(after stating the facts). — 1. The conditions in an insurance policy requiring immediate notice of the loss and proofs to be furnished within sixty days are reasonable requirements, and as such, are universally upheld by the courts, therefore the law is well settled to the effect that before a recovery can be had on a policy containing the conditions in that behalf to be found in the policy in suit, it must affirmatively be shown that the required notice had been given within a reasonable time after the loss and that the proofs have been rendered within the time specified in the policy or *180a waiver of such conditions of the policy by the insurance company acting through some officer authorized to represent it in the matter pertaining to the adjustment and settlement of such loss, must be established. [Summers v. Western Home Ins. Co., 45 Mo. App. 46; LaForce v. Williams City Fire Ins. Co., 43 Mo. App. 518; Gale v. State Ins. Co., 33 Mo. App. 518; Okey v. State Ins. Co., 29 Mo. App. 105; Exchange Bank v. Thuringia, 109 Mo. App. 654, 83 S. W. 534.]
In the case at bar, there is no pretense made that proof of loss was furnished within the time required. The requirement of notice and proof of loss is a formal condition introduced into the policy solely for the benefit of the insurer and it may be waived by it. The waiver may be expressed or it may be by implication and inferred from the acts and conduct of the insurer, evidencing a recognition of liability, or from their denial of obligation, exclusively for other reasons than the insufficiency or entire want of such proofs, and it is settled that the waiver of such notice or proofs operates to strike the condition requiring them out of the contract of insurance. [LaForce v. Williams, supra; Pa. Fire Ins. Co. v. Dougherty, 102 Pa. St. 568; West Rockingham Ins. Co. v. Sheets & Co., 26 Grat. (Va.) 854; Roberts v. Ins. Co., 94 Mo. App. 142, 72 S. W. 144; Porter v. Germ. Amer. Ins. Co., 62 Mo. App. 520; Flanders on Insurance, p. 541-542.]
It is contended on behalf of respondent that such proofs were waived by the insurance company in this case and the trial court so found the fact to be. The question of waiver is usually a mixed question of law and fact. In a case of express waiver, and in a case where the act or conduct of the insurer has been so definite and certain as to amount to a waiver in that behalf, in accordance with the settled rules of law; that is, in a case where the evidence of waiver is so convincing that reasonable men could not differ as to the result thereof, the court is authorized to declare a waiver as *181a matter of law. Ordinarily, however, it is a question of fact for the jury or for the court sitting as a jury trying the facts. It is the province of the court to determine whether or not there is any evidence to support the alleged claim of waiver. The weight and sufficiency of the evidence is purely a question for the jury or the court sitting as a jury trying the facts. Each case must depend upon its own peculiar circumstances and surroundings. The doctrine of this court is that ordinarily, a waiver is a question of intention. It is often dealt with and ascertained in accordance with the principle of estoppel. [Summers v. Ins. Co., 45 Mo. App. 46; Okey v. Ins. Co., 29 Mo. App. 105; Ehrlich v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 88 Mo. 249; Noonan v. Hartford Ins. Co., 21 Mo. 90; 2 Wood on Ins. (2 Ed.), sec. 442-443.]
While the matter of ivaiver, as above stated, is frequently predicated upon the doctrine of estoppel by the courts, and while, as a general proposition, there could be no estoppel except where the party against whom the estoppel is sought to be invoked is in possession of all of the facts and acts understandingly and intentionally in the matter of waiver of his rights in the premises, it is the generally accepted law on the subject and the rule is satisfied when one being in possession of the facts, so conducts himself thereabout within the time provided in the policy, as would lead a reasonably prudent person to believe that he intended a waiver whether in fact he intended such waiver or not. It might be difficult, indeed, for one holding the affirmative of the issue to establish that the insurer intended to waive proofs; so difficult that in many instances it could not be done, and substantial justice would thereby be defeated. In such case, the law is satisfied with such a showing of facts pertaining to the conduct of the insurer in and about the loss, as would lead a reasonable man to believe that the company did not intend to insist upon the fulfillment of the conditions precedent with regard to notice and proof. As expressed by Judge Sharswood in the *182case of Beatty v. Lycoming County Mutual Ins. Co., 66 Pa. St. 9: “To constitute a waiver there should be some official act or declaration by the company during the currency of the time dispensing with it; something from which the assured might reasonably infer that the underwriters did not mean to insist upon it.” Or, as said by the Kansas City Court of Appeals in Gale v. State Ins. Co., 38 Mo. App. 664: “If the insurance company so conducted itself as to cause plaintiff, while acting as an honest and reasonable man, to believe that the company would not require a formal proof of loss, so that, relying thereon and induced thereby, plaintiff permitted the time to elapse within which such proofs should have been made, then the company is precluded from insisting on such proof.” [See also Summers v. Ins. Co., 45 Mo. App. 46; Okey v. Ins. Co., 29 Mo. App. 105.]
In accordance with these principles, it is laid down as the law by Mr. Wood, in his work on Insurance (2 Ed.), sec. 446, and followed by the courts of this State, as follows: “When the insurer is informed of the loss by the insured and without saying anything about preliminary proofs, proceeds to inquire whether the insurance is valid, upon a specific ground, independent of those required to be stated in the proofs, and declines to pay the loss upon a specific ground, this operates as a waiver of all objections to the insufficiency or even entire absence of preliminary proofs.” [Exchange Bank v. Thuringia, 109 Mo. App. 654; Summers v. Ins. Co., 45 Mo. App. 46.] The Kansas City Court of Appeals, in the case of Okey v. Ins. Co., 29 Mo. App. 105, states the doctrine thus: “When the insurer, knowing the facts, does that which is inconsistent with his intention to insist upon a strict compliance of the conditions precedent of the contract, it is treated as having waived their performance and the assured may recover without proving performance.” [Gale v. Ins. Co., 33 Mo. App. 664; Underwood v. Ins. Co., 57 N. Y. 500; 2 May on Ins. (3 Ed.), sec. 507.]
*183From what has been said, and in view of these well-established principles, there can be no doubt of there being substantial evidence of a waiver in the record before us and the trial court was justified in finding the fact to that effect. The evidence is that respondent called upon the manager of the company in its home office about two weeks after the fire, when the manager canvassed the loss and figured thereon for twenty minutes with Mr. Daniels, the Continental adjuster, who had been upon the scene of the conflagration some days before and no doubt ascertained all the facts -which the appellant desired and possibly more than the proof of loss would have conveyed. At least, Mr. Daugherty seemed to be satisfied with the facts and so announced, for he finally offered to settle, or in the presence of respondent, ordered Daniels to propose a settlement of $1,000 on defendant’s policy, basing his refusal to pay the entire claim, not upon want of proof or want of notice, but upon the fact that he knew all about the value of the building and claimed to know more about it than respondent who suffered the loss. At no time did he urge any reason for not settling other than the quantity and value of the loss. As said by the Supreme Court of Connecticut in the case of Rathbone v. City Fire Ins. Co., 31 Conn. 193, and as said in Summers v. Ins. Co., 45 Mo. App. 46: “He, in effect, said to the insured that it was all right except, only the house was insured for too great a sum, and that the company would pay what it was worth. . . This was a practical admission of liability, but a refusal to pay the entire amount mentioned in the policy.” The refusal to settle.in this case was based upon the sole and only ground that the building was not worth the amount for which it was insured. This, of itself, was substantial evidence in a case circumstanced as this one is, of the purpose of the company to waive the requirement of notice and proof of loss. When the attorney for respondent called upon Mr. Daugherty within the time allowed for the proofs, he *184was informed that the company stood ready to settle whenever it conld he demonstrated to it that the building was worth the amount for which it was insured, and in. fact, in none of these conversations was notice or proof of loss required or even mentioned by Mr. Daugherty. Conduct of this hind on the part of the insurer leading the respondent to believe as he said in his testimony, that such proofs were unnecessary, continually assuring him that the loss was honest and fair and the only question in difference was its amount, works an estoppel in pais on the company to thereafter deny responsibility on account of the failure to furnish such proofs when the party had been led to believe they were not required, and for that reason did not furnish the proofs. [Exchange Bank v. Thuringia, 109 Mo. App 654, 83 S. W. 534; Summers v. Ins. Co., 45 Mo. App. 46; Okey v. Ins. Co., 29 Mo. App. 105; Rathbone v. Fire Ins. Co., 31 Conn. 193; 2 Wood on Ins. (2 Ed.), 446; 2 May on Ins. (2 Ed.), sec. 504.]
2. It is argued by appellant, however, that the letter of Mr. Daugherty in which respondent was furnished blank forms of proof and in which was had the admonition that “this company requires of you strict compliance with all the conditions and stipulations of said policy, especially in relation to rendering said company a particular account of the alleged loss,” etc., and that the company “neither admits nor denies liability,” etc., operated to withdraw any waiver theretofore made by it, if any, and to reinstate the relations of the parties under the contract as theretofore existing. To this proposition we cannot agree. Conditions of this kind cannot be stricken out of and inserted in a policy with such efficacy at the pleasure of the company and to suit its convenience. The law is established in this jurisdiction to the effect that upon an estoppel arising by virtue of the conduct of the insurer as in this case, and the waiver of the precedent conditions taking effect, it is equivalent to eliminating these conditions from the policy and *185thereby the rights of the parties become fixed anew. It is as a new contract and so stands for all time thereafter, unless the adverse party consents to a reinstatement of such conditions, to permit the waiver to be recalled by the insurer after the insured had marked out a course of conduct with relation to the loss, relying upon such waiver, which had been introduced into the case by the action of the insurer, would operate a fraud upon the innocent who had followed the conduct of the insurance company to no end, and this the law forbids. [Porter v. German Amer. Ins. Co., 62 Mo. App. 520; Roberts v. Ins. Co. of Amer., 94 Mo. App. 142, 72 S. W. 144; Okey v. Ins. Co., 29 Mo. App. 105.]
3. It is next insisted by appellant that the special finding of facts by the court predicates the waiver upon the letter from Mr. Daugherty of date November 11, supra, and that this operates the exclusion of other facts in evidence on the question of waiver; that the letter itself is insufficient to support the finding and therefore the judgment must be reversed. It is to be noted that the letter itself refers to the conversations had with M'r. Daugherty in his office in the following language:
‘‘As the figures which I presented to you at the time of your visit were exactly what we know the property to he worth. You frankly acknowledged the house could be built for less than it cost you. It is only reasonable that you should allow for wear and tear, and your policy especially provides for this.” It is impossible to separate this letter from the evidence detailed before the court on which the letter itself is predicated, even though the court based its finding upon the letter. The facts detailed in evidence, to which the letter itself refers, must be considered in connection therewith and are necessarily a part of the evidence in support of the finding of the facts by the court. The letter, in connection with the facts referred to by Mr. Daugherty, therein says that it was a question of amount of the loss only in difference between the parties. While we do not mean to *186say that it shows a waiver as a matter of law, we do say that it is sufficient to support the finding of facts as to waiver.
4. It is next insisted by the appellant that the condition of the policy requiring immediate notice of the loss is a condition separate and apart from that requiring proof of loss and as such, it is a condition precedent which the respondent must allege and prove and which notice must likewise be found by the court under the special finding of fact to have been given in accordance with the policy or have been waived by the appellant. That inasmuch as the special finding of facts given by the court at the request of appellant wholly fails to mention the question of notice, whether given or waived, that such finding is insufficient to support the. conclusions of law or judgment announced upon the case. It is a fact that the first condition of the policy, that is, that requiring immediate notice, is a separate and distinct condition of the policy, compliance with which must be alleged and proved or waiver thereon shown. [LaForce v. Ins. Co., 43 Mo. App. 528; Edgerly v. Ins. Co., 5 Ins. Law Journal, 848; 43 la. 578.] To support this proposition, the argument advanced is that the special finding of facts by the trial court under the statute, must find all of the facts essential to a recovery.
To this general proposition we must agree in part. The general rule on the subject is that such a finding of facts is in the nature of a special verdict though it is not considered so critically as a special verdict and its sufficiency is determined by the same general rules. Accordingly, it is laid down that the Judge must find the facts and not the mere evidence of facts and that his findings must not leave any part of the facts to be presumed nor to be supplied by weight of intendment but must settle all of the facts which are deemed material, so that the court will have nothing to do but to declare the law upon the subject. Facts will be presumed when their existence may legally be presumed from facts *187found, by tbe court, otherwise the presumption will not be made. The object of the statute is to permit parties to make a case for the revision of the appellate court in which the facts and law" will appear separately, without requiring instructions or bills of exceptions. [2 Thompson on Trials, sec. 2658; Nichols v. Carter, 49 Mo. App. 401.] This general rule is satisfied, however, if all the facts essential to a recovery which arc controverted hy evidence upon the trial are specially found in the verdict, so the formal verdict may be sufficient though it does not find separately facts which, although put in issue by the pleadings, are yet not controverted on the trial,, or are established by the undisputed evidence. [Murphy v. Weil, 89 Wis. 146; Stringham v. Cook, 75 Wis. 589; Montreal R. L. Co. v. Mihills, 80 Wis. 540; Hart v. West Side E. Co., 86 Wis. 488.]
Notice of the loss was given by Boyer, the agent, immediately after the fire and the entire conduct of the parties shows it was not controverted. The offer made by the company’s manager evinced a full knowledge of the loss and the formal waiver of the notice. The point now made is not that the notice was not given, nor that the conduct of the insured was not a waiver, but it is a mere technicality that the trial judge omitted to state in the special finding that it was either given or waived. We take it that the trial judge treated it as an immaterial fact at that stage of the case. It certainly was, as the finding that the proofs were waived by the conduct of the company necessarily involved the finding that the company had full knowledge of the loss, else there could be no estoppel or waiver, and the finding of the estoppel involved all precedent facts which were essential thereto and merged therein, or in other words, the notice may be legally presumed or supplied by intendment from the facts found by the court as the main fact found essentially included the lesser fact of notice. [Nichols v. Carter, supra.] In this connection, it is contended by appellant that the provision of its answer containing the *188general denial controverted the allegation of full performance of the precedent conditions contained in the petition and thereby denied and put in issue the giving of the notice of loss. To support this contention, appellants have cited us to Caperhart v. Ins. Co., 8 N. E. (Ind.) 289; Glenn v. Ins. Co., 4 N. E. (Ind.) 926, and Cooledge v. Ins. Co., 3 Atl. Rep. 798, all of which are in point on the proposition contended for and hold that a general denial puts in issue the giving of notice and proofs, inasmuch as they are precedent conditions which plaintiff must allege in his petition and prove the fulfillment or waiver thereof upon trial. And, indeed, we find that it is laid down in 11 Ency. of Plead. & Prac., p. 422, that: “Where the code practice obtains, the defendant may show under a general denial, breach of condition precedent, such as failure to give notice or proofs of loss,” which text is supported by Manchester F. Assurance Co. v. Glenn, 13 Ind. App. 365.
While this appears to be the law in Indiana and in some other states where the Code prevails, we cannot agree to it as being the rule of pleading which obtains in this jurisdiction. It certainly is not the practice here. The familiar practice in Missouri is that the defendant should plead specifically, failure to perform these conditions precedent in the policy. Mr. Ostrander, in his work on Fire Insurance (2 Ed.), sec. 382, makes the following observation on the subject:
“When the defense arises from a failure to perform the conditions of a policy, such as payment of the premium, notice or proofs of loss, arbitration, etc., it has been held in some of the states to be sufficient for the answer to express a general denial. When this is done, the defendant is saved from making the disclosure (until called upon during the trial to produce his evidence) under which of the several conditions of the policy his defense rests. This will, no doubt, sometimes occasion the plaintiff perplexity and confusion, and possibly cause him to neglect or wholly overlook the real point in the *189controversy, while directing all his efforts to fortifying what he may suppose to he the most important and vulnerable point in his case, but which is shown to have no special significance, on account of the manner in which the defense is subsequently developed. But it is generally required, and always safer, to plead specifically each matter relied on to defeat the action.” [Sec. 382.]
And concludes his very able and interesting review of the subject as follows:
“It will not be sufficient for the answer to express only a general denial. The defense may arise from default in performance of some one or more conditions; and performance having been pleaded, denial would theoretically bring into issue the defense relied upon. But the uniform practice of the courts requires that all matters of defense under the terms of the contract shall be specially pleaded.”
And this conclusion of the author last above quoted seems to us to be the better rule on the subject and that which prevails here. [Hester v. Fidelity, etc., Co., 69 Mo. App. 186.] There can be no doubt, however, that inasmuch as the plaintiff is required to allege the precedent conditions in his petition, that the general denial would theoretically raise the issue and put the fact of notice and proofs in controversy, yet the policy of the law is that the plaintiff shall be specifically informed by the answer, of all defenses which are to be relied upon under the terms of the policy, and the courts of this State so hold. [Hester v. Fidelity, etc., Co., 69 Mo. App. 186.]
From what has been said, it is apparent that the matter of giving the notice in this case was not a controverted fact under the pleadings, and therefore it was not essential for the court to make a specific finding thereon under the rule above announced. But be this as it may, for the sake of argument only, let it be admitted that the general denial put the fact of notice in issue (we do not understand this to be the law, however), we cannot admit that the giving of such notice was contro*190verted by tbe evidence in tbe case, as the entire trial proceeded without an effort to that effect, and it appears as having been introduced into the case in this court for the first time and this feature of the controversy comes strictly within the rule announced above, “that the verdict may be sufficient, although it does not find specially facts which, although put in issue by the pleadings, are yet not controverted on the trial or are established by the undisputed evidence.” [Murphy v. Weil, 89 Wis. 150, and authorities supra.]
This assignment must likewise be ruled against appellant.
5. It is finally contended by appellant that inasmuch as the reply alleges a waiver to have arisen from the meeting and conference of the assured and the company’s manager in its office, at which conference Mr. Daugherty gave the respondent to understand that the only question was the amount of the loss, and the finding of facts based the waiver, not upon the conference, but upon the letter of Mr. Daugherty mentioned, that such finding is not responsive to the issues made by the pleading. . In answer to this, it is quite sufficient to say that it was wholly unnecessary for respondent to plead a waiver in his reply as it is well settled that in suits on policies of insurance in this State, a waiver of notice and proof can be shown under the allegation of full performance of precedent conditions on the part of the assured contained in the petition and this assignment must likewise be ruled against the appellant. [Nickell v. Ins. Co., 144 Mo. 420, 46 S. W. 435; McCullough v. Ins. Co., 113 Mo. 616, 21 S. W. 207; Ins. Co. v. Kyle, 11 Mo. 278; Russell v. Ins. Co., 55 Mo. 585; Okey v. Ins. Co., 29 Mo. App. 105; Travis v. Ins. Co., 32 Mo. App. 198; Maddox v. Ins. Co., 39 Mo. App. 198; Roy v. Boteler, 40 Mo. App. 213.] What has been said heretofore sufficiently answers the other questions raised in the briefs. Finding, no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
Bland, P. J., and Goode, J., concur.