Overinsurance by concurrent policies on the same property tends
to cause carelessness and fraud, and a clause in a policy rendering
it void in case other insurance had been or should be made upon the
property and not consented to by the insurer is customary and
reasonable.
In this case, such a provision was expressly and in unambiguous
terms contained in the policy sued on, and it was shown in the
proofs of loss furnished by the insured, and it was found by the
jury, that there was a policy in another company outstanding when
the one sued upon in this case was issued, and hence the question
in this case is reduced to one of waiver.
It is a fundamental rule in courts both of law and equity that
parol contemporaneous evidence is inadmissible to contradict or
vary the terms of a valid written instrument unless in cases where
the contracts are vitiated by fraud or mutual mistake.
Where a policy provides that notice shall be given of any prior
or subsequent insurance, otherwise the policy to be void, such a
provision is reasonable, and constitutes a condition, the breach of
which will avoid the policy.
Where the policy provides that notice of prior or subsequent
insurance must be given by endorsement upon the policy or by other
writing, such provision is reasonable, and one competent for the
parties to agree upon, and constitutes a condition the breach of
which will avoid the policy.
Contracts in writing, if in unambiguous terms, must be permitted
to speak for themselves, and cannot, by the courts at the instance
of one of the parties, be altered or contradicted by parol evidence
unless in case of fraud or mutual mistake of facts, and this
principle is applicable to cases of insurance contracts.
Provisions contained in fire insurance policies that such a
policy shall be void and of no effect if other insurance is placed
on the property in other companies without the knowledge and
consent of the insuring company are usual and reasonable.
It is reasonable and competent for the parties to agree that
such knowledge and consent shall be manifested in writing, either
by endorsement upon the policy or by other writing.
It is competent and reasonable for insurance companies to make
it matter of condition in their policies that their agents shall
not be deemed to have
Page 183 U. S. 309
authority to alter or contradict the express terms of the
policies as executed and delivered.
Where fire insurance policies contain provisions whereby agents
may, by writing endorsed upon the policy or by writing attached
thereto, express the company's assent to other insurance, such
limited grant of authority is the measure of the agent's power.
Where such limitation is expressed in the policy, the assured is
presumed to be aware of such limitation.
Insurance companies may waive forfeiture caused by nonobservance
of such conditions.
Where waiver is relied upon, the plaintiff must show that the
company, with knowledge of the facts that occasioned the
forfeiture, dispensed with the observance of the condition.
Where the waiver relied on is the act of an agent, it must be
shown either that the agent had express authority from the company
to make the waiver or that the company subsequently, with knowledge
of the facts, ratified the action of the agent.
In September, 1898, the Grand View Building Association, a
corporation organized under the laws of Nebraska, in the District
Court of Lancaster County of that state, brought an action against
the Northern Assurance Company of London, incorporated under the
laws of the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, seeking to
recover the sum of $2,500 as due under the terms of a policy of
insurance that had been issued by the assurance company to the
plaintiff company on December 31, 1896, on certain property
situated in said Lancaster County, and which, on June 1, 1898, had
been destroyed by fire.
Thereupon the defendant company filed in the said county court a
petition and bond, in due form, and prayed for an order removing
the cause to the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of Nebraska, and on September 29, 1898, the county court
approved the bond and entered an order granting the prayer of the
petition for removal.
Subsequently the case was put at issue on the petition, answer,
and reply in the circuit court of the United States, and was so
proceeded in that, on October 20, 1898, a special verdict was found
by the jury empaneled in the case, and on January 14, 1899, a final
judgment was entered for the plaintiff and against the defendant
company in the sum of $2,500, with interest and costs. The cause
was then taken to the United States Circuit
Page 183 U. S. 310
Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, and that court, on
March 26, 1900, affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. 101 F.
77. Thereafter, on petition of the defendant company, a writ of
certiorari was allowed, in response to which the record and
proceedings in the cause were brought to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In order that the questions discussed in this case and the
grounds of our judgment therein may sufficiently appear, it seems
proper to set out with substantial fullness the pleadings of the
parties and the special verdict of the jury.
The plaintiff's petition, having alleged the making of the
policy of insurance and the destruction of the property insured,
then proceeded to allege in its fourth paragraph, apparently by way
of meeting an expected defense, that
"plaintiff, shortly prior to issuance of aforesaid policy by the
defendant, had procured a policy of insurance from the Firemen's
Fund Insurance Company, incorporated under the laws of California,
insuring it against loss by fire of the same property in the sum of
$1,500 for a term of two years, which insurance was then subsisting
and remained in force to and including the date of said fire; that
the fact of said subsisting insurance in said company was, by H. J.
Walsh, plaintiff's president, disclosed to defendant at and prior
to the execution and delivery of said policy, and prior to payment
by plaintiff of said premium therefor, and was so by him orally
disclosed and communicated to defendant's recording agent at
Lincoln, Nebraska, A. D. Borgelt, who then had full authority from
defendant to countersign and issue its policies and accept fire
insurance risks in its behalf and accept and receive the premium
therefor, and who in fact accepted said
Page 183 U. S. 311
risk and issued said policy, and accepted and received said
premium as such agent in behalf of defendant with knowledge
beforehand of said concurrent insurance, and with the intent
knowingly to waive the condition of said policy that 'it shall be
void if the insured now has or shall hereafter make or procure any
other contract of insurance' on the property covered thereby. And
by the aforesaid several acts and by procuring, receiving,
accepting, and retaining of said insurance premium with knowledge
of said subsisting concurrent insurance, the defendant has waived
the said condition, and is estopped to claim benefit thereof, and
is bound by its said policy notwithstanding said condition; that
plaintiff had no insurance on said property except as before
stated."
Having stated that plaintiff had rendered and delivered a
statement of loss in compliance with the terms of the policy, the
petition further alleged that,
"on the 26th day of July, 1898, the plaintiff demanded of
defendant the payment of said insurance, and defendant,
disregarding its undertaking in that behalf, denies liability on
the sole ground that said policy has been void from the date of its
issue by reason of the said provision in regard to other insurance,
the same provision which as aforesaid it had waived at the time of
issuing its said policy."
The answer of defendant admitted the making of the policy, the
destruction of the insured property by fire, and proof of loss, but
denied specifically the allegations of the fourth paragraph of said
petition, as follows:
"Further answering, this defendant alleges that the policy of
insurance which it issued to the plaintiff on December 31, 1896,
contained the following provision:"
" This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement
endorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void if the insured now
has or shall hereafter make or procure any other contract of
insurance, whether valid or not, on property covered in whole or in
part by this policy."
"The defendant further says that its policy in question was
issued to the plaintiff with the express statement therein made
that it was issued in consideration of the 'stipulations' therein
named and a certain amount of premium paid therefor. And said
policy, besides the provisions
Page 183 U. S. 312
above quoted, contains the following stipulation and
condition:"
"This policy is made and accepted subject to the foregoing
stipulations and conditions, together with such other provisions,
agreements, or conditions as may be endorsed hereon or added
hereto, and no officer, agent, or other representative of this
company shall have power to waive any provision or condition of
this policy except such as by the terms of this policy may be the
subject of agreement endorsed herein or added thereto, and as to
such provisions and conditions, no officer, agent, or
representative shall have such power or be deemed or held to have
waived such provisions or conditions unless such waiver, if any,
shall be written upon or attached hereto, nor shall any privilege
or permission affecting the insurance under this policy exist or be
claimed by the insured unless so written or attached."
"The defendant says that, notwithstanding the stipulations,
provisions, and agreements above set forth and without the consent
of the defendant endorsed upon said policy in writing, and without
the knowledge of the defendant, the plaintiff obtained a policy of
insurance, upon the property covered by the policy issued by this
defendant, in the sum of $1,500 in the Firemen's Fund Insurance
Company."
"Defendant says that the property upon which it issued its
policy in the sum of $2,500 was represented by the plaintiff to the
defendant to be of the value of $3,500. The defendant alleges that,
by reason of the additional insurance upon said property, not
consented to in writing endorsed upon the policy of defendant and
not in fact known to the defendant, the policy written by the
defendant upon the plaintiff's property was at the date of the fire
which damaged or destroyed the plaintiff's property wholly void,
and was and has been void from the date of such additional
assurance. Defendant further says that, on the 5th day of August,
1898, the defendant tendered to the plaintiff in current fund the
sum of $33.75, the amount of the premium paid by the plaintiff upon
the policy in question, and now brings into court and tenders to
the plaintiff the said sum of $33.75, with interest at the rate of
seven percent from December 31, 1896."
The plaintiff company replied to the answer, denying that
Page 183 U. S. 313
it procured a policy of insurance in the Firemen's Fund
Insurance Company upon the property insured by defendant in
violation of the terms of the policy issued by defendant and
without the knowledge of defendant, and made the following
allegations:
"The policy referred to in said answer of $1,500 in the
Firemen's Fund Insurance Company was, on the contrary, subsisting
at and prior to the issuance by defendant to the plaintiff of the
policy sued on herein, and was in fact issued December 12, 1895,
for the term of three years, and the existence of such policy was
personally well known to A.D. Borgeit, defendant's recording agent,
who wrote said policy, and accepted said risk, and who then had
full charge of defendant's agency at Lincoln, Nebraska, with
authority to accept fire insurance risks for and on defendant's
behalf, to countersign and issue its policies of insurance, and to
collect and receive the premiums therefor. And at and prior to his
acceptance of said risk and insurance of the policy sued on, the
plaintiff's president, H. J. Walsh, reported orally to said A.D.
Borgelt the fact of such subsisting insurance of $1,500, and said
Borgelt, as such agent, with full knowledge of said fact, accepted
the risk and wrote, executed, and delivered said policy to
defendant, with the intent on the part of both plaintiff and
defendant that the same should be concurrent with the said
subsisting insurance and not avoided or affected thereby, and with
purpose and intent of defendant knowingly to waive and forego all
benefit of the provisions of said policy set forth in defendant's
answer, and in faith thereof and with the sole purpose to procure
such insurance to be concurrent with the subsisting insurance, and
not otherwise, the plaintiff paid, and the defendant procured and
received, the premium therefor. By all the aforesaid several acts,
the defendant has waived all benefit of the particular conditions
of its policy prohibiting concurrent insurance, prior and
subsequent, except by endorsement on the policy, and the defendant
is estopped and concluded thereby from claiming any benefit or
advantage by reason of said conditions of the policy."
In support of its side of the issues thus presented, the
plaintiff
Page 183 U. S. 314
company called as witnesses H. J. Walsh, its president, and Bert
Richards, the agent of the Firemen's Fund Insurance Company, who
testified that Borgelt was informed by them and had knowledge of
the subsisting insurance at and before the delivery of the policy
in suit. The plaintiff likewise put in evidence the original policy
sued on, and a letter from G. H. Lermit, manager of the defendant
company at Chicago, Illinois, and who had signed the policy in suit
as such agent, in the terms following:
"Chicago,
Aug. 2, 1898"
"To Grand View Building Association, H. J. Walsh, President,
Lincoln, Nebraska."
"Dear Sirs: We have your favor of the 26th ult., enclosing to us
what purports to be proof of loss, making claim under our policy
No. 310,024, of Lincoln, Nebraska, agency, and issued to you for
$2,500 on household furniture, etc., while contained in the
three-story brick and stone building on lot F in Grand View
Residence Park Addition, on account of a fire which occurred on the
1st day of June, 1898, and beg to say in reply that your sworn
statement therein advises us that you had other insurance on this
same property to the amount of $1,500. This additional insurance
held by you was without the knowledge or consent of this company,
and was not permitted by agreement as provided for in lines Nos.
11, 12, and 13 of the printed conditions of our policy, to which we
beg to refer you. We therefore regret to have to advise you, and do
hereby say to you, that the Northern Assurance Company specifically
and absolutely denies any and all liability under said policy No.
310,024 held by you, holding that said policy has been void from
the date of its issuance by reason of the said provision in regard
to other insurance above referred to."
"Our agents at Lincoln have been instructed to return to you the
full premium paid them by you, namely, $33.75 at once."
The plaintiff further offered the original policy in evidence,
containing, among other things, the following provisions:
"This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement
endorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void if the insured
Page 183 U. S. 315
now has or shall hereafter make or procure any other contract of
insurance, whether valid or not, on property covered in whole or in
part by this policy."
"This policy is made and accepted subject to the foregoing
stipulations and conditions, together with such other provisions,
agreements, and conditions as may be endorsed hereon or added
hereto, and no officer, agent, or other representative of this
company shall have power to waive any provision or condition of
this policy except such as by the terms of this policy may be the
subject of agreement endorsed hereon or added hereto, and as to
such provisions and conditions, no officer, agent, or
representative shall have such power or be deemed or held to have
waived such provisions or conditions unless such waiver, if any,
shall be written upon or attached hereto, nor shall any privilege
or remission affecting the insurance under this policy exist or be
claimed by the insured unless so written or attached."
The defendant, to maintain the issues on its part, called as a
witness A.D. Borgelt, who testified that he was a member of the
firm of Borgelt & Beasley, insurance agents at Lincoln,
Nebraska, which firm wrote the policy in the Northern Assurance
Company on the Grand View Building Association; that, at the time
he wrote the policy, he had no notice or knowledge that there was
other insurance upon the property covered by the policy in suit,
and the first time be knew of any other insurance was after the
fire; that, while Walsh might have mentioned that there was an
existing policy, he, the witness, had no recollection of having
known anything about the other insurance until after the fire. He
further testified that, on August 4, 1898, the premium paid for the
policy in suit was tendered to the plaintiff company, which
declined to take it. The defendant thereupon moved the court to
instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, which
motion was overruled, and defendant excepted.
The jury, under the instructions of the court, found that the
defendant company issued to the plaintiff company the policy
described in the plaintiff's petition; that the property covered by
said policy of insurance was burned on or about June 1,
Page 183 U. S. 316
1898; that the plaintiff, on or about July 26, 1898, furnished
the defendant with proofs of the loss of said property by fire;
that the policy contained the provision hereinbefore mentioned,
providing that the policy should be void if the insured had or
should thereafter make or procure any other contract of insurance
on the property covered by the policy in suit, and that the policy
was made subject to such condition, and that no officer, agent, or
other representative of the company should have power to waive any
provision or condition of the policy except such as by the terms of
the policy had been endorsed thereon or added thereto, and that no
officer, agent, or representative of the company should have power
or be deemed or held to have waived such provision or condition
unless such waiver was written upon or attached to the policy, and
that no privilege or provision affecting the insurance under the
policy should exist or be claimed by the insured, unless so written
or attached; that there was at the time of the issuance of the
policy in suit other insurance upon the insured property in the sum
of $1,500, in the Firemen's Fund Insurance Company; that Borgelt
was recording agent of the Northern Assurance Company at Lincoln,
Nebraska, with authority from the defendant company to countersign
and issue its policies and accept fire insurance risks in its
behalf and to collect and receive premiums therefor, and that he
had issued the policy sued on as such agent; that Borgelt knew,
when the policy in the defendant company was issued and delivered
to the plaintiff company, that there was then $1,500 subsisting
insurance in the Firemen's Fund Insurance Company upon the insured
property, issued prior to the date of the policy of the defendant
company, and that such knowledge was communicated to said Borgelt
by and on behalf of the assured; that the actual cash value of the
property covered by the policy in suit and destroyed by fire June
1, 1898, was $4,140; that no consent to concurrent insurance of
$1,500 was endorsed on the policy in suit, and that, on August 4,
1898, the amount of the premium paid for the policy was tendered to
and refused by the plaintiff.
Thereafter, motions were respectively made by the plaintiff and
defendant for judgment upon the findings and special verdict
Page 183 U. S. 317
of the jury, and on January 14, 1899, the motion of the
defendant was overruled, and exception was taken by the defendant,
and the motion of the plaintiff was sustained, and judgment was
entered in favor of the plaintiff and exception was taken by the
defendant. A writ of error was prayed for by the defendant and
allowed, and the cause was taken to the United States Circuit Court
of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, where the judgment of the
circuit court was affirmed, and the cause was then brought to this
Court by a writ of certiorari.
Overinsurance by concurrent policies on the same property tends
to cause carelessness and fraud, and hence a clause in the policies
rendering them void in case other insurance had been or should be
made upon the property and not consented to in writing by the
company is customary and reasonable.
In the present case, such a provision was expressly and in
unambiguous terms contained in the policy sued on, and it was shown
in the proofs of loss furnished by the insured, and it was found by
the jury, that there was a policy in another company outstanding
when the present one was issued.
It also was made to appear that no consent to such other
insurance was ever endorsed on the policy or added thereto.
Accordingly, it is a necessary conclusion that, by reason of the
breach of the condition the policy became void and of no effect,
and no recovery could be had thereon by the insured unless the
company waived the condition. The question before us is therefore
reduced to one of waiver. The policy itself provides the method
whereby such a waiver should be made:
"This policy is made and accepted subject to the foregoing
stipulations and conditions, together with such other provisions,
agreements, or conditions as may be endorsed hereon or added
hereto, and no officer, agent, or other representative of this
company shall have power to waive any provision or condition of
this policy, except such as by the terms of this policy may be the
subject of agreement endorsed hereon or added hereto, and as to
such provisions or conditions no officer, agent, or representative
shall have such power or be deemed or held to have waived such
provisions or conditions, unless such waiver, if any, shall be
written upon or attached hereto, nor shall any provision or
Page 183 U. S. 318
permission affecting the insurance under this policy exist or be
claimed by the insured unless so written or attached."
Before proceeding to a direct consideration of the question
before us, it may be well to inquire into the principles
established by the authorities as applicable to such cases.
It is a fundamental rule, in courts both of law and equity, that
parol contemporaneous evidence is inadmissible to contradict or
vary the terms of a valid written instrument. This rule is thus
expressed in Greenleaf on Evidence, vol. 1, sec. 275, 12th ed.:
"When parties have deliberately put their engagements into
writing in such terms as import a legal obligation without any
uncertainty as to the object or extent of such engagement, it is
conclusively presumed that the whole engagement of the parties, and
the extent and manner of their undertaking, was reduced to writing,
and all oral testimony of a previous colloquium between the
parties, or of conversation or declarations at the time when it was
completed, or afterwards, as it would tend in many instances to
substitute a new and different contract for the one which was
really agreed upon, to the prejudice, possibly, of one of the
parties, is rejected."
The rule is thus expressed by Starkie, 587, 9th Am.ed.:
"It is likewise a general and most inflexible rule that wherever
written instruments are appointed either by the requirement of law
or by the compact of the parties to be the repositories and
memorials of truth, any other evidence is excluded from being used
either as a substitute for such instruments or to contradict or
alter them. This is a matter both of principle and policy -- of
principle because such instruments are in their nature and origin
entitled to a much higher degree of credit than parol evidence; of
policy because it would be attended with great mischief if those
instruments upon which men's rights depended were liable to be
impeached by loose collateral evidence."
This rule has always been followed and applied by the English
courts in the case of policies of insurance in writing.
Thus, in
Weston v. Emes, 1 Taunt. 115, it was held that
parol evidence of what passed at the time of effecting a policy is
not
Page 183 U. S. 319
admissible to restrain the effect of the policy, Mansfield, Ch.
J., observing that such
"evidence could not be admitted without abandoning, in the case
of policies, the rule of evidence which prevails in all other
cases, and that it would be of the worst effect if a broker could
be permitted to alter a policy by parol accounts of what passed
when it was effected."
In
Robertson v. French, 4 East 130, it was held, per
Lord Ellenborough, in a suit on a marine policy of insurance, that
a parol agreement that the risk should begin at a place different
from that inserted in the policy cannot be received in
evidence.
These cases are cited as establishing the rule in cases of
insurance in Marshall on Marine Insurance 278, and in Arnould on
Insurance, vol. 1, p. 277.
In
Flinn v. Tobin, 1 Moody & Malle. 367, Lord
Tenterden, C.J., said that
"the contract between the parties is the policy which is in
writing, and cannot be varied by parol. No defense therefore which
turns on showing that the contract was different from that
contained in the policy can be admitted, and this is the effect of
any defense turning on the mere fact of misrepresentation without
fraud."
So where, in assumpsit for use and occupation, upon a written
memorandum of lease at a certain rent, parol evidence was offered
by the plaintiff of an agreement at the same time to pay a further
sum, being the ground rent of the premises, to the ground landlord,
it was rejected.
Preston v. Merceau, 2 W.Bl. 1249.
And where, in a written contract of sale of a ship, the ship was
particularly described, it were held that parol evidence of a
further descriptive representation, made prior to the time of sale,
was not admissible to charge the vendor without proof of actual
fraud, all previous conversations being merged in the written
contract.
Pickering v. Dowson, 4 Taunt. 779.
See also
Powell v. Edmunds, 12 East 6;
Smith v. Jeffryes, 15
M. & W. 561;
Gale v. Lewis, 9 Q.B. 730;
Acey v.
Fernie, 7 M. & W. 151.
The case of
Western Assurance Co. v. Doull, 12 Canada
S.C. 446, was one where a policy of insurance against loss by fire
contained the following condition:
"In case of subsequent
Page 183 U. S. 320
assurance, . . . notice thereof must also be given in writing at
once, and such subsequent assurance endorsed on the policy granted
by this company, or otherwise acknowledged in writing, in default
whereof such policy shall thenceforth cease and be of no
effect."
The insured effected subsequent insurance and verbally notified
the agent, but there was no endorsement made on the policy, nor any
acknowledgment in writing by the company. A loss having occurred,
the damage was adjusted by the inspector of the company, and
neither he nor the agent made any objection to the loss on the
ground of noncompliance with the above condition. In a suit to
recover the amount of the policy, the company pleaded breach of the
condition, in reply to which the plaintiff set up a waiver of the
condition and contended that, by the act of the agent and
inspector, the company was estopped from setting it up. It was held
by the Supreme Court of Canada that, the insured not having
complied with the condition, the policy ceased and became of no
effect on the subsequent insurance being effected, and that neither
the agent nor the inspector had power to waive a compliance with
its terms.
In discussing the question of the power of the agent to waive
the condition, the court said:
"It is not shown that it was within the scope of Greer's
authority as a local agent to waive such a condition. The condition
itself does not, either by express words or by implication,
recognize such an authority, but the reason for requiring the
notice obviously points to a directly contrary construction.
Moreover, the English case already quoted [
Gale v. Lewis,
9 Q.B. 730], which determines that the required notice is to be
given to the company itself and not to the local agent, shows
a
fortiori that such an agent has, in the absence of express
authority, no power to waive the condition. Direct authority is,
however, not wanting. In the case of
Shannon v. Gore Mutual
Insurance Company, 2 Ont.App. 396, the facts were the same as
in the present case, the subsequent assurance having been effected
through the agent who also acted for the defendants in taking the
original risk. It was contended that, the successive insurances
having been thus effected with the same person as the agent of the
two companies, the company which granted the first policy had
knowledge of the subsequent
Page 183 U. S. 321
insurance, and were therefore estopped from setting up a
condition vitiating the policy for want of a written notice. But
the Court of Appeals held otherwise, and determined that, in such a
case, notice to the agent was not notice to the company, and that
the agent neither had authority to waive the condition nor could by
his conduct estop his principals, the first insurers. As regards
any direct action of the appellants [insurance company] through
their immediate agents, the directors or principal officers of the
company conducting its affairs at the head office, there is no
pretense for saying that there is in the present case the slightest
evidence of conduct upon which either a defense of waiver of the
condition, or by way of estoppel against insisting upon it, can be
based, and this for the very plain reason that these directors and
officers never had the fact of a subsequent assurance brought to
their knowledge, and without proof of such knowledge, neither
waiver nor estoppel can be made out. . . . The condition in the
policy is one which must be complied with or waived. The company,
by signing a condition of that kind, reserves to itself the right
to withdraw the policy in case of further insurance. That question
is one which cannot be decided by a mere local agent. He may
receive the notice for transmission, but he cannot act on it; it
must be brought to the notice of some person authorized by the
company to continue the insurance after notice has been given them.
It has been decided in a number of cases in England that a local
agent has not such authority, and a mere notice to him, even in a
case where he is acting for another company taking the further
risk, has been held to be no notice to the company."
Coming to the decisions of our state courts, we find that while
there is some contrariety of decisions, the decided weight of
authority is to the effect that a policy of insurance in writing
cannot be changed or altered by parol evidence of what was said
prior or at the time the insurance was effected; that a condition
contained in the policy cannot be waived by an agent unless he has
express authority so to do, and then only in the mode prescribed in
the policy, and that mere knowledge by the agent of an existing
policy of insurance will not affect the
Page 183 U. S. 322
company unless it is affirmatively shown that such knowledge was
communicated to the company.
In
Worcester Bank v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company,
11 Cush. 265, which was a case of additional insurance, and where
one Smith testified that he was agent for the defendant company to
issue policies, and was in the habit of receiving notices of
additional insurance, which he endorsed on the policies, it was
held by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts that as it is
provided in the policy on which this action is brought that, if the
assured or his assigns shall thereafter make any other insurance on
the same property, and shall not with all reasonable diligence give
notice thereof to this company, and have same endorsed on this
instrument or otherwise acknowledged by them in writing, this
policy shall cease and be of no further effect, and as, after the
making of this policy, the assured obtained other insurance on the
same property, but did not have the same endorsed on the policy or
otherwise acknowledged by the defendants in writing, the policy was
void, notwithstanding there was parol evidence tending to show that
notice had been given to Smith, the company's agent.
The same court held, in
Hale v. Mechanics' Mutual Fire
Insurance Company, 6 Gray 169, that a policy issued by a
mutual fire insurance company, whose bylaws provided that any
insurance subsequently obtained without the consent in writing of
their president should avoid the policy, and that the bylaws should
in no case be altered except by a vote of two-thirds of the
stockholders or directors, was avoided by a subsequent insurance
obtained with the mere verbal consent of the president. It was said
by Bigelow, J., giving the unanimous opinion of the court:
"Such being the rights of the parties under the contract, it is
clear upon the facts in this case that the policy was annulled
under the fifteenth article of the bylaws, by reason of the
subsequent insurance procured by Stone and Perry on the property,
without the assent of the president of the corporation in writing,
unless the waiver of such written assent by the president and his
verbal consent to such subsequent insurance as found by the jury
operate to set aside this provision in the bylaws as to
Page 183 U. S. 323
this particular policy and render the contract valid
notwithstanding by its express terms, as well as by the clause in
the bylaws, it would be otherwise void. But the difficulty in
maintaining the plaintiff's position on this part of the case is
not only that it attempts to substitute for the written agreement
of the parties a verbal contract, but that there is an entire
absence of any authority on the part of the president to make such
waiver or give such verbal assent. He was an agent, with powers
strictly limited and defined, and could not act so as to bind the
defendants beyond the scope of his authority. Story, Agency, secs.
127, 133;
Salem Bank v. Gloucester Bank, 17 Mass. 29. By
article 15 of the bylaws, his power to assent to subsequent
insurance was expressly confined to giving such assent in writing.
In order to guard against the danger of overinsurance, the
corporation might well require that any assent on their part to
further insurance on property insured by them should be given by
the deliberate and well considered act of their president in
writing, and not be left to the vagueness and uncertainty of parol
proof. The whole extent and limit of the president's authority in
this respect were set forth in the bylaws attached to the policy in
the present case, and, as the evidence shows, were fully known to
the assured. . . . If the argument of the plaintiff should be
carried out to its legitimate result, it would give to the
president the right in any case to suspend or change the bylaws by
his verbal act and at his pleasure. This he clearly had no power to
do. We are therefore of opinion that the finding of the jury does
not render the policy valid, but that it was annulled by the
subsequent insurance obtained by the assured without the written
assent of the president."
In
Smith v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., 60 Vt. 682, the
Supreme Court of Vermont, in an elaborate opinion, in
Wilson v.
Ins. Co., 4 R.I. 141, the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, and
in
Cleaver v. Traders' Ins. Co., 65 Mich. 527, and same
case in 71 Mich. 414, the Supreme Court of Michigan, held that the
fact that the company's agent had authority in a certain way or
manner to consent to the taking of additional insurance does not
aid the plaintiff, that the agent did not consent, in the cases
cited, within the line of his authority or
Page 183 U. S. 324
in the manner prescribed by the policy, wherein the agent is
expressly prohibited from waiving or modifying the written
contract.
The same view of the law prevails in Connecticut. In
Sheldon
v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company, 22 Conn. 235, it was held
that where the policy and survey constituted a contract between the
parties, and there was no imperfection or ambiguity in the
contract, evidence of parol representations made to the agent prior
to the issuing of the policy could not be received to explain or
qualify the contract.
See also Glendale Mfg. Co. v. Protection
Ins. Co., 21 Conn.19, 37;
Hough v. City Fire Ins.
Co., 29 Conn. 10.
New York Insurance Co. v. Thomas, 3 Johns.Cas. 1, was
an action upon a policy of insurance and where parol evidence was
offered to vary the terms of the instrument. The question was thus
disposed of by Kent, J.:
"The next point is whether the parol proof be admissible to
explain the contract, and, if it be, what is the effect, in the
present case, of such proof."
"I know no rule better established than that parol evidence
shall not be admitted to disannul or substantially vary or extend a
written agreement. The admission of such testimony would be
mischievous and inconvenient. Parol evidence is to be received in
the case of an
ambiguitas latens to ascertain the identity
of a person or thing, but before the parol evidence is to be
received in such case, the latent ambiguity must be made out and
shown to the court. In the present instance, there is no ambiguity.
The language of the contract throughout is consistent and explicit.
This general rule of law has been particularly and emphatically
applied to policies. (Skinn. 54.) And except in the special
instance of explanations resulting from the usage of trade, they
have never been allowed to be contradicted by parol
agreements."
Jennings v. Chenango County Mut. Ins. Co., 2 Denio 75,
has long been a leading case. There it was held that conditions of
insurance containing statements of the purpose for which the
property insured is to be occupied, and of its situation as to
other buildings, are warranties, and if untrue, the policy is
void
Page 183 U. S. 325
though the variance be not material to the risk, and that parol
evidence that the insured truly informed the agent of the insurer
who prepared the application as to these particulars is not
admissible. In the opinion, the language of Parker, C.J., in
Higginson v. Dall, 13 Mass. 96, is quoted that policies,
though not under seal,
"have nevertheless ever been deemed instruments of a solemn
nature and subject to most of the rules of evidence which govern in
the case of specialties. The policy itself is considered to be the
contract between the parties, and whatever proposals are made or
conversations had between the parties prior to the subscription,
they are to be considered as waived if not inserted in the policy
or contained in a memorandum annexed to it."
In
Fowler v. Metropolitan Ins. Co., 116 N.Y. 389, it
was said:
"A long line of authorities has settled the law to be that, when
it is expressly provided that the premium on a life insurance
policy shall be paid on or before a certain day, and in default
thereof the policy shall be void, that the nonpayment of the
premium upon the day named works a forfeiture. . . . The claim that
such provision in a paid-up policy is unconscionable and
oppressive, and presents a case in which a court of equity should
relieve from the forfeiture incurred by omission to make prompt
payment of premiums, is not a new one. It has frequently been
presented to the courts, and has recently received very full
consideration in this Court in
Attorney General v. North
America Life Insurance Co., 82 N.Y. 172, and in
People v.
Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co., 103 N.Y. 480, 485. It was decided
in those cases that provisions in paid-up policies issued in lieu
of other policies on which notes had been given for premiums that
they should be void in case the interest on such notes was not paid
is not unconscionable, oppressive, or usurious. In the first case
cited, Judge Earl said:"
"There are doubtless some decided cases which hold that such
forfeiture should not be enforced, but I think the better rule is
to uphold and enforce such contracts when free from fraud or
mistake, just as the parties have made them."
"And in
Douglas v. Knickerbocker L. Ins. Co., 83 N.Y.
492, it was said:"
"It has generally been found most conducive to the general
welfare to leave parties to make their own contracts,
Page 183 U. S. 326
and then enforce them as made unless, on the ground of fraud,
accident, or mistake, ignorance, impossibility, or necessity,
relief can be granted against them. . . ."
"It would be impossible to sustain the claim that the statements
and representations contained in the pamphlet issued by the company
were to be regarded as affecting or modifying the strict terms of
the policy without disregarding the established rule of law that a
written contract merges all prior and contemporaneous negotiations
in reference to the same subject, and that the whole engagement of
the parties and the extent and manner of their undertaking is
embraced in the writing. This rule is the same in equity as at
common law, and although a written agreement may be set aside or
reformed, fraud or mistake must be shown to entitle a party to such
relief. And it is never competent in an action upon a written
contract to show that it was executed on the faith of a preceding
parol stipulation not embraced in it."
In
Baumgartel v. Providence Washington Ins. Co., 136
N.Y. 547, where defendant had issued to plaintiff a policy of fire
insurance which contained a clause to the effect that, unless
otherwise provided by agreement endorsed thereon, it should be void
in case of other insurance on the property insured, and it also
provided that no agent of the company should have power to waive
any provision or condition of the policy except such as, by its
terms, might be the subject of agreement endorsed thereon or added
thereto, and, as to those, that he should have no such power nor be
deemed to have waived them unless in writing so endorsed or
attached, and where, in an action upon the policy, it appeared
that, during its life, the plaintiff, without notice to the
defendant and without its knowledge or consent, obtained other
insurance upon the property, and that thereafter he informed the
agent, who had issued the policy, of this fact, and that the agent
had replied, "All right; I will attend to it;" but it did not
appear that the plaintiff then had the policy in suit with him, or
afterwards applied to said agent for written consent to the other
insurance; it was held that knowledge of the agent of the
subsequent insurance did not satisfy the condition of the policy,
and that, plaintiff having failed to comply
Page 183 U. S. 327
therewith, the policy was forfeited and void, and also held that
the statements of defendant's agent did not amount to a waiver of
the conditions or authorize the application of the doctrine of
estoppel. It was said in the opinion:
"The stipulation with respect to further insurance is one of the
conditions upon which, by the agreement of the parties, the
liability of the defendant depended in case of a loss during the
term of the insurance. The parties have also agreed upon the mode
in which the condition could be complied with or waived -- namely,
by writing endorsed upon the policy in the form of a consent to the
other insurance. The agent had power to give this consent only in
the manner prescribed by the contract. But there is not in the case
any proof, even of verbal consent by the agent that the plaintiff
might procure further and additional insurance. . . . The effect of
such stipulations in a contract of insurance, as well as the manner
in which they may be modified or waived by agents of the company,
have been so thoroughly discussed and so clearly pointed out that a
reference to some of the more recent cases on the subject is all
that is needful here.
Allen v. German American Ins. Co.,
123 N.Y. 6;
Quinlan v. Providence W. Ins. Co., 133 N.Y.
356;
Messelback v. Norman, 122 N.Y. 583;
Walsh v.
Hartford Ins. Co., 73 N.Y. 5."
It is doubtless true that, in several later cases, the New York
Court of Appeals seems to have departed from the principles of the
previous cases and to have held that the restrictions inserted in
the contract upon the power of an agent to waive any condition,
unless done in a particular manner, cannot be deemed to apply to
those conditions which relate to the inception of the contract when
it appears that the agent has delivered it and received the
premiums
with full knowledge of the actual situation. To
take the benefit of a contract
with full knowledge of all the
facts, and attempt afterwards to defeat it, when called upon
to perform, by asserting conditions relating to those facts would
be to claim that no contract was made, and thus operate as a fraud
upon the other party.
Robbins v. Springfield Fire Ins.
Co., 149 N.Y. 484;
Wood v. American Fire Ins. Co.,
149 N.Y. 385.
But see Rohrback v. German Fire Ins. Co.,
62
Page 183 U. S. 328
N.Y. 63, and
Owens v. Holland Ins. Co., which are
irreconcilable.
The fallacy of this view is disclosed in the phrases we have
italicized. It was thereby assumed that the agent had full
knowledge of all the facts, that such knowledge must be deemed to
have been disclosed by the agent to his principal, and, that
consequently it would operate as a fraud upon the assured to plead
a breach of the conditions. This mode of reasoning overlooks both
the general principle that a written contract cannot be varied or
defeated by parol evidence and the express provision that no waiver
shall be made by the agent except in writing endorsed on the
policy. As we shall hereafter show when we come to consider the
meaning and legal purport of the contract in suit, such express
provision was intended to protect both parties from the dangers
involved in disregarding the rule of evidence. The mischief is the
same whether the condition turned upon facts existing at and before
the time when the contract was made or upon facts subsequently
taking place.
In
Franklin Fire Ins. Co. v. Martin, 40 N.J.L. 568, the
facts were as follows: a policy described the property insured as
"occupied as a dwelling and boarding house;" in fact, it was
occupied as a country tavern, and there was kept for use a billiard
table in a room back of the bar room. The property continued to be
so used until the fire occurred. In the conditions of insurance,
taverns were classified as extrahazardous, and billiard rooms were
named as specially hazardous, each being subject to higher premiums
than ordinarily hazardous rights. It was held by the New Jersey
Court of Errors and Appeals that evidence that the application for
insurance was prepared by the agent of the insurer, and that he
knew at the time of the application that the property was occupied
as a tavern, and that a billiard table was kept in it for use,
could not be received for the purpose of showing that, under the
description of a dwelling and boarding house, the parties intended
to insure the premises as they were then in fact being used, that a
written contract of insurance cannot be altered or varied by parol
evidence of what occurred between the insured and the agent of the
insurer at the time of effecting the insurance,
Page 183 U. S. 329
and that such evidence will not be received to raise an estoppel
in pais which shall conclude the insurer from setting up
the defense that the policy was forfeited by a breach of the
conditions of insurance.
In the opinion of the court, given by Judge Depue, there was a
full examination of cases on the subject of the admissibility of
parol evidence in actions on policies of insurance, and some of his
observations are so weighty, and so applicable to the case before
us, we shall quote from them at some length:
"The leading case in New York is
Jennings v. Chenango
Insurance Company, 2 Denio 75. This case held, in accordance
with a series of cases, beginning with
Vandervoort v.
Smith, 2 Cal. 155, that parol evidence that the insured truly
informed the agent of the insurer, who prepared the application, as
to the situation of the premises was not competent to vary a
warranty on that subject or save the insured from the consequences
of a breach of the contract of insurance. This case was recognized
as good law by the courts of that state until the decision of
Plumb v. Cattaraugus Insurance Company, 18 N.Y. 392, where
such evidence was held by a divided court to be admissible not to
change the contract, but to produce the same result under the guise
of an equitable estoppel.
Plumb v. Cattaraugus Insurance
Company was followed in
Rowley v. Empire Insurance
Company, 36 N.Y. 550. It was justly criticized and condemned
as founded on erroneous views by the Chief Justice in
Dewees v.
Manhattan Insurance Company, as reported in 6 Vroom 336, and
with
Rowley v. Empire Insurance Company, has been greatly
shaken by subsequent decisions in the same court, if it was not
practically overruled by
Rohrbach v. Germania Insurance
Company, 62 N.Y. 47, 63. In
Maher v. Hibernia Insurance
Company, 67 N.Y. 283, reformation of the contract of insurance
seems to have been regarded as the appropriate method of relief
under such circumstances."
"The condition of the law on this important subject in that
state is such that it would not be advisable to adopt it, or
prudent to endeavor to follow the decisions of its courts. The
discordant and irreconcilable decisions which have grown out of
Page 183 U. S. 330
the departure from the law as held in
Jennings v. Chenango
County Ins. Co. are cited by Judge Folger in
Van Schoick
v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., 68 N.Y. 438. Some of the conditions
of the policy may be controlled by evidence of the knowledge of the
parties at the time the insurance was effected, and others not; but
no rule or principle has been promulgated for ascertaining, in
advance of the litigation, what stipulations in the contract belong
to the one class or the other -- a condition of the law sure to
result from the effort to deal with contracts of this kind in
disregard of established rules of law and acknowledged legal
principles. . . ."
"It is manifest that the theory that such parol evidence, though
it may not be competent to change the written contract, may be
received for the purpose of raising an estoppel
in pais,
is a mere evasion of the rule excluding parol testimony when
offered to alter a written contract. A party suing on a contract in
an action at law must be conclusively presumed to be aware of what
the contract contains, and the legal effect of his agreement is
that its terms shall be complied with. Extrinsic evidence of the
kind under consideration must entirely fail in its object unless
its purpose be to show that the contract expressed in the written
policy was not in reality the contract as made. A defendant cannot
be estopped from making the defense that the contract sued on is
not his contract, or that his adversary has himself violated it in
those particulars which are made conditions to his rights under it,
on the ground of negotiations and transactions occurring at the
time the contract was entered into, unless the plaintiff is
permitted to show from such sources that the contract, as put in
writing, does not truly express the intention of the parties. The
difficulty lies at the very threshold. An estoppel cannot arise
except upon proof of a contract different from that contained in
the written policy, and an inflexible rule of evidence forbids the
introduction of such proof by parol testimony when offered to vary
or affect the terms of the written instrument. . . ."
"The cases usually cited for the proposition that a contract of
insurance is excepted out of the class of written contracts with
respect to the admissibility of parol evidence to vary or
Page 183 U. S. 331
control the written contract will be found on examination to be,
to a large extent, those in which the proof has been received with
a view to the reformation of the policy in equity, or to meet the
defense that the contract was induced by false and fraudulent
representations not embodied in the contract, or are the decisions
of courts in which the legal and equitable jurisdictions are so
blended that the functions of a court of equity have been
transferred to the jury box. . . . The powers of agents of every
kind of principals to act for and bind their principals are
determined by the unvarying rule of ascertaining what authority is
delegated to them. How the contract was effected, whether directly
with the insurer or by the intervention of agents, is of no
consequence. The question of the admissibility of the testimony
does not relate to the method by which the contract was made. It
concerns the rule of evidence by which the contract, however made,
shall be interpreted."
"Upon principle, it is impossible to perceive on what ground
such testimony should be received. A policy of insurance is a
contract in writing, of such a nature as to be within the general
rule of law that a contract in writing cannot be varied or altered
by parol testimony. If it be ambiguous in its terms, parol
evidence, such as would be competent to remove an ambiguity in
other written contracts, may be resorted to for the purpose of
explaining its meaning. If it incorrectly or imperfectly expresses
the actual agreement of the parties, it may be reformed in equity.
If strict compliance with the conditions of insurance with respect
to matters to be done by the insured after the contract has been
concluded has been waived, such waiver may, in general, be shown by
extrinsic evidence by parol. Further than this it is not safe for a
court of law to go. To except policies of insurance out of the
class of contracts to which they belong, and deny them the
protection of the rule of law that a contract which is put in
writing shall not be altered or varied by parol evidence of the
contract the parties intended to make, as distinguished from what
appears, by the written contract, to be that which they have in
fact made, is a violation of principle that will open the door to
the grossest frauds. . . . A court of law can do nothing but
enforce
Page 183 U. S. 332
the contract as the parties have made it. The legal rule that,
in courts of law, the written contract shall be regarded as the
sole repository of the intentions of the parties, and that its
terms cannot be changed by parol testimony, is of the utmost
importance in the trial of jury cases, and can never be departed
from without the risk of disastrous consequences to the rights of
parties."
Dewees v. Manhattan Ins. Co., 35 N.J.L. 366, referred
to in the case just cited, reports an opinion by Chief Justice
Beasley, and from which we shall quote, as it contains, as we
think, an able and sound statement of the law on this important
subject:
"The contract between these litigants, on the point which I
shall discuss, is clear and unambiguous. The defendants agreed to
insure a building occupied as a country store, and the stock of
goods, consisting of the usual variety of a country store. This, by
the plain meaning of the terms employed, is a warranty on the part
of the insured that the building was used at the date of the
agreement for the purpose specified. It was a representation, on
the face of the policy, touching the premises in question, and
which affected the risk, and such a representation, according to
all the authorities, amounts to a warranty. . . . The cases are
numerous and decisive upon the subject -- so much so that it does
not appear to me to be necessary to refer to them in detail, as, in
my opinion, the character of a representation of this kind is
apparent upon its face. It can be intended for no other purpose
than to characterize the use of the building at the date of the
insurance, for unless this be done, there can be no restriction on
the use of the property by the insured during the running of the
risk. Unless this description has the force thus attributed to it,
the premises could have been used for any of the most hazardous
purposes. A building described in a policy as a 'dwelling house'
could, except for the rule above stated, be converted into a mill
or a factory. I think it is incontestably clear that the
description of the use of the premises in this case was meant to
define the character of the risk to be assumed by the
defendants."
"But, besides this, it is plain that the written contract
was
Page 183 U. S. 333
violated in a fatal particular by the assured. By the express
terms of one of the stipulations of the insurance, it is declared
that, if the premises should be used"
"for the purpose of carrying on therein any trade or vocation,
or for storing or keeping therein any articles, goods, or
merchandise denominated hazardous, or extrahazardous, or specially
hazardous, in the second class of the classes of hazards annexed to
this policy, etc., from thenceforth, so long as the same shall be
so used, etc., the policy shall be of no force or effect."
"Among the extrahazardous risks, that of keeping a 'private
stable' is enumerated, and it was shown on the trial, and was not
denied, that, at the date of the policy and at the time of the
fire, a part of the building insured was applied by the plaintiff
to this use."
"It cannot be denied, then, that, if we take into view these
conditions of the case alone, the plaintiff's action must fall to
the ground. He did an act which, by force of his written agreement,
had the effect to suspend, temporarily, his insurance. As this
fact, having this destructive effect, could not be disputed, it
became necessary, in order to save the plaintiff's action, to avoid
the effect of the written contract, and this burden was assumed on
the argument by the counsel of the plaintiff. The position taken
with this view was that the policy was obtained for the plaintiff
by the agent of the defendants, and that he knew that the building
in question was in part used as a stable."
"The plaintiff's claim appears to be a meritorious one, and on
this account, and in the hope that there might be found some legal
ground on which to support this action, the case was allowed by me
at the circuit to go to the jury, and the questions of law were
reserved for this Court. But the consideration which I have since
given the matters involved has excluded the faintest idea that upon
legal principles this suit can be successfully carried through. In
my opinion, that end can be attained only by the sacrifice of legal
rules which are settled and are of the greatest importance. Let us
look at the proposition to which we are asked to give our
assent."
"The contract of these parties, as it has been committed to
writing, is that if the plaintiff shall keep a stable on the
premises insured, for the time being, the policy shall be
vacated.
Page 183 U. S. 334
But, it is said, the agent of the defendants who procured this
contract was aware that the real contract designed to be made was
that the plaintiff might apply the premises to this use. This
knowledge of the agent of the defendants, and which it is conceded
will bind the defendants, is to have the effect to vary the
obligations of the written contract. Upon what principle is this to
be done? There is no pretense of any fraud in the procurement of
this policy. The only ground that can be taken is that the agent,
knowing that the premises were to be in part used as a stable,
should have so described the use in the policy. The assumption is,
and must be, that the warranty in its present form was a mistake in
the agent. But a mistake cannot be corrected, in conformity with
our judicial system, in a court of law. No one can doubt that, in a
proper case of this kind, an equitable remedy exists. 'There cannot
at the present day,' says Mr. Justice Story,"
"be any serious doubt that a court of equity has authority to
reform a contract where there has been an omission of a material
stipulation by mistake, and a policy of insurance is just as much
within the reach of the principle as any other written contract.
Andrews v. Essex Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 3 Mason
10."
"It is possible, therefore, that in this case, in equity, the
present contract might be reformed so as to contain a permission
for the plaintiff to keep his stable in this building; but I think
it has never before been supposed that this end could be reached in
this state by proof before the jury in a trial at the circuit. The
principle would cover a wide field, for if this mistake can be
there corrected, so can every possible mistake. If the plaintiff
can modify the stipulation with respect to the restricted use of
the premises on the plea of a mistake in such stipulation, on
similar grounds it would be open to the company to modify the
policy with respect to the amount insured. I am at a loss to see
how, on the adoption of the principle claimed, we are to keep
separate the functions of our legal and equitable tribunals. Nor do
I think, if this Court should sustain the present action, that it
could be practicable to preserve in any useful form the great
primary rule that written instruments are not to be varied or
contradicted by parol evidence. The knowledge of the agent
Page 183 U. S. 335
in the present transaction is important only as showing what the
tacit understanding of the contracting parties was. Suppose,
instead of proof of such tacit understanding, the plaintiff had
offered to make a stronger case by showing that the agent expressly
agreed that the building might be used not only as a country store,
as the policy stated, but also as a stable, and that the
restraining stipulation did not apply to the extent expressed. Can
anyone doubt that, according to the practice and decisions in this
state, such proof should have been rejected? A rule of law
admitting such evidence would be a repeal of the principle, giving
a controlling efficacy to written agreements. The memory and
understanding of those present at the formation of the contract
would be quite as potent as the written instrument."
"I have not found that it is anywhere supposed that this general
rule which illegalizes parol evidence under the conditions in
question has been relaxed with respect to contracts for insurance.
Decisions of the utmost authority, both in England and in this
country, propound this doctrine as applicable to policies in the
clearest terms."
After citing a number of cases, the Chief Justice took notice of
the case of
Plumb v. Cattaraugus Ins. Co., 18 N.Y. 392, in
the following terms:
"In the case from New York here referred to, there was, in the
application for the policy, a misdescription of the distance of the
adjacent buildings from the premises insured, and to this defense
the reply was that the agent of the company had made the
measurements and had obtained the signature of the plaintiff on the
assurance 'that the application was all right and just as it should
be.' The court decided that this declaration of the agent could not
be offered for the purpose of altering or contradicting the written
contract, but that it was admissible as an estoppel
in
pais. Now it is at once obvious that, by force of that view,
the agreement in question was enforced not in the sense of the
written terms, but in the sense of the oral evidence, and that the
practical result was precisely the same as though the instrument
had been reformed in conformity to such evidence at the trial. I
think there is no doubt that this application
Page 183 U. S. 336
of the doctrine of estoppel to written contracts is an entire
novelty. In the long line of innumerable cases which have proceeded
and been decided on the ground that parol evidence is not
admissible as against a written instrument, no judge or counsel has
ever intimated, as it is believed, that the same result could be
substantially attained by a resort to this circuity. It is true
that, if there be a substantial ground in legal principle for its
introduction, the fact that it is new will not debar from its
adoption; but I have not been able to perceive the existence of
such substantial ground. In my apprehension the doctrine can be
made to appear plausible only by closing the eyes to the reason of
the rule which rejects, in the presence of written contracts,
evidence by parol. That reason is that the common good requires
that it shall be conclusively presumed in an action at law, in the
absence of deceit, that the parties have committed their real
understanding to writing. Hence it necessarily follows that all
evidence merely oral is rejected whose effect is to vary or
contradict such expressed understanding. Such rejection arises from
the consideration that oral testimony is unreliable in comparison
with that which is written. It is idle to say that the estoppel, if
permitted to operate, will prevent a fraud or inequitable result --
most parol evidence contradictory of a written instrument has the
same tendency; but such evidence is rejected not because, if true,
it ought not to be received, but because the written instrument is
the safer criterion of what was the real intention of the
contracting parties. In the case now criticized, the party insured
stipulated against the existence of buildings within a definite
number of feet from the insured property; by the admission of parol
testimony, this stipulation was restricted and limited in its
effect. This result no doubt was strictly just if we assume that
the parol evidence was true; but, standing opposed to the written
evidence, the law presumes the reverse. The alternative is
unavoidable -- it is a choice between that which is written and
that which is unwritten. In the case cited, the effect of the rule
adopted by the court was to give a different effect to the written
terms from that which they intrinsically possessed -- a result
induced by the admission of oral evidence. This I cannot but think
was a
Page 183 U. S. 337
palpable alteration of the agreement of the parties. The mistake
of the court appears to have been in regarding simply the legal
effect of the facts which were proved by parol. Receiving that
testimony into the case, a clear estoppel was made out, but the
error consisted in the circumstance that such oral evidence was, on
rules well settled, inadmissible. The question presented was purely
one as to a rule of evidence, but it was treated as a problem
relating to the application of general legal principles to an
admitted state of facts. The case was not decided by a unanimous
court, three judges dissented, and, in my judgment, that dissent
was based on satisfactory grounds. . . . The facts now before us do
not present the elements of an estoppel. Such a defense rests on a
misconception as to a state of facts, induced by the party against
whom it is set up. The person who seeks to take advantage of it
must have been misled by the words or conduct of another. Now in
the present case, the agent did not make any statement, nor did he
do anything which led the plaintiff to alter his condition. The
most that can be laid to his charge is that, from carelessness, he
omitted properly to describe the use of the premises insured. But
this was not a misstatement of a fact on which the plaintiff acted,
because the plaintiff was aware of the circumstance that the
building was put to another use. The alleged error in the
description is plain on the face of the policy, and the law
incontestably charges the parties with knowledge of the meaning and
legal effect of his own written contract. . . . To found an
estoppel on the ignorance of the plaintiff of the plainly expressed
meaning of his own contract would be absurd."
In Pennsylvania, it has always been held that courts of law will
not permit the terms of written contracts to be varied or altered
by parol evidence of what took place at or before the time the
contracts were made, and that policies of insurance are within the
protection of the rule.
Thus, when it was stipulated in the conditions of insurance that
a false description of the property insured should avoid the
policy, it was held that a misdescription defeated the plaintiff's
right to recover under it, though the statements were known to be
false by the insurer's agent, who prepared the description
Page 183 U. S. 338
and informed the plaintiff that in that respect the description
was immaterial.
Smith v. Cash Mut. Ins. Co., 24 Pa. 320;
Columbia Ins. Co. v. Cooper, 50 Pa. 331.
In
Commonwealth Mutual Fire Insurance Company v.
Huntzinger, 98 Pa. 41, the subject was examined at length and
the previous cases considered, and it was held that mere mutual
knowledge by the assured and the agent of the falsity of a fact
warranted is entirely inadequate to induce a reformation of the
policy so as to make it conform with the truth; that it is rather
evidence of guilty collusion between the agent and the assured,
from which the latter can derive no advantage. "The conditions of
insurance," said the court,
"provide that notice of additional insurance, or of any change
in existing insurance, shall be given to the company by the insured
in writing, and shall be acknowledged in writing by the secretary,
and no other notice shall be binding or have any force against the
company. In absence of evidence of waiver of the notice required in
this stipulation, we do not think the jury would be justified in
inferring that the knowledge of the agent will bind the principal
of notice of subsequent insurance or surrender of previous
insurance. The parties agreed that written notice should be given,
and in like manner acknowledged by the secretary; mere knowledge of
an agent is not the equivalent of that."
That the law enunciated in these and numerous other cases in
Pennsylvania was not overturned by the case of
Kalmutz v.
Northern Mutual Ins. Co., 186 Pa. 571, as claimed in the brief
of defendant in error, will appear on examining the facts of that
case and the reasoning of the court.
The opinion shows that the court refused to hold that what was
alleged to have taken place at the time the contract was entered
into might be received to change the legal effect of the policy,
Sterrett, C.J., saying:
"The policy in suit contains this provision as to other
insurance:"
"Policies of all other insurance upon property herein described
-- whether made prior or subsequent to the date hereof -- must be
endorsed on this policy, otherwise the insurance shall be
void."
"The existence of such other insurance of which no endorsement
was made on the policy, was conceded, and in order to avoid
Page 183 U. S. 339
the effect of the condition above quoted, the plaintiff
undertook to prove that the defendant company, by its own acts, had
waived the condition, and was thereby estopped from setting it up
as a bar to his recovery. As is usual in such cases, there was more
or less conflicting testimony as to what passed between the
plaintiff and the defendant's agent at the inception of the
contract. In the court below, as well as here, it was forcibly
contended on plaintiff's behalf that the testimony referred to was
sufficient to warrant the jury in finding such facts as legally
constitute an estoppel;
but, inasmuch as the record discloses
other undisputed evidence which necessarily leads to the same
conclusion, it is unnecessary to consider in detail the
conflicting testimony that was submitted to the jury on that
question. The policy in suit was issued in April, 1894, and the
last assessment thereon was made in October following. Defendant
company's secretary testified that he had notice of the additional
insurance on the first Wednesday of November, 1894. Notwithstanding
that notice to the company, the policy was neither recalled nor
cancelled, the premiums or assessments collected were not returned,
nor was any effort made to return the premium note given by
plaintiff, binding him to pay the premiums at such times and in
such manner as the company's directors might by law require. These
facts were admitted, and if, as the authorities appear to hold,
they operated as an estoppel, it will be unnecessary to consume
time in the consideration of other questions sought to be raised by
several of the specifications of error."
The court then cited
Elliott v. Lycoming County Ins.
Co., 66 Pa. 26, where Justice Sharswood said:
"Undoubtedly, if the company, after notice or knowledge of the
overinsurance, treated the contract as subsisting by making and
collecting assessments under it from the insured, they could not
afterwards set up its forfeiture. It would be an estoppel, which is
the true ground upon which the doctrine of waiver in such cases
rests. . . . Enough has been said to show that, upon the undisputed
evidence in the case, the learned trial judge would have been
warranted in holding, as matter of law that the defendant was
estopped from setting up the condition
Page 183 U. S. 340
above quoted as a bar to plaintiff's claim and in instructing
the jury accordingly."
As, therefore, there was no limitation put in the policy upon
the powers of the company's secretary, and as the company, after
having received notice of the existence of other insurance,
declined to avail itself of the right to rescind the contract, but,
on the contrary, elected to enforce payments under the terms of the
policy as a subsisting contract, and these facts having been made
to appear by undisputed evidence, the court would seem to have been
justified in applying the doctrine of estoppel.
It must be conceded that it is shown in the able brief of the
defendant in error that, in several of the states, the courts
appear to have departed from well settled doctrines in respect both
to the incompetency of parol evidence to alter written contracts
and to the binding effect of stipulations in policies restricting
the authority of the company's agents. The nature of the reasoning
on which such courts have proceeded will receive our consideration
when we come to discuss the particular terms of the contract before
us.
Leaving, then, the state courts, let us inquire what is the
voice of the federal authorities.
We do not consider it necessary or profitable to examine in
detail the decisions of the circuit courts or of the circuit courts
of appeals. It is sufficient for our present purpose to say that
the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has held
consistently to the doctrines on this subject laid down by the
English and American courts generally,
United Firemen's Ins.
Co. v. Thomas,, 82 F. 406, and that the Court of Appeals for
the Eighth Circuit in the present case has by a majority of its
members adopted and applied the view that a written contract may,
in an action at law, be changed by parol evidence, and that such
clauses as restrict the power of agents of insurance companies to
contract otherwise than by some writing should be given effect, if
at all, as they respect such modifications of a policy as are made
or attempted to be made after it has been delivered and taken
effect as a valid instrument, and should not be considered as
having relation to acts done by the company or its agents at the
inception of the contract. 101 F. 77.
Page 183 U. S. 341
In such divergence of decisions, we have deemed it proper to
have the present case brought before us by a writ of
certiorari.
As to the fundamental rule that written contracts cannot be
modified or changed by parol evidence unless in cases where the
contracts are vitiated by fraud or mutual mistake, we deem it
sufficient to say that it has been treated by this Court as
invariable and salutary. The rule itself and the reasons on which
it is based are adequately stated in the citations already given
from the standard works of Starkie and Greenleaf.
Policies of fire insurance in writing have always been held by
this Court to be within the protection of this rule.
The first case to be examined is
Carpenter
v. Providence Washington Ins. Co., 16 Pet. 495. The
importance of this case is great, because, if the conclusion there
reached was sound when expressed, and if it has not been overruled
by our subsequent decisions, it is decisive of the case before
us.
And first as to the facts of that case insofar as they resemble
those with which we have now to deal. They were thus stated by Mr.
Justice Story, who delivered the unanimous opinion of the
court:
"This is a writ of error to the circuit court for the District
of Rhode Island. The original action was brought by Carpenter, the
plaintiff in error, against the Providence Washington Insurance
Company, the defendants in error, upon a policy of insurance under
written by the insurance company of $15,000 'on the Glenco Cotton
Factory, in the State of New York,' owned by Carpenter, against
loss or damage by fire. The policy was dated on the 27th of
September, 1838, and was to endure for one year. Among other
clauses in the policy are the following:"
"And provided further, that in case the insured
shall have
already any other insurance on the property hereby insured, not
notified to this corporation and mentioned in or endorsed upon this
policy, then this insurance shall be void and of no effect. .
. . And if the said insured or his assigns
shall hereafter
make any other insurance on the same property, and shall not
with all reasonable diligence give notice thereof to this
corporation and have the same endorsed on this instrument or
otherwise acknowledged by them in writing, this policy
Page 183 U. S. 342
shall cease and be of no further effect. And in case of any
other insurance upon the property hereby insured, whether prior or
subsequent to the date of this policy, the insured shall not in
case of loss or damage be entitled to demand or recover on this
policy any greater portion of the loss or damage sustained than the
amount hereby insured shall bear to the whole amount insured on the
said property. . . ."
"Annexed to the policy are the proposals and conditions on which
the policy is asserted to be made, and among them is the
following:"
"Notice of all
previous insurances upon property
insured by this company shall be given to them, and endorsed on the
policy, or otherwise acknowledged by the company in writing at or
before the time of their making insurance thereon, otherwise the
policy made by this company shall be of no effect."
"The declaration averred that, during the continuance of the
policy he, Carpenter, was the owner of the property by the policy
insured, and was interested in said property to the whole amount so
insured by the company, and that, on the 9th of April, 1839, the
factory was totally destroyed by fire, of which the company had due
notice and proof. The cause came on for trial upon the general
issue, and a verdict was found for the defendants. The plaintiff
took a bill of exceptions to certain instructions refused, and
other instructions given by the court in certain matters of law
arising out of the facts in proof at the trial, and judgment having
been given upon the verdict for the defendants, the present writ of
error has been brought to ascertain the validity of these
exceptions. . . ."
"From the 17th of October, 1836, to the 6th of December, 1837,
Henry M. Wheeler and Samuel G. Wheeler continued to own the factory
in equal moieties, and transacted business under the firm of Henry
M. Wheeler & Co. On that day, Samuel G. Wheeler sold his moiety
to Jeremiah Carpenter. On the 18th of April, 1838, Henry M. Wheeler
sold and conveyed his moiety to Carpenter, who thus became the sole
owner of the entire property. The last conveyance declared the
property subject to a mortgage on the premises from Henry M.
Wheeler and wife, dated in June, 1835, to Epenetus Reed, on which
there was then due six thousand dollars, which Carpenter
Page 183 U. S. 343
assumed to pay. There had been a prior policy on the premises in
the Washington Insurance office, which, upon Carpenter's becoming
the sole owner, the company agreed to continue for account of
Carpenter, and in case of loss, the amount to be paid to him. That
policy expired on the 27th of September, 1838, the day on which the
policy, upon which the present suit is brought, was effected. It is
proper farther to state that other policies on the same factory had
been effected and renewed from time to time, from December 12,
1836, for the benefit of the successive owners thereof, by another
insurance company in Providence, called the American Insurance
Company, and among these was a policy effected, by way of renewal,
on the 14th of December, 1837, in the name of Henry M. Wheeler
& Co., for six thousand dollars, for the benefit of Henry M.
Wheeler and Carpenter (who were then the joint owners thereof),
payable in case of loss to Epenetus Reed. The sale by Henry M.
Wheeler to Carpenter, on the 18th of April, 1838, of his moiety
having been notified to the American Insurance Company, the latter
agreed to the assignment, and the policy thenceforth became a
policy for Carpenter, payable in case of loss to Epenetus Reed. And
on the 23d of May, 1838, Carpenter transferred all his interest in
the policy to Epenetus Reed. The policy thus effected on the 14th
of December, 1837 [in the American Insurance Company] was, (as the
Washington Insurance Company assert), not notified to them at the
time of effecting the policy made on the 27th of September
following, and declared upon in the present suit, nor was the same
ever mentioned in or endorsed upon the same policy, and upon this
account, the company insist that the present policy is, pursuant to
the stipulations contained therein, utterly void. Subsequently,
viz., on the 11th of December, 1838, the American
Insurance Company renewed the policy of the 14th of December, 1837,
for Carpenter and at his request, for one year. This renewed policy
was never notified to the Washington Insurance Company, nor
acknowledged by them in writing, nor does it appear ever to have
been actually assigned to Epenetus Reed, down to the period of the
loss of the factory by fire. On this account also, the Washington
Insurance Company insist that
Page 183 U. S. 344
their policy of the previous 27th of September, 1838, is,
according to the stipulations therein contained, utterly void."
"It seems to have been admitted, although not directly proved,
that a suit was brought upon the policy of the 14th of December,
1837 at the American Insurance office, after the loss, by Carpenter
as trustee of or for the benefit of Reed, for the amount of the six
thousand dollars insured thereby, and that, at the November term,
1839, of the circuit court, the company set up as a defense that
there was a material misrepresentation of the cost and value of the
property in the factory insured made to them at the time of the
original insurance, and it being intimated by the court that if
such was the fact, it would avoid the policy, the plaintiff
acquiesced in that decision, and discontinued or withdrew the
action before verdict."
"The instructions prayed and refused, and also the instructions
actually given by the court, are fully set forth in the record. It
does not seem important to the opinion which we are to pronounce to
recite them at large,
in totidem verbis, since the points
on which they turn admit of a simple and exact exposition."
After disposing of the first instruction, which does not relate
to our present inquiries, the court said:
"The second instruction asked proceeds upon the ground that,
although the policy of the American Insurance Company of the 6th of
December, 1836, was good upon its face, yet if in point of fact it
was procured by a material misrepresentation by the owners of the
cost and value of the premises insured, it was to be deemed utterly
null and void, and therefore, as a null and void policy, notice
thereof need not have been given to the Washington Insurance
Company at the time of underwriting the policy declared on."
"The court refused to give the instruction and, on the contrary,
instructed the jury that if the policy of the American Insurance
Company was, at the time when that at the Washington Insurance
office was made, treated by all the parties thereto as a subsisting
and valid policy, and had never in fact been avoided, but was still
held by the assured as valid, then that notice thereof ought to
have been given to the Washington
Page 183 U. S. 345
Insurance Company, and if it was not, the policy declared on was
void. We are of opinion that the instruction, as asked, was
properly refused, and that given was correct."
After discussing the question, the court added the following
observations:
"Indeed we are not prepared to say that the court might not have
gone farther, and have held that a policy -- existing and in the
hands of the insured and not utterly void upon its very face,
without any reference whatever to any extrinsic facts -- should
have been notified to the underwriters, even although by proofs
afforded by such extrinsic facts it might be held in its very
origin and concoction a nullity."
"And this leads us to say a few words upon the nature and
importance and sound policy of the clauses in fire policies,
respecting notice of prior and subsequent policies. They are
designed to enable the underwriters, who are almost necessarily
ignorant of many facts which might materially affect their rights
and interests, to judge whether they ought to insure at all, or for
what premium, and to ascertain whether there still remains any such
substantial interest of the insured in the premises insured as will
guarantee on his part vigilance, care, and strenuous exertions to
preserve the property. To quote the language of this Court in the
passage already cited, the underwriters do not rely so much upon
the principles as upon the interest of the assured. Besides, in
these policies there is an express provision that in cases of any
prior or subsequent insurances, the underwriters are to be liable
only for a ratable proportion of the loss or damage as the amount
insured by them bears to the whole amount insured thereon. So that
it constitutes a very important ingredient in ascertaining the
amount which they are liable to contribute towards any loss, and
whether there be any other insurance or not upon the property, is a
fact perfectly known to the insured, and not easily or ordinarily
within the means of knowledge of the underwriters."
"The public, too, have an interest in maintaining the validity
of these clauses and giving them full effect and operation. They
have a tendency to keep premiums down to the lowest rates, and to
uphold institutions of this sort, so essential in the
Page 183 U. S. 346
present state of our country for the protection of the vast
interest embarked in manufactures and on consignments of goods in
warehouses. If these clauses are to be construed with a close and
scrutinizing jealousy, when they may be complied with in all cases
by ordinary good faith and ordinary diligence on the part of the
insured, the effect will be to discourage the establishment of fire
insurance companies or to restrict their operations to cases where
the parties and the premises are within the personal observation
and knowledge of the underwriters. Such a course would necessarily
have a tendency to enhance premiums and to make it difficult to
obtain insurance where the parties live or the property is situate
at a distance from the place where the insurance is sought. But be
these considerations as they may, we see no reason why, as these
clauses are a known part of the stipulations of the policy, they
ought not to receive a fair and reasonable interpretation according
to their terms and obvious import. The insured has no right to
complain, for he assents to comply with all the stipulations on his
side in order to entitle himself to the benefit of the contract,
which, upon reason or principle, he has no right to ask the court
to dispense with the performance of his own part of the agreement,
and yet to bind the other party to obligations, which, but for
those stipulations, would not have been entered into."
"We are, then, of opinion that there is no error in the second
instruction. On the contrary, there is strong ground to contend
that the stipulations in the policy as to notice of any prior and
subsequent policies were designed to apply to all cases of policies
then existing in point of fact, without any inquiry into their
original validity and effect or whether they might be void or
voidable."
"The third instruction prayed the court to instruct the jury
that, if the Washington Insurance Company had notice in fact of the
existence of the policy in the American office, that 'was in law a
compliance with the terms of the policy.' The court refused to give
the instruction as prayed, but instructed the jury that at law,
whatever might be the case in equity, mere parol notice of such
insurance was not of itself sufficient to
Page 183 U. S. 347
comply with the requirements of the policy declared on, but that
it was necessary, in case of any such prior policy, that the same
should not only be notified to the company, but should be mentioned
in or endorsed upon the policy; otherwise the insurance was to be
void and of no effect."
"We think this instruction was perfectly correct. It merely
expresses the very language and sense of the stipulation of the
policy, and it can never be properly said that the stipulation in
the policy is complied with when there has been no such mention or
endorsement as it positively requires and without which it declares
the policy shall henceforth be void and of no effect."
Two propositions, then, are clearly established by this
decision: (1) that where a policy provides that notice shall be
given of any
prior or
subsequent insurance,
otherwise the policy to be void, such a provision is reasonable and
constitutes a condition the breach of which will avoid the policy;
(2) that, where the policy provides that notice of prior or
subsequent insurance must be given by endorsement upon the policy
or by other writing, such provision is reasonable and one competent
for the parties to agree upon, and constitutes a condition the
breach of which will avoid the policy.
We are next to inquire whether this decision has been overruled,
or whether it remains as an authoritative declaration of the
law.
Shortly after the case was decided at law, it appears that an
effort was made by said Carpenter to invoke the aid of a court of
equity to enable him to avoid the effect of his own disregard of
the conditions contained in the policy.
Carpenter
v. Providence-Washington Insurance Company, 4 How.
185.
This Court held, affirming the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Rhode Island, sitting in equity, that
under the facts disclosed by the pleadings and evidence, the
complainant was not entitled to equitable relief.
"It is a matter of regret that so great a loss, which the
plaintiff and those under whom he claims intended to guard against
by insurance, should happen entirely without indemnity. But it is
to be remembered that the defendants gave abundant and
Page 183 U. S. 348
repeated notice to him, in writing and print in the policy
itself as well as other ways, that they would not take any risks on
property where it was insured beyond a certain ratio of its full
value unless the circumstances were made known to them, and the
additional policy recognized in writing so as to avoid any mistake,
or accident, or want of deliberate attention to the subject. If the
plaintiff, after all this, omitted to comply with so substantial a
provision in the contract itself, as we are bound to believe on the
evidence now offered, we see no way, equitably or legally, to
prevent the consequences from falling on himself, rather than
others, being the result either of his own neglect or that of some
of the agents he employed. An adherence to such important rule is
peculiarly necessary for the protection of absent stockholders,
often interested extensively in insurance companies, and so far
from its being unconscientious to enforce them, when their
existence is well known and when the risk has been increased
without conforming to them, it is the only and just safeguard of
all concerned in such institutions."
Carpenter v. Providence
Insurance Co., 16 Pet. 495, has been frequently
referred to as an authority in subsequent cases on points
collateral to the one we are now considering.
Taylor
v. Benham, 5 How. 260;
Russell v.
Southard, 12 How. 145;
Oates v. National
Bank, 100 U. S. 246;
Burgess v. Seligman, 107 U. S.
34.
In
Phoenix Life Insurance Co. v. Raddin, 120 U.
S. 183,
120 U. S. 189,
we find
Carpenter v. Providence Insurance Co. cited, per
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, as an authority for the proposition that
"the parties may by their contract make material a fact that
would otherwise be immaterial, or make immaterial a fact that would
otherwise be material. Whether there is other insurance on the same
subject, and whether such insurance has been applied for and
refused, are material facts, at least when statements regarding
them are required by the insurers as part of the basis of the
contract."
It is not pretended in the opinion of the majority in the
circuit court of appeals in the present case that the case of
Carpenter v. Providence-Washington Insurance Co. has
been
Page 183 U. S. 349
modified or overruled by this Court, but the cases relied on by
that court are wholly decisions of several state courts and of some
of the circuit courts. Nor is it claimed by the learned counsel for
the defendant in error that the
Carpenter case has been
formally overruled or modified by this Court. He, however, does
cite three decisions of this Court which, as he views them, should
be regarded as abandoning the doctrines of that case,
viz.,
80 U. S. v.
Wilkinson, 13 Wall. 232;
Eames v. Home Insurance Co.,
94 U. S. 621, and
Insurance Co. v. Norton, 96 U. S. 234.
These cases must therefore receive our attention. What, then,
was the case of
Insurance Co. v. Wikinson? That was a case
where the agent of a life insurance company had inserted in the
application a representation of the age of the mother of the
assured at the time of her death which was untrue, but which the
agent himself obtained from a third person and inserted without the
assent of the assured. It was held that this untrue statement
contained in the application did not invalidate the policy; that
permitting verbal testimony to show how this untrue statement found
its way into the application did not contradict the written
contract sued on, but proceeded on the ground that this statement
was not that of the assured. The trial court said to the jury that,
if the applicant did not know at what age her mother died, and did
not state it, and declined to state it, and that her age was
inserted by the agent upon statements made to him by others in
answer to inquiries he made of them, and upon the strength of his
own judgment, based upon data thus obtained, it was no defense to
the action to show that the agent was mistaken. The case as
reported does not disclose that the plaintiff's testimony as to the
way in which the untrue statement was put in the application was
contradicted or denied by the company. It may therefore be presumed
that the plaintiff's case in that respect was made out by
undisputed evidence. And it would seem, such being the state of
facts, that this Court had reason to hold that the untrue statement
was not made by the assured, and that it would operate as a fraud
on the plaintiff if he were not permitted to show this fact, which
was not a fact or statement contained in
Page 183 U. S. 350
the policy sued on, but an extrinsic fact or statement contained
in the application. The defense made upon that statement was in
legal effect a denial of the execution of the statement -- a
defense that can always be sustained by parol evidence.
However this may have been, we are unwilling to have the case
regarded as one overthrowing a general rule of evidence. Some of
the remarks contained in the opinion might seem to bear that
interpretation, but not necessarily so.
That Mr. Justice Miller did not intend, in the case of
Insurance Co. v. Wilkinson, to lay down a new rule of
evidence in insurance cases is clearly shown in the subsequent case
of
Insurance Co. v.
Lyman, 15 Wall. 664, where the opinion was
delivered by the same learned justice, and who used the following
language:
"Undoubtedly a valid verbal contract for insurance may be made,
and when it is relied on, and is unembarrassed by any written
contract for the same insurance, it can be proved and become the
foundation of a recovery as in all other cases where contracts may
be made either by parol or in writing."
"But it is also true that, when there is a written contract of
insurance, it must have the same effect as the adopted mode of
expressing what the contract is, that it has in other classes of
contract, and must have the same effect in excluding parol
testimony in its application to it that other written instruments
have."
"Counsel for the defendants in error here relies on two
propositions -- namely, that the policy, though executed January
5th, is really but the expression of a verbal contract, made the
31st day of December previous, and that the loss of the vessel
between those two dates does not invalidate the contract, though
known to the insured and kept secret from the insurers; and
secondly that they can abandon the written contract altogether and
recover on the parol contract."
"We do not think that either of these propositions is sound.
Whatever may have been the precise facts concerning the
negotiations for a renewal of the insurance previous to the
execution of the policy, they evidently had reference to a written
contract, to be made by the company. When the company
Page 183 U. S. 351
came to make this instrument, they were entitled to the
information which the plaintiffs had of the loss of the vessel. If
then they had made the policy, it would have bound them, and no
question could have been raised of the validity of the instrument
or of fraud practiced by the insured. On the other hand, if they
had refused to make a policy, no injury would have been done to the
plaintiffs, and they would then have stood on their parol contract,
if they had one, and did not need a policy procured by fraudulent
concealment of a material fact at the time it was executed and the
premium paid."
"To permit the plaintiffs, therefore, to prove by parol that the
contract of insurance was actually made before the loss occurred,
though executed and delivered and paid for afterward, is to
contradict and vary the terms of the policy in a matter material to
the contract, which we understand to be opposed to the rule on that
subject in the law of Louisiana as well as at the common law."
"We think it equally clear that the terms of the contract having
been reduced to writing, signed by one party and accepted by the
other at the time the premium of insurance was paid, neither party
can abandon that instrument as of no value in ascertaining what the
contract was and resort to the verbal negotiations which were
preliminary to its execution for that purpose. The doctrine is too
well settled that all previous negotiations and verbal statements
are merged and excluded when the parties assent to a written
instrument as expressing the agreement."
Eames v. Home Insurance Co., 94 U. S.
621, is another case relied on as showing that the
general rule of evidence was not applicable in insurance cases. But
that was the case of a bill in equity filed against an insurance
company of New York to require said company to issue to the
complainants a policy of insurance against loss or damage by fire,
in pursuance of a contract for that purpose alleged to have been
made with their agents in Illinois. It was made to appear that the
terms of a contract for insurance upon property which was destroyed
by fire before the policy was received had been agreed upon. This
agreement was manifested by an application signed by the
Page 183 U. S. 352
complainant, and in several letters which had passed between the
local agent and the general agent of the company and between the
complainant and the local agent. The report of the case states that
there was an agreement as to certain facts by the attorneys in the
cause, but what those facts were does not distinctly appear in the
report. However, all that can be claimed for the case is that this
Court considered, from the agreement as to facts between the
attorneys and from the application and the several letters between
the agents and the complainant, that a case was made out justifying
a court of equity to decree that complainant was entitled to a
policy of insurance to be issued for the amount and at the premium
shown by the proofs. What was the scope of the authority of the
agents who prepared the application and conducted the
correspondence does not appear, but the Court seems to have assumed
that it sufficiently appeared that the agents had authority to act
as they did. It is not perceived that this case has any valid
application to the case now before us beyond apparently holding,
with
Insurance Co. v.
Wilkinson, in 13 Wall., that it may be shown by
parol that a statement which purports to have been made by an
applicant for insurance was not in point of fact his statement, but
was really that of the agent.
The next case relied on is
Insurance Co. v. Norton,
96 U. S. 234, and
in which it was held by a majority of this Court that an insurance
company may waive any condition of a policy inserted therein for
its benefit. As to this proposition, there was, and could have
been, no disagreement among the judges, but the difference arose
over the sufficiency of the evidence to show the waiver. The
question really was whether the company's agent had authority to
extend the payment of a premium note notwithstanding a provision in
the policy that a failure to pay the note at maturity would incur a
failure of the policy and a declaration that the agents of the
company were not authorized to make, alter, or abrogate contracts
or waive forfeitures. It was held by the majority that a waiver by
the company of both these conditions might be shown by admitting
evidence as to the practice of the company in allowing its agents
to extend the
Page 183 U. S. 353
time for payment of premiums and of notes given for premiums, as
indicative of the power given to those agents, and that error was
not committed by submitting to the jury, upon such evidence, to
find whether the defendants had or had not authorized its agent to
make an extension in this case. In speaking for the majority, Mr.
Justice Bradley said:
"The written agreement of the parties, as embodied in the policy
and the endorsement thereon as well as in the notes and the receipt
given therefor, was undoubtedly to the express purport that a
failure to pay the notes at maturity would incur a forfeiture of
the policy. It also contained an express declaration that the
agents of the company were not authorized to make, alter, or
abrogate contracts or waive forfeiture. And these terms, had the
company so chosen, it could have insisted on. But a party always
has the option to waive a condition or stipulation made in his own
favor. The company was not bound to insist upon a forfeiture,
though incurred, but might waive it. . . . That it [the company]
did authorize its agents to take notes, instead of money for
premiums, is perfectly evident from its constant practice of
receiving such notes when taken by them. That it authorized them to
grant indulgence on these notes, if the evidence is to be believed,
is also apparent from like practice. It acquiesced in and ratified
their acts in this behalf."
Mr. Justice Strong, speaking for the dissenting parties,
said:
"The insurance effected by the policy became forfeited by the
nonpayment
ad diem of the premium note. The policy then
ceased to be a binding contract. It was so expressly stipulated in
the instrument. Admitting that the company could afterwards elect
to treat the policy as still in force, or, in other words, could
waive the forfeiture, the local agent could not, unless he was so
authorized by his principals. The policy declared that agents
should not have authority to make such waivers. And there is no
evidence in this case that the company gave to the agent parol
authority to waive a forfeiture after it had occurred. They had
ratified his acts extending the time of payment of premium notes
when the extension was made before the notes fell due. But no
practice of the company sanctioned any act of
Page 183 U. S. 354
its agent, done after a policy had expired, by which new life
was given to a dead contract."
Whatever may be thought of these divergent views, it is clear
that the facts of that case are widely different from those here
under consideration where there is no evidence whatever of a waiver
by the company, or of authority to the agent, express or implied,
from a course of practice by the company. Here the company "has
chosen," in the language of Mr. Justice Bradley, "to insist upon
the terms of the written contract."
The subject of waiver by agents was further considered in the
case of
Insurance Co. v. Wolff, 95 U. S.
326, when the unanimous opinion of the Court was
delivered by Mr. Justice Field:
"By the residence of the insured within the prohibited district
of country during the period designated in the policy without the
previous consent of the company, and the failure of the assured to
pay the annual premium when it became due, the policy, by its
express terms, was forfeited, and the company released from
liability, unless the forfeiture was waived by the action of the
company, or of its agents authorized to represent it in that
respect."
"The waiver of the forfeiture for the nonpayment of the premium
due on the 1st of November, 1872, is alleged on the ground that the
premium was subsequently paid to an agent of the company, he
delivering its receipt for the same, signed by its secretary and
countersigned by the manager and cashier of the local office, the
plaintiff contending that the company, by its previous general
course of dealing with its agents and its practice with respect to
the policy in suit, had authorized the premiums to be paid and the
agent to receive the same after they became due, and thus had
waived any right to a strict compliance with the terms of the
policy as to the payment of premiums."
"The waiver of the forfeiture arising from the residence within
the prohibited district between the 1st of July and November
without the previous consent of the company is also alleged from
the subsequent payment of the premium and its receipt by the local
agent, the plaintiff contending that the premium was received with
knowledge by the agent of the
Page 183 U. S. 355
previous residence of the insured within the prohibited
district. . . ."
"The conditions mentioned in the policy could, of course, be
waived by the company either before or after they were broken; they
were inserted for its benefit, and it depended upon its pleasure
whether they should be enforced. The difficulty in this case, and
in nearly all cases where a waiver is alleged in the absence of
written proof of the fact, arises from a consideration of the
effect to be given to the acts of agents of the company in their
dealings with the assured. Of course such agents, if they bind the
company, must have authority to waive a compliance with the
conditions upon the breach of which the forfeiture is claimed, or
to waive the forfeiture when incurred, or their acts waiving such
compliance or forfeiture must be subsequently approved by the
company. The law of agency is the same whether it be applied to the
act of an agent undertaking to continue a policy of insurance or to
any other act for which his principal is sought to be held
responsible. . . ."
"The company, notwithstanding the provision in the policy that
its agents were not authorized to waive the forfeitures, sent to
them renewal receipts signed by its secretary, to be used when
countersigned by its local manager and cashier, leaving their use
subject entirely to the judgment of the local agent. The propriety
of their use, in the absence of any fraud in the matter, could not
afterwards be questioned by the company. . . . So far, then, as the
waiver of the forfeiture incurred for nonpayment of the premiums is
concerned, it is clear that the company, by its course of dealing,
had, notwithstanding the provision of the policy, left the matter
to be determined by its local agent, to whom the renewal receipts
were entrusted."
"But so far as a forfeiture arose from the residence of the
insured within the prohibited district, the case is different.
There is nothing in the acts of the company which goes to show that
it ever authorized its agents to waive a forfeiture thus incurred,
or that it ever knew of any residence of the insured within the
prohibited district until informed of his death there. In every
case where premiums were received after the day they were payable,
the fact that a forfeiture had been incurred was
Page 183 U. S. 356
made known to the company from the date of the payment, and the
retention of the money constituted a waiver of the forfeiture, but
no information of a forfeiture on any other ground was imparted by
the date of such payment. The agent receiving the premium in the
case at bar testified that he knew nothing of the residence of the
insured within the prohibited district during the excepted period,
and the evidence in conflict with his testimony was slight. He knew
that the insured had a place of business there, and that he was
permitted to make occasional visits there within that period, and
to reside there at other times. Everything produced as evidence of
knowledge of residence within the prescribed district is consistent
with these occasional visits and residence at other times than
during the excepted period."
"But even if the agent knew the fact of residence within the
excepted period, he could not waive the forfeiture thus incurred
without authority from the company. The policy declared that he was
not authorized to waive forfeitures, and to the provision effect
must be given, except so far as the subsequent acts of the company
permitted it to be disregarded. There is no evidence that the
company in any way, directly or indirectly, sanctioned a disregard
of the provision with reference to any forfeitures except such as
occurred from nonpayment of premiums. As soon as it was informed of
the residence of the insured within the prohibited district, it
directed a return of the premium subsequently paid. It would be
against reason to give to the receipt of the premium by the agent,
under the circumstances stated, the efficacy claimed. The court, in
its instructions, treated the receipt of the premium by the agent,
with knowledge of the previous residence of the insured within the
prohibited district, if the agent had such knowledge, as itself a
sufficient waiver of the forfeiture incurred, without any evidence
of the action of the company when informed of such residence, and
in this respect we think the court erred. It is essential that the
company should have had some knowledge of the forfeiture before it
can be held to have waived it. It is true that, where an agent is
charged with the collection of premiums upon policies, it will be
presumed that he informs the company of any circumstances coming to
his knowledge affecting
Page 183 U. S. 357
its liability, and if subsequently the premiums are received by
the company without objection, any forfeiture incurred will be
presumed to be waived. But here there was no ground for any
inference of this kind from the subsequent action or silence of the
company. There was no evidence of a disregard of the condition as
to the residence of the insured in any previous year, and
consequently there could be no inference of a waiver of its breach
from a subsequent retention of the premium paid. This is a case
where immediate enforcement of the forfeiture incurred was directed
when information was received that the condition of the policy in
that respect had been broken."
"Not only should the company have been informed of the
forfeiture before it could be held by its action to have waived it,
but it should also have been informed of the condition of the
health of the insured at the time the premium was tendered, upon
the payment of which the waiver is claimed. The doctrine of waiver,
as asserted against insurance companies to avoid the strict
enforcement of conditions contained in their policies, is only
another name for the doctrine of estoppel. It can only be invoked
when the conduct of the companies has been such as to induce action
in reliance upon it, and where it would operate as a fraud upon the
assured if they were afterwards allowed to disavow their conduct
and enforce the conditions. To a just application of this doctrine,
it is essential that the company sought to be estopped from denying
the waiver claimed should be apprised of all the facts -- of those
which create the forfeiture and of those which will necessarily
influence its judgment in consenting to waive it. The holder of the
policy cannot be permitted to conceal from the company an important
fact, like that of the insured being
in extremis, and then
to claim a waiver of the forfeiture created by the act which
brought the insured to that condition. To permit such concealment
and yet to give to the action of the company the same effect as
though no concealment were made would tend to sanction a fraud on
the part of the policyholder, instead of protecting him against the
commission of one by the company."
New York Life Insurance Co. v. Fletcher, 117 U.
S. 519, is
Page 183 U. S. 358
an instructive case on the points in controversy here. The facts
of the case, as stated in the syllabus, were as follows:
"A person applied in St. Louis to an agent of a New York
insurance company for insurance on his life. The agent, under
general instructions, questioned him on subjects material to the
risk. He made answers which, if correctly written down and
transmitted to the company, would have probably caused it to
decline the risk. The agent, without the knowledge of the
applicant, wrote down false answers, concealing the truth, which
were signed by the applicant without reading, and by the agent
transmitted to the company, and the company thereupon assumed the
risk. It was conditioned in the policy that the answers were part
of it, and that no statement to the agent not thus transmitted
should be binding on his principal, and a copy of the answers, with
these conditions conspicuously printed upon it, accompanied the
policy.
Held, that the policy was void."
The unanimous opinion of the court was delivered by Mr. Justice
Field, the principal portions of which were as follows:
"It is conceded that the statements and representations
contained in the answers, as written, of the assured to the
questions propounded to him in his application respecting his past
and present health were material to the risk to be assumed by the
company, and that the insurance was made upon the faith of them,
and upon his agreement, accompanying them, that, if they were false
in any respect, the policy to be issued upon them should be void.
It is sought to meet and overcome the force of this conceded fact
by proof that he never made the statements and representations to
which his name was signed; that he truthfully answered those
questions; that false answers, written by an agent of the company,
were inserted in place of those actually given, and were forwarded
with the application to the home office, and it is contended that,
such proof being made, the plaintiff is not estopped from recovery.
But on the assumption that the fact as to the answers was as stated
and that no further obligation rested upon the assured in
connection with the policy, it is not easy to perceive how the
company can be precluded from setting up their falsity, or bow any
rights upon the policy ever accrued to him. It is, of
Page 183 U. S. 359
course, not necessary to argue that the agent had no authority
from the company to falsify the answers, or that the assured could
acquire no right by virtue of his falsified answers. Both he and
the company were deceived by the fraudulent conduct of the agent.
The assured was placed in the position of making false
representations in order to secure a valuable contract which, upon
a truthful report of his condition, could not have been obtained.
By them the company was imposed upon, and induced to enter into the
contract. In such a case, assuming that both parties acted in good
faith, justice would require that the contract be cancelled and the
premiums returned. As the present action is not for such
cancellation, the only recovery which the plaintiff could properly
have upon the facts he asserts, taken in connection with the
limitation upon the powers of the agent, is for the amount of the
premiums paid, and to that only would he be entitled by virtue of
the statute of Missouri."
"But the case as presented by the record is by no means as
favorable to him as we have assumed. It was his duty to read the
application he signed. He knew that upon it the policy would be
issued, if issued at all. It would introduce great uncertainty in
all business transactions if a party making written proposals for a
contract, with representations to induce its execution, should be
allowed to show after it had been obtained that he did not know the
contents of his proposals, and to enforce it notwithstanding their
falsity as to matters essential to its obligation and validity.
Contracts could not be made or business fairly conducted if such a
rule should prevail, and there is no reason why it should be
applied merely to contracts of insurance. There is nothing in their
nature which distinguishes them in this particular from others. But
here the right is asserted to prove not only that the assured did
not make the statements contained in his answers, but that he never
read the application, and to recover upon a contract obtained by
representations admitted to be false just as though they were true.
If he had read even the printed lines of his application, he would
have seen that it stipulated that the rights of the company could
in no respect be affected by his
Page 183 U. S. 360
verbal statements or by those of its agents unless the same were
reduced to writing and forwarded with his application to the home
office. The company, like any other principal, could limit the
authority of its agents and thus bind all parties dealing with them
with knowledge of the limitation. It must be presumed that he read
the application and was cognizant of the limitations therein
expressed."
"In
Globe Insurance Co. v. Wolff, 95 U. S.
329, the policy declared that the agents of the company
were not authorized to waive forfeitures, and this Court held that
effect must be given to the provision except so far as the
subsequent acts of the company permitted it to be disregarded. In
Insurance Co. v. Norton, 96 U. S. 240, the policy
contained an express declaration that the agents of the company
were not authorized to make, alter, or abrogate contracts or waive
forfeitures, and this Court held that the company could have
insisted upon those terms had it so chosen. . . . The present case
is very different from
Insurance Co. v. Wilkinson,
13 Wall. 222, and from
Insurance Co. v. Mahone, 21
Wall. 152.
In neither of these cases was any limitation upon
the power of the agent brought to the notice of the assured.
Reference was made to the interested and officious zeal of
insurance agents to procure contracts, and to the fact that parties
who were induced to take out policies rarely knew anything
concerning the company or its officers, but relied upon the agent
who had persuaded them to effect insurance, 'as the full and
complete representative of the company in all that is said or done
in making the contract,' and the court held that the powers of the
agent are
prima facie coextensive with the business
entrusted to his care, and would not be narrowed by limitations not
communicated to the person with whom he dealt. Where such agents,
not limited in their authority, undertake to prepare applications
and take down answers, they will be deemed as acting for the
companies. In such cases, it may well be held that the description
of the risk, though nominally proceeding from the assured, should
be regarded as the act of the company. Nothing in these views has
any bearing upon the present case. Here, the power of the agent was
limited, and notice of such limitation given by being embodied in
the application, which
Page 183 U. S. 361
the assured was required to make and sign, and which, as we have
stated, he must be presumed to have read. He is therefore bound by
its statements."
What, then, are the principles sustained by the authorities, and
applicable to the case in hand?
They may be briefly stated thus: that contracts in writing, if
in unambiguous terms, must be permitted to speak for themselves,
and cannot, by the courts at the instance of one of the parties, be
altered or contradicted by parol evidence unless in case of fraud
or mutual mistake of facts; that this principle is applicable to
cases of insurance contracts as fully as to contracts on other
subjects; that provisions contained in fire insurance policies that
such a policy shall be void and of no effect if other insurance is
placed on the property in other companies without the knowledge and
consent of the company are usual and reasonable; that it is
reasonable and competent for the parties to agree that such
knowledge and consent shall be manifested in writing, either by
endorsement upon the policy or by other writing; that it is
competent and reasonable for insurance companies to make it matter
of condition in their policies that their agents shall not be
deemed to have authority to alter or contradict the express terms
of the policies as executed and delivered; that, where fire
insurance policies contain provisions whereby agents may, by
writing endorsed upon the policy or by writing attached thereto,
express the company's assent to other insurance, such limited grant
of authority is the measure of the agent's power in the matter, and
where such limitation is expressed in the policy, executed and
accepted, the insured is presumed as matter of law to be aware of
such limitation; that insurance companies may waive forfeiture
caused by nonobservance of such conditions; that where waiver is
relied on, the plaintiff must show that the company, with knowledge
of the facts that occasioned the forfeiture, dispensed with the
observance of the condition; that where the waiver relied on is an
act of an agent, it must be shown, either that the agent had
express authority from the company to make the waiver or that the
company subsequently, with knowledge of the facts, ratified the
action of the agent.
Page 183 U. S. 362
In the light of these principles, let us examine the contract
that was made between the parties to the controversy before us. The
contract was in writing, and in clear and unambiguous terms; that
contract provided that
"this entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement
endorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void if the insured
now has or shall hereafter make or procure, any other
contract of insurance, whether valid or not, on property covered in
whole or in part by this policy,"
and that
"no officer, agent, or other representative of this company
shall have power to waive any provision or condition of this policy
except such as by the terms of the policy may be the subject of
agreement endorsed hereon or added hereto, and as to such
provisions or conditions, no officer, agent, or representative
shall have power or be deemed or held to have waived such
provisions or conditions, unless such waiver, if any, shall be
written upon or attached hereto, nor shall any privilege or
permission affecting the insurance under this policy exist or be
claimed by the insured unless so written or attached."
Such being the contract, and the property insured having been
destroyed by fire on June 1, 1898, and the insurance company having
denied liability because informed that other insurance was held by
the insured on the same property without the knowledge or consent
of the company, this action was brought.
It is not pretended, as we understand the plaintiff's position,
that by any language or declaration of the agent at the time the
policy was delivered and the premium paid, he claimed to have power
to waive any provision or condition of the policy, nor that the
plaintiff was induced to accept the policy by any promise of the
agent to procure the assent of the company to permit the
outstanding insurance and to waive the condition. The plaintiff's
case stands solely on the proposition that, because it is alleged
and the jury have found that the agent had notice or knowledge of
the existence of insurance existing in another company at the time
the policy in suit was executed and accepted, and received the
premium called for in the contract, thereby the insurance company
is estopped from availing itself of the protection of the
conditions contained in the policy. In
Page 183 U. S. 363
other words, the contention is that an agent with no authority
to dispense with or alter the conditions of the policy could confer
such power upon himself by disregarding the limitations expressed
in the contract, those limitations being according to all the
authorities presumably known to be insured. It was not shown that
the company, when it received the premium, knew of the outstanding
insurance, nor that, when made aware of such insurance, it elected
to ratify the act of its agent in accepting the premium. On the
contrary, all the record discloses is that the jury found that the
agent knew, when the policy in the defendant company was issued and
delivered to the plaintiff, that there was then subsisting fire
insurance to the amount of $1,500 in another fire insurance
company, and that such knowledge had been communicated to the agent
by or on behalf of the assured. There is no finding that the agent
communicated to the company or to its general agent at Chicago, at
the time he accounted for the premium, the fact that there was
existing insurance on the property and that he had undertaken to
waive the applicable condition. Indeed, it appears from the letter
of defendant's manager at Chicago, to whom the proofs of loss had
been sent, which letter was put in evidence by the plaintiff and is
set forth in the bill of exceptions, that the additional insurance
held by the plaintiff was without the knowledge or consent of the
company, and it further appears, and was found by the jury, that
immediately on the company's being informed of the fact, the amount
of the premium was tendered by the agents of the company to the
insured. So that there is not the slightest ground for claiming
that the insurance company, with knowledge of the facts, either
accepted or retained the premium. The plaintiff's case, at its
best, is based on the alleged fact that the agent had been informed
at the time he delivered the policy and received the premium that
there was other insurance. The only way to avoid the defense and
escape from the operation of the condition is to hold that it is
not competent for fire insurance companies to protect themselves by
conditions of the kind contained in this policy. So to hold would,
as we have seen, entirely subvert well settled principles declared
in the leading English and American cases, and particularly in
those of this Court.
Page 183 U. S. 364
This case is an illustration of the confusion and uncertainty
which would be occasioned by permitting the introduction of parol
evidence to modify written contracts and by approving the conduct
of agents and persons applying for insurance in disregarding the
express limitations put upon the agents by the principal to be
affected.
It should not escape observation that preserving written
contracts from change or alteration by verbal testimony of what
took place prior to and at the time the parties put their
agreements into that form is for the benefit of both parties. In
the present case, if the witnesses on whom the plaintiff relied to
prove notice to the agent had died, or had forgotten the
circumstances, he would thus, if he had depended to prove his
contract by evidence extrinsic to the written instrument, have
found himself unable to do so. So, on the other side, if the agent
had died, or his memory had failed, the defendant company might
have been at the mercy of unscrupulous and interested witnesses. It
is not an answer to say that such difficulties attend other
transactions and negotiations, for it is the knowledge of the
inconveniences that attend oral evidence that has led to the custom
of putting important agreements in writing and to the legal
doctrine that protects them when so expressed, and when no fraud or
mutual mistake exists, from being changed or modified by the
testimony of witnesses as to conversations and negotiations that
may never have taken place or the real nature and meaning of which
may have faded from recollection.
Besides the importance of such considerations to the parties
immediately concerned in business transactions, the community at
large have a deep interest in the welfare and prosperity of such
beneficial institutions as fire insurance companies. It would be
very unfortunate if prudent men should be deterred from investing
capital in such companies by having reason to fear that conditions
which have been found reasonable and necessary to put into policies
to protect the companies from faithless agents and from dishonest
insurers are liable to be nullified by verdicts based on verbal
testimony. Increased importance should be given to the rules
involved in this discussion
Page 183 U. S. 365
by that fact that, in latter times and in most, if not all, of
the states, statutory changes have opened the courts to the
testimony of the very parties who have signed the written
instrument in controversy.
The judgment of the circuit court of appeals is reversed.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is likewise reversed, and the
cause remitted to that court with directions to proceed in
conformity with this opinion.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM
dissent.