Howard v. Kentucky & Louisville Mutual Insurance
Howard v. Kentucky & Louisville Mutual Insurance
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Howard brought an action in the Bourbon circuit ■court against the Kentucky and Louisville Mutual Insurance Company, and stated in his petition that the defendants, by their policy dated the 4th January, 1848, agreed to pay him the sum of two thousand dollars, if his three story brick and frame warehouse, situated in the town of Paris, should be destroyed by fire within six years from the date of the policy; that he had duly performed all the conditions required of him by the policy, and that on the-day of-, 1851, the frame part of said warehouse was entirely, and the brick portion partially destroyed by fire, the policy still being in full force, and the building occupied as at the date thereof; and that the defendants had not, although duly notified thereof in the manner required by the policy, rebuilt said warehouse or paid him the amount of the insurance. He therefore prayed judgment for the two thousand dollars.
The defendants in their answer, after copying therein the tenth section of the act to incorporate the Kentucky and Louisville Mutual Insurance Company, which was passed in 1839, (Session Acts, 1838-9, 228,) denied that the court had jurisdiction of the action, because, by the provisions of that section of their charter, all suits for losses upon any policy issued by them, must be brought in the Jefferson circuit court, as therein prescribed.
As another ground of defense, they stated in their answer that the loss mentioned in the petition was occasioned by the burning of a framed building erected by the plaintiff since the date of the policy, near to the house insured, without the knowledge or consent of the defendants, and that the risk was much increased, and the loss in fact directly occasioned thereby.
The plaintiff filed a separate demurrer to each of these two grounds of defense, and his demurrers having been overruled, a judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, which the plaintiff now seeks to reverse.
It is contended, that this section does not confer exclusive jurisdiction over the matter in controversy upon the Jefferson circuit coui’t; that other circuit courts would have jurisdiction in such cases, if the jurisdiction of the Jefferson circuit court be not exclusive; and as the language of the charter does not necessarily import such exclusive jurisdiction, other circuit courts should not be ousted of their jurisdiction over the matter by mere intendment and inference, but only by language clear and explicit.
The charter prescribes the mode in which a person sustaining a loss upon property insured by the company shall proceed to have the extent of the loss ascertained, and to obtain relief for the injury. In
It is, however, contended that the right to sue the company in the county of Bourbon exists under the provisions of the Code of Practice, even if‘ the action were previously local by the terms of the charter. The Code of Practice, §127, authorizes an action to be brought against a bank or an insurance company in the county in which there is a branch of the bank, or agency of the company, where it arises out of a transaction of such branch or agency. And § 106 provides, that where the defendant is an incorporated insurance company, and the action is in a county in which there is an agency thereof, the service may be upon the chief officer of such agency.
The Code of Practice undoubtedly authorized the plaintiff to maintain the present action in the county of Bourbon, unless the insurance company acquired a right under the charter to be sued alone in the county of Jefferson, which could not be divested by subsequent legislation.
In general the legislature has the power to regulate the remedy for the enforcement of contracts, and to modify it in any manner it may deem proper, if the obligation of the contract be not thereby impaired, or the vested rights of the parties encroached upon or violated. Whether the remedy given by its charter against an incorporated company, forms a part of its chartered rights, which the legislative power cannot constitutionally modify or alter, where such alteration essentially affects the rights or interests of the com
The only objection urged to the jurisdiction of the Bourbon circuit court is, that a trial in that county may increase the costs of the defendants, and if the corporation be compelled to submit its rights to the decision of a tribunal where the plaintiff resides, an undue influence may be exercised against it in favor of the party whose property has been destroyed by fire. With respect to the costs of the suit, it is evident that a trial in the county where the property was situated, and the loss occurred, would in all probability diminish instead of increasing them. It may be presumed that, ordinarily, the witnesses necessary in such a trial reside where the property was destroyed, and as the agent of the corporation also resides at the same place, the convenience of both parties will
The circuit court having decided that it had no jurisdiction in the case, it was improper for it to decide' upon the sufficiency of the other matters of defense relied upon in the answer; for it was immaterial, if the court had no jurisdiction, whether they constituted a valid defense to the action or not; and the fact that-the plaintiff, had died a demurrer to that part of the answer did not authorize the court to decide the question which it presented. We shall, therefore, regard the parties as occupying the position they would do, if the court below had alone decided, as it should have done, the question of jurisdiction. But as the sufficiency of the defense set forth and relied upon in the answer was decided by the court, and will no doubt arise upon the return of the cause to the circuit court,we will consider the question it involves, and dispose of it at this time.
In the description of the building insured, made by the plaintiff at the time he pz’ocured the policy, he was required to state its relative situation to other buildings, and distance from each, if less than ten rods, and- the purposes for which such other buildings were occupied. It thus appears that these matters entered into the estimate of the risk, and therefore the applicant was under an obligation to give a true statement of them in the descziption he furnished ;- but he did not undertake, either expressly or by implication,-that the relative situation of the building insured, with reference to other adjacent buildings, should remain unchanged during the continuance of the policy. He was not required to state in the description of the insuz’ed property, who were the proprietors of the adjacent ground upon which other buildings might be erected; and if it belonged to1 other persons, it was certainly not in the contemplation of the parties that he should be responsible for their acts.-
It is evident that the policy contains no’ prohibition hgainst the erection of other buildings contiguous to those insured. The defendants, by the terms of the policy, guarded against ait increase of the risk, by an appropriation of the building insured for a purpose more hazardous than that which existed at its date, by declaring the policy void in consequence of such increased risk; but they did not insert any such stipulation with respect to the erection of adjacent buildings.
The erection of an adjacent building by the assured did not, therefore, render the policy void, or ¿is-charge the underwriters. It might not have produced any actual injury to the insurers, even if it greatly increased the risk, and as the act did not violate any stipulation in the policy, the law would, in the event that no injury resulted from it, regard it as harmless an d unimportant. Although, however, the policy was not rendered void by the subsequent erection of á building adjacent to those insured, it does not follow that the insurers are bound to sustain the loss, if 7 7 . 77 , oné occurred, and was occasioned by such an act on the part of the assured. The contract of insurance rests upon the mutual good faith of the parties. The assured violates that good faith' by doing any act which increases the risk that has been incurred by the ^ insurers. This breach of good faith, if it produces no" injury to the other party, doés not impair his own-rights under the contract; but if it occasions a loss,such loss devolves upon himself, and hot upon the insurers, inasmuch as it results from a violation of that goo’d faith, which in legal contemplation was pledged to them, that the risk should- not be increased by his act, during the running of the policy, without their ásSerit. Thus, if the assured should, subsequent to the' date' of the policy, erect a building near to the property insured, and thereby greatly increase the hazard df loss by fire, and a loss should occur, which was not occasioned by the building newly erected, the insurers would have no cause to complain of the act of
According to this doctrine the ground of defense contained in the answer, to which the second demurrer of the plaintiff was filed, was valid, and sufficient to defeat the plaintiff’s action. As the demurrer was overruled, and the plaintiff did not i-ndicate any desire to try the issue presented by the answer, but abided by his demurrer, the judgment for the defendant would be right, and could not be reversed, were it not that the court, by deciding that it had no jurisdiction of the cause, deprived the plaintiff of all right to proceed any further, and of course he was not bound to notice the other matters of defense, nor demand a trial of them by a jury, which the court, according to the decision given by it on the question of jurisdiction, could not have allowed. Nor should the second demurrer have been acted on by the court, as the effect of its decision upon the first demurrer was to put the plaintiff out of court. We shall, therefore, regard the judgment as having been pronounced upon the question of jurisdiction made under the first demurrer, and the parties as occupying the same attitude they would have done, if the court had not acted at all, upon the second demurrer.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.