Plaintiff’s assignor, Joseph M. Lenhoff, was engaged in the clothing business in Fast Saginaw in February, 1887. His stock was insured to the amount of §13,000 in seven companies, of which the defendant was one, having a policy of 82,000. A fire occurred in the .store February 20, resulting in a total destruction of part of the stock, and damage to the rest. Among the provisions of this policy are the following :
“All fraud or attempt at fraud, by false swearing or otherwise, shall cause a forfeiture of all claims on this •company under this policy.”
“ When property is damaged, the assured shall forthwith cause it to be put in order, assorting and arranging the various articles according to their kinds, separating the damaged from the undamaged, and shall cause an inventory to be made and furnished to the company of the whole, naming the quantity, quality, and cost of each article. The amount of sound value, and of the loss or damage, shall he determined by agreement between the •company and the assured; but if at any time differences shall arise as to the amount of any loss or damage, or as to any question, matter, or thing concerning or arising out of this insurance, every such difference shall, at the written request of either party, be submitted, at equal •expense, of the parties, to competent and impartial persons, one to be chosen by each party, and the two so chosen shall select an umpire to act with them in case ■of their disagreement; and the award, in writing, of any two of them shall be binding and conclusive as to the amount of such loss or damage, or as to any question, matter, or thing so submitted, but shall not decide the liability of this company; and until such proofs, declarations, and certificates are produced, and examinations and appraisals permitted, the loss shall not be payable. There can be no abandonment to the company of the property insured, but the company reserve the right to take the whole or any part thereof, at its appraised value; and provided, further, that it shall be optional with the company to repair, rebuild, replace, or restore the property lost or damaged within a reasonable time, giving notice *214of their intention so to do within thirty days after the receipt of the proofs herein required.55
“The assured shall, if required, submit to an examination or examinations under oath by any person appointed by the company.55
“It is furthermore hereby expressly provided and mutually agreed that no suit or action against this company for the recovery of any claim by virtue of this policy shall be sustainable in any court of law or chancery until after an award shall have been obtained fixing the amount of such claim in the manner above provided.55
Two days after the fire the adjusters for the several companies met to investigate the loss. Being unable to agree, the adjusters made an oral request for arbitration. To this Lenhoif assented, and March 8 an agreement for submission was duly executed by him and the caippanies interested. The parties agreed upon were Carl Heaven-rich and Fred Osborn, with one James C. Mercer as umpire in case of their disagreement. This agreement-had the following clause:
“It is understood and agreed that the appraisers are not to take into account or to consider the question of merchandise totally consumed.55
On the same day the appraisers accepted and qualified' by taking the proper oath. They completed their work on the 10th, and agreed without any intervention of the umpire. The award was written out and ready for signatures on March 10. Mr. Osborn signed the award; Mr. Heavenrich, under the direction of Lenhoif, refused to-sign. They found the value of the goods before the fire to be $5,890.88, and the damage to be $4,858.11. This-did not include the goods totally destroyed. On the same day plaintiff’s assignor, under the advice of his counsel, revoked the arbitration in writing, in which he said to the defendant and the other insurance companies:
“I have elected, and do hereby elect, to cancel, annul, *215and revoke the same, and I decline to proceed with or be bound thereby.”
The reason for this revocation as given by his attorney upon the trial was that the agreement for arbitration did not embrace the whole controversy, but involved only the damage to the goods injured, and not the damage resulting from those totally destroyed. No such reason, however, was given to the defendant, and no request was then made by Lenhoff for any such submission.
March 17 Lenhoff submitted his proofs of loss to the defendant. April 2 defendant wrote Lenhoff, notifying him that the proofs were insufficient, and not in accordance with the terms of the policy. May 3 Lenhoff submitted his second proofs of loss, duly verified, in which -he adopted, item by item, the valuation agreed upon by the arbitrators.
Immediately after serving his notice of revocation upon the companies he procured an appraisal to be made by two men, and proceeded at once to sell the goods, all of which he sold before July 4. May 18 defendant, by letter, notified Lenhoff that he was required to submit to an examination under oath by Mr. O. S. Draper, at his office in East Saginaw, on May 25, touching his loss by fire, and the liability of defendant under its policy. Lenhoff appeared, and submitted to such examination. August 6 Lenhoff wrote defendant as follows:
“ Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance Company,—
“ Gentlemen: On May 25 last, at your request and that of other companies who had written upon my stock, I submitted to an examination, and produced before the-agents and attorneys who conducted the same for the insurance companies such of my books and papers as were called for. At the conclusion of that examination I was informed by your attorney that an early answer would be given me as to the course the several companies proposed to pursue, since which time I have heard nothing from you. Eor the purpose of arriving at a speedy *216settlement of my -claim, I hereby offer to submit the question of my loss and damage under your policy number 996 to arbitration, and I request that said arbitration be entered into pursuant to the terms and conditions of said policy. Please favor me with an early reply, and oblige,
“ Yours truly, J. M. Lenhoee.'’*
To this letter defendant replied as follows:
“East Saginaw, Mich., Aug. 17, '87.
“J. M. Lenhoee, Esq.,—
“Bear Sir: In reply to your offer to the several insurance companies having policies on your stock of clothing, etc., recently destroyed by fire, to arbitrate the question of liability and amount of loss, etc., we, as attorneys for the companies, inform you that they decline so to do. You having assigned your claims to a trustee, as we are informed, would render an arbitration somewhat uncertain. This, with other reasons not necessary to mention, leads the several companies to the conclusion that the differences between you and them had better be settled in the court of law than' otherwise.
“Yours, etc., Wisner & Draper."
This closed all communication and correspondence between the parties, and thereupon the plaintiff, to whom Lenhoff had assigned the policy April 5, brought this suit. The deplaration did not set forth the policy in full, but only its tenor and effect, giving its date and number, and alleging the loss. It made no reference to any" of the terms and conditions of the policy above set forth. The plea was the general issue, with notice that Lenhoff had made false statements as to the goods which he claimed were entirely destroyed by the fire, and as to the amount and value theaeof, with intent to defraud the defendant, and that said policy was therefore void.
Two appraisals were introduced in evidence, — that of the arbitrators above given, and that of the two persons employed by Lenhoff, who appraised .the original value of the goods not totally destroyed at $6,712.13. The jury *217found the value of the goods totally destroyed to be $5,110, and the sound value of the goods not totally destroyed to have been $5,890. The lowest damage to the latter under the evidence and charge of the court was $4,858.11. The least total loss, therefore, should have been $9,908.11, of which the defendant’s share would have been two-thirteenths, or $1,533, with three years’ interest to be added. But the jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for but $951.29, — a verdict inconsistent with their special findings and the evidence.
1. When the plaintiff had rested his case, defendant’s counsel moved the court to direct a vertict for the defendant, upon the ground that the suit was permaturely brought under the plaintiff’s own showing, no award having been made as provided in the policy. The court denied the motion, and one ground for his ruling appears to have been that no notice of this defense had been attached to the plea. Defendant then asked leave to amend, which the court denied. While the ruling of the court denying the motion was correct for reasons to be hereinafter stated, we think that those specific rulings were erroneous. If any notice had been necessary, the amendment should have been allowed. But the precise point was put in issue by the declaration and the plea, under Circuit Court Eule No. 104. While under this rule the policy need not have been set forth in hc&c verla, or according to its legal effect, yet the rule of evidence was not changed, and proofs must be made in the same way as if the declaration had set forth the policy in full. When the declaration is upon a written contract, under a plea of the general issue the defendant may show, upon cross-examination of plaintiff’s witnesses or otherwise, a non-compliance with any of the conditions of the contract which will defeat recovery.
We are not to be understood as holding that under *218such circumstances it is the duty of the trial judge to charge the jury as requested. The trial judge is under no obligation to charge the jury until both parties have rested, and announced the testimony as closed. The defendant may, if he chooses, rest upon the plaintiff's showing. Until he has so announced to the court, he is not in position to legally insist upon instruction to the j«ry.
2. The judge charged the jury that—
“ The company, or its adjusters appeared to have acquiesced in the right of Mr. Lenhoff at that time to revoke this submission, to arbitration.''
This was error, but harmless, because, under the author, ities, the company's right to insist upon that as a defense had been-waived. Lenhoff and defendant, by this agreement to arbitrate the damage to the goods which could be identified, had waived any other arbitration and award provided for by the policy. By his revocation Lenhoff violated his agreement, and lost his right to sue upon the-policy, which could only be regained by a seasonable offer to submit the amount of damages to arbitration. His offer of August 6 came too late. He had disposed of the goods. He had deprived the defendant of the valuable-right provided by the policy to take them at the appraisal. The silence of defendant's adjuster at the time did not-constitute an acquiescence in the revocation. After that defendant was not called upon to speak or act until some affirmative action was taken by Lenhoff. This is clearly within the principle of Chippewa Lumber Co. v. Phenix Insurance Co., 80 Mich. 116. But more than two months-after this revocation defendant demanded of Lenhoff that he submit to an examination under oath. See above letters of May 18 and August 6. By so doing defendant subjected him to additional costs and expense. This conduct was entirely inconsistent with the idea that defend*219ant insisted upon tliis forfeiture. This is directly within the rule in Marthinson v. Insurance Co., 64 Mich. 372, 383; Titus v. Insurance Co., 81 N. Y. 410, 418.
3. Plaintiff's assignor submitted the second proofs of loss with a full knowledge of the value of the goods which were not totally destroyed. He had the itemized appraisal of the arbitrators. He had also the appraisal of his own ex parte appraisers. If there was any mistake or fraud — which upon this record he does not appear to claim — he then knew it. He chose to adopt under his oath the appraisal made by the arbitrators, in Avhich appeared every article of goods, and the amount of the damage thereto. In the absence of fraud or mistake, this Avas binding upon him, and the circuit court should have so instructed the jury.
4. The court instructed the jury that—
“Proof of fraud should be of such a character as to be inconsistent Avith any other view than that Mr. Lenhoff was guilty of fraud."
This was error. It was in effect saying to them that defendant must establish fraud beyond a reasonable doubt. It cannot be said that his further instruction that they “should deal Avith that question precisely as Avith any other question of fact, viewing it reasonably, weighing it and acting upon it upon the same testimony, and using the same reason in arriving at results, as you do upon any other branch of the case," modified this charge. The court had previously said to the jury:
“The burden of proof is upon the party who alleges fraud to make the same clearly and satisfactorily appear to you."
This was correct, and was as strong a statement of the rule as plaintiff was entitled to. If the charge had stopped Avith this statement, no error would have been committed.
*2205. The circuit court'charged the jury as follows:
“The only proof in the case as to the value of the goods not totally consumed which remained capable of being appraised is embraced in this appraisal of Osborn and Heavenrich, adopted in the final'proofs of loss, or in the appraisal made by Mr. Young and Mr. Bendit. It is for you to pass between the two, and to adopt that which, in view of the history of the case, and the acts of the parties, and the method in which it was made, gives you the best assurance that it represents the true and actual value of those goods thus submitted to appraisal.”
Under this charge the only verdict which the jury could render in favor of the- plaintiff would have been one for at least $1,533, with three years’ interest. The jury evidently ignored the charge of the court and the evidence in the case, and agreed upon a compromise verdict outside the evidence. Such verdicts cannot and ought not to stand. Juries are sworn to decide according to the law and the evidence. Whenever they disregard either or both, courts should promptly set them aside upon the motion of either party,, if not upon their own motion. Suitors bring their cases into court to be determined in accordance with the facts and their legal rights. Any other disposition of their cases is contrary to law and justice. Such illegal conduct in jurors should be promptly rebuked by the trial courts by setting aside the verdict.
Judgment is reversed, with the costs of this Court, and a new trial ordered.
Ohamplin, O. J., Morse and McG-rath, JJ., concurred. Long, J., did not sit.