Clevinger v. Northwestern National Insurance

Smith, P. J.

This is an action on a fire insurance policy wherein the plaintiff had judgment and the defendant appealed. The question for decision arises on the face of the record proper and is whether the petition states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

Petition It alleges that the defendant by its policy number 563 for a certain premium insured plaintiff against loss by fire “on his stock of goods and fixtures ** by him kept in his store” at, etc., for one year for $1,000 and that while the said-policy was in force the property covered by it was destroyed by fire; that the property so destroyed was of the value of $2,500; that he gave defendant immediate notice of the loss and had performed all the other conditions required by the provisions of said policy; that defendant had refused to pay him the sum due 1 ‘by reason of his said loss, ” etc.

*76Insufancf: pleading: petition: insurable interest. *75It has been declared by both divisions of the court of appeals of this state that if a petition fails to allege the ownership of the goods in-the plaintiff either at the *76time of the issue of the policy or at the time of the fire that it is fatally defective and will not support the judgment. Scott v. Ins. Co., 65 Mo. App. 75; Harness v. Ins. Co., 62 Mo. App. 245; Story v. Ins. Co., 61 Mo. App. 534. And the only question here is whether the petition, the substance of which has just been stated, is sufficient when tested by this rule.

Hardwick v. Ins. Co., 20 Oregon, 547, was where it was alleged in the petition as here that the defendant insured “his dwelling house” and it was ruled an insufficient allegation of plaintiff’s interest. It was there said that the decisions without exception sustain the position that in cases of this kind the complaint must distinctly allege an insurable interest when the policy is taken out and also when the property was damaged by fire, otherwise it does not state a cause of action. The interest of the plaintiff in the property insured is one of the essential facts upon which the right of recovery depends in an action founded on the policy. Chrisman v. Ins. Co., 16 Oregon, 283. Insurance Co. v. Dunbar (Texas S. C.), 26 S. W. Rep. 628, was where it was held that the petition which alleged that the appellant insured the appellee for the term of three years against fire in the sum of $.1,575 “on his one story frame metal roof building, occupied as a dwelling,” etc., did not allege that the appellee had an insurable interest at the time of the insurance; and accordingly the judgment of the lower court, which was for the insured, was reversed. An allegation as to the ownership» of the property covered by the policy similar to that here was declared insufficient in Fowler v. Ins. Co., 26 N. Y. 422.

The cases just referred to, together with those we have cited from our own reports, show that the allegation of the plaintiff’s petition, namely, that the defend*77ant insured the plaintiff against loss by fire “on his stock of goods and fixtures kept in his store” is not the distinctive allegation of an insurable interest of the plaintiff in the property covered by the policy at the time of the issue and delivery of the same to plaintiff which is required by the rule to which we have already adverted. Nor is there any such allegation of interest in plaintiff at thb time of the loss. It is clear that the petition is radically defective in these particulars. It fails to state a cause of action. The petition does not defectively state a cause of action, but according to the adjudications already referred to it states no cause of action at all. The omissions are essential and are not aided by the answer.

NIkvcr:tI0admis Since the petition does not allege an insurable interest either at the time of the issue of the policy or at that of the fire, it is difficult to discover how the mere omission of the answer to deny these two un alleged essential facts can amount, by inevitable implication, to an admission thereof. By no rule of construction, however liberal, with which we are acquainted, are we authorized to interpolate into plaintiff’s petition the omitted essential allegations in relation to the plaintiff’s insurable interest. None of the provisions of our statute of jeofails can be invoked and applied to help the plaintiff out of the predicament in which his inadvertence has placed him. There is nothing left for us to do but to reverse the judgment and remand the cause with leave to plaintiff-to replead.

All concur.