the extent of the loss. As it was, the plaintiff was permitted to guess at the value first, and the jury next, and upon the duplicate guesses the verdict was based.
We would also suggest that a more definite description of the property insured than that found in the petition would be better.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded. Judge Rombauer concurs; Judge Bond dissents, and, as he is of the opinion that this decision is opposed to that of the Kansas City court of appeals in the case of Lingenfelter v. Ins. Co., supra, the cause will be certified to the supreme court.