Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GENERAL ASSURANCE SOCIETY Ltd.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHANDUMULL JAIN AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/02/1966
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
RAMASWAMI, V.
SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1644 1966 SCR (3) 500
ACT:
Insurance-Acceptance and covers notes issued by insurer-
Policy not issued-Conditions of policy whether applicable to
contract-Condition allowing parties to cancel contract
whether reasonable-Cancellation by insurer when valid.
HEADNOTE:
Letters of acceptance of the proposals and cover notes were
issued by the appellant Society purporting to insure certain
houses belonging to the respondents against damage from
fire, flood etc. According to the covernotes the insurance
was subject to the ’usual conditions of the Society’s
polices.’ However, the Society had not issued the policies
by the time the Ganges, near the banks of which the houses
stood, began to get into flood. Soon thereafter the society
cancelled the risk, relying on condition (10) of its Fire
policy. The houses were washed away and the respondents
filed a suit in the High Court demanding payment under the
policies. The trial Judge dismissed it but the High Court
decreed it. The questions that fell for determination were,
whether Condition (10) of the Fire policy was applicable to
the facts of the case, whether the said condition was
reasonable, and whether the cancellation of the policy by
the society was valid :
HELD : (i) Looking at the proposal, the letter of acceptance
and the cover notes it was clear that a contract of
insurance under the standard policy of fire and extended to
cover flood, cyclone, etc., had come into being The fact
that the policy was not actually delivered made no
difference because when a contract of insurance is complete,
it is immaterial whether the policy is actually delivered
after the loss, and for the same reason the rights of the
parties are governed by the policy to be, between acceptance
and delivery of the policy. Even if no terms are specified
the terms contained in a policy customarily issued in such a
case, apply. In the present case the cover notes clearly
said that the usual terms of the society’s policies would
apply. Condition (10) was a usual condition of such
policies and therefore it could be invoked by the Society.
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[510 B; 512 D-G]
(ii- There is nothing wrong in including in a contract of
insurance a mutual condition for the cancellation of the
contract. Condition (10) of the Fire policy gave equal
rights of cancellation to both parties and was not
unreasonable. [513 B-C]
(iii) A condition such as Condition (10) is intended to
cancel the risk but not to avoid liability for loss which
has taken place, or to avoid risk when it is already turning
into a loss. Cancellation is reasonably possible before the
liability under the policy has commenced or has become
inevitable, and it is a question of fact in each case
whether the cancellation is legitimate or illegitimate. On
the facts of the case it could not be said that the society
cancelled the policies after the loss had already commenced
or had become inevitable. The cancellation was therefore
valid. [514 H-515 C; 515 G]
501
Sun Fire Office v. Hart & Ors. (1889) 14 A. C. 98 a d The
Central Bank of India v. Hartford Fire Insurance Co. Ltd. n.
1. R. (1956) S. C. 1288, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 886 of 1963.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated 13th/14th July,
1961 of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal No. 44 of 1959.
C. B. Agarwala, B. M. Agarwala and L N. Shroff, for the
appellant.
Niren De, Additional Solicitor General, G. L. Sanghi, Nirmal
Kumar Ghosal, J. B. Dadachanji, 0. C. Mathur and Ravinder
Narain, for the respondents.,
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatallah J. This appeal is taken from a judgment of the
High Court of Calcutta, July 13 and 14, 1961, by which a
Divisional Bench of the High Court, reversing the judgment
of a learned single Judge of the same Court, decreed the
respondents’ claim for damages. The circumstances were
these. The appellant is a general insurance company. On
June 2, 1950 the respondents submitted proposals to the
company with a view to insuring certain houses in Dhullian
bearing Holding Nos. 274, 274/-A-B-C-and D and 273, 273/A-B-
C and D, for Rs. 51,000 and Rs. 65,000 respectively against
fire and including loss or damage by cyclone, flood and/ or
change of course of river or erosion of river, landslides
and subsidence. The town of Dhulian is situated on the
banks of the Ganges and for several years the river had been
changing its course and in 1949 a part of the town was
washed away. The insurance was obviously effected with this
risk in sight. The period of insurance was to be from June
3, 1950 to June 2, 1951. The Company accepted the proposals
by two letters (Ex. D.) on June 3, 1950 and the letters
stated that. in accordance with the proposal the assured was
held covered under cover notes enclosed with the letters.
At the back of these letters of acceptance, there was
description of the houses and an endorsement which read:
"Including Cyclone, Flood and/or loss by
change of course of river diluvium and/or
Erosion of River Landslide and/or subsidence.
It is further noted that there is a thatched
building of residence within 50 ft. of the
above premises."
Two interim protection cover notes Nos.118848 and 18850 in
respect of the two proposals were filed by the insurance
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company along with the written statement and they were said
to be copies of cover notes sent with the letters of
acceptance, but they bore the date June 5, 1950. There is
some dispute as to whether they were at all enclosed with
the reply showing acceptance of the proposals.
110Sup. CI/66-2
502
of the two cover notes, which are identical except for
details we may read one only:
"Messrs. Chandmull Lal Chand, P.O. Dhulian
Murshidabad being desirous to effect an
Insurance from loss by Fire, for Rs. 51,000 on
the following Property viz.:
One Pucca built and roofed bldg. (C. J.
Vizandah) holding No. 274, 274A, 274B and 274C
occpd. as residence and/or shop for the
storage of Hydrogenated G nut oil (vanaspati)
and safety matches also situate at Dhulian,
Ward No. IV, District Murshidabad.
Incl. Loss or damage by cyclone flood and/or
change of course of river and/or Erosion of
river, landslides and/or subsidence.
It is further noted that there is a thatched
bldg. of residence within 50 ft. of the above
premises.
for one year from 3rd June, 1950 to 3rd June,
1951.
The said property is hereby held insured
against ,damage by Fire, subject to the terms
of the Applicant’s proposal and to the usual
Conditions of the Society’s policies. It is,
however, expressly stipulated that this
protection Note cannot, under any
circumstances be applicable for a longer
period than Thirty Days, and that it is also
immediately terminated before that date by
delivery of the policy, or if the Risk be
declined by the notification of such
declinature.
Prem : Rs. 892-8-0 Fire @ 28 as %
Prem : Rs. 382-8-0 Flood and other risks
12 as%
Premium : Rs. 1,275-0-0."
On June 7, the assured sent the premia by cheque. As no
policy was received by them, the assured wrote a letter on
July 1 (Ex. A/g) asking for the policy or for extension of
the cover notes. This was not done.
On July 6, 1950 the Company wrote to the assured two identi-
cally worded letters (except for changes in amounts and
numbers
of the policies) which read
Calcutta 6th July, 1950
503
TO
M/s Chandmull Lal Chand, P.O. Dhulian,
Murshidabad.
Dear Sir,
In accordance with the inspection report lodged with this
Co. we cancel the risk from 6th July, 1950 as noted below.
The relative Endorsement is under preparation and will be
forwarded to you in due; course.
Yours faithfully,
(Sd.)/- Illegible
Ag. Manager & Underwriter.
Nature of Alteration:
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The above cover note is cancelled by the General Assurance
Society Ltd. as from 6th July, 1950."
On July 15, 1950 the assured wrote to say that they held the
Company bound because although there was no erosion by the
river when the proposals were submitted and accepted, the
Company was trying to get out of the contract when the river
was eroding the banks. They ended this letter by saying:
"Now when the erosion and/or change of course
of river and/or subsidence have commenced, it
is quite impossible to take any precautionary
measure or to rein sure the same with any
other office of Insurance at this stage.
On July 17, 1950 the Company prepared an endorsement for the
’policies cancelling the risk and sent the endorsements to
the assured. The endorsement read:
_ . . . . . . . . . . .
_ . . . . . . . . . . .
In the name of :-Messrs. Chandmull Lal Chand, P.O.
Dhulian, Murshidabad.
It is hereby declared and agreed that as from 6th July 1950
the insurance by this policy is cancelled by The General
504
Assurance Society Ltd., Calcutta, and a refund premium of
Rs.......... is hereby allowed to the assured on a
pro rata basis.
(Sd)/- Illegible.
Ag. Manager & Underwriter.
Calcutta,
In reply the latter said that as the risk had already
"commenced’ and "taken place", there could be no
cancellation as there was no time left for the assured to
take precautionary measures by reinsuring. In reply the
Company referred to condition 10 of the Fire policy under
which the Company claimed to cancel the policy at any time.
Condition 10 of the Fire Policy read:
"10. This insurance may be terminated at any
time at the request of the Insured, in which
case the Society will retain the customary
short period rate for the time the policy has
been in force. This insurance may also at any
time be terminated at the option of the
Society, on notice to that effect being given
to the Insured, in which case the Society
shall be liable to repay on demand a ratable
proportion of the premium for the unexpired
terms from the date of the cancelment."
In reply the assured wrote on August 2 that the condition
did not ,apply to any risk except that of fire and could
not, in any event, protect the Company after the risk had
commenced. On 13th and 15th August the houses were washed
away. After unsuccessfully demanding payment under the
policies, the assured filed the present suit on the Original
Side of the Calcutta High Court. It was dismissed with
costs by G. K. Mitter J. but on appeal the claim was decreed
to the extent of Rs. 1,10,000 with costs, the decretal
amount to carry interest at 3%, per annum. The High Court
certified the case as fit for appeal and the present appeal
has been filed by the Company.
Before we deal with the question in dispute we may say a few
words about the position of the Ganges river. in relation to
the Dhulian town in general and the insured houses in
particular. The town of Dhulian is situated on the bank of
the river which, for several years, has been changing its
course and eroding the bank on the side of Dhulian. In 1949
there was much erosion and the river had come as close as 1-
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1/2 to 2 furlongs from the town and a few of the godowns
lying close to the bank had been washed away. There is
ample material to show what the condition of the river in
relation to the insured houses was between June 2, 1950 when
the proposal for insurance was made and August 13/15 when
the houses
505
were washed away, with particular reference to the 18th
June, 1950 when one P. K. Ghose (D.W. 2) visited Dhulian to
make local inquiries on behalf of the Company and the 6th
July when the Company cancelled the risk and withdrew the
cover. The evidence comes from both sides but is mostly
consistent. Lalchand Jain (P.W.1) for the assured stated
that on the 2nd of June the houses were 400/450 feet away
from the bank of the river (Q. 73) and on that date there
was no erosion because the river was quite calm (Q. 132).
This continued to the second week of June (Q. 136). The
river began to rise in the 3rd week of June but there was no
erosion (Q. 137). Erosion began by the end of June (Q. 142)
and the current was then swift (Q. 144) and the right bank
started to be washed away. Houses within 10-50 feet of the
bank were first affected in the last week of June (Q. 180).
At that time the insured houses were 400/450 feet away.
Even on July 15, 1950 the distance between these houses and
the river was 250 feet (Q. 179). Surendranath Bhattacharjee
(P.W.2), Overseer and Inspector, Dhulia Municipality stated
that the erosion started four or five days after Rathajatra
which took place on or about June 20, 1950. Bijoy Kumar
(P.W.4), Retired Superintending Engineer is an important
witness. He submitted three reports Exs. F, G and H to
Government on May 27, 1949, November 4, 1949 and September
11, 1950. In these reports he gives a description of the
scouring of Dhulian town on August 5, 1950. He said nothing
about the state of affairs in the first week of July which
he would undoubtedly have said if erosion had already begun
then. With his report submitted on September 11, 1950, he
sent a letter of 9th August, in which he said that he had
visited Dhulian Bazar on August 5, 1950 and found that the
scouring of the compound of the Police Station at the
junction of the Ganges and Bagmari rivers had begun a
fortnight earlier and that scouring must have been at the
rate of 20-25 feet per day. From this evidence it is
possible to form an opinion about state of the river on or
about July 6, 1950. To that we shall come later.
The learned single Judge at the trial held that condition 10
of the policy applied to all the risks covered by the policy
and not the risk from fire only. Although the policy was
not ready, the proposal not having been declined during the
period of the cover note, the learned Judge held, the policy
was bound to issue and the extent of the protection would
thus be according to the company’s usual terms and subject
to the conditions in the policy. Relying, therefore, upon
the dicta of the Judicial Committee in the Sun Fire Office
v. Hart & Ors.(1), the learned Judge gave a wide meaning to
condition 10 and held that the Company was within its rights
in cancelling the policy as and when it did. The learned
Judge pointed out that the condition was a usual provision
in a policy of fire insurance and an assurer cancelling the
policy under that
(1) (1889) 14 A. C. 98.
506
condition, need give no reasons and every defence was open
to him and the reasons, if given, could not be examined in a
court of law. Finally, the fact that no reasons were given
or that the report of Ghose was not produced or that Ghose
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did not support Dangali, the Manager, was held to be
immaterial because reasons like motives, were held to be
immaterial. The suit was accordingly dismissed with costs.
An appeal under the letters patent was filed against the
judgment of the learned single Judge.
The appeal was heard by P. B. Mukharji and S. K. Datta JJ.
The judgment on appeal was delivered by Mukharji J. In
dealing with the cancellation of the policy the learned
Judge considered the matter with and without condition 10.
He first considered whether condition 10 of the policy at
all applied. The learned Judge gave eight reasons why it
did not. To those reasons we will come presently. The
conclusion of the learned Judge was that the policy had not
come into existence and did not govern this contract of
insurance. As the cover note was only for a month and on
its terms had ceased to be operative, a contract of
insurance absolute for one year was spelled out from the
letter of acceptance which was said to govern the relations
of the parties between July 3, 1950 (the date of the expiry
of the cover note) and July 6, 1950 (when the policy was
cancelled) and till 13/15th August, 1950 when the houses
were washed away. Condition 10 was thus held to be not
applicable. However, assuming that it did, the learned
Judge held that it was unreasonable and the cancellation
having been lone when the loss had already commenced or
became so proximate that it could be said to have almost
commenced, the Company could not be allowed to invoke it.
In reaching this conclusion the decision of the Judicial
Committee was not accepted and the width of the condition
was cut down. In the result the claim of the assured was
decreed in the sum of Rs. 1,10,000 with costs in the appeal
and the suit.
There is a preliminary question of fact to which the courts
below have addressed themselves. It is whether the cover
notes accompanied the letters of acceptance of the
proposals. The learned single Judge seems to imply that
they did and the Division Bench holds that they did not.
This has led to a divergence of opinion on whether condition
10 of the Fire Policy which enables determination ,of the
policy at will on both sides, at all operated. How this
finding leads to a discussion on the applicability of
condition 10,is a very important circumstance and we shall
now attempt to do, what we have not done yet, namely,
analyse the reasons given in the two decisions of the High
Court.
The letters of acceptance state that the "relative cover" in
each case was enclosed. These letters were dated June 3,
1950 and stated that the assured was covered against risk
from June 3, 1950
507
to June 3, 1951 and the endorsement at the back of the
letters has been reproduced by us earlier. That endorsement
did not state any terms and it did not refer to the terms or
conditions of any policy. The cover notes, of which one has
also been reproduced in full, held the property insured for
a period of 30 days only "subject to the terms of the
applicants’ proposal and to the usual conditions of the
Societies Policies". The learned single Judge held that the
letters of acceptance incorporated and attracted by
reference the terms and conditions of the cover notes and
through them the terms and conditions of the policy and
further held that the relationship could be declined within
30 days under the terms of the cover note but if not so
declined, the relationship would be governed by the terms
and conditions of the policy for the whole of the period of
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insurance. In reaching this conclusion the learned single
Judge held that the cover notes must have accompanied the
letters of acceptance and in this way condition 10 was
allowed to play its part.
The Divisional Bench took a different view of the matter.
The learned Judges noted that the letters of acceptance
spoke of risk for a whole year and stated that the "relative
covers" were enclosed. The cover notes, it was pointed out,
bore the date 5th June and must have been sent later than
June 3rd, the date of the acceptance of the proposals. The
learned Judges observed that the "relative cover" ought to
have been a cover for a whole year and if it was for a month
only it could not be a "relative cover" because the letter
of acceptance undertook the risk for the whole year. Next
they held that as the cover notes did not accompany the
letters of acceptance, there was no notice to the assured
that the terms and conditions of any policy would govern the
contract. They found fault with the word ’policies’ in the
phrase ’usual conditions of the Societies policies’ because
the word indicated a plurality of policies and not a
standard policy. They commented that the standard fire
policy applied condition 10 to fire risk and not to risk by
flood, cyclone etc. They found the expression ’the said
properties are hereunder held insured for damage by fire’
insufficient to cover other risks although they admitted
that the cover notes spoke of loss or damage-by flood,
cyclone etc. They next pointed but that the words of the
cover note wore not "an the conditions of the policy" but
only "usual conditions" and by referring to books on the law
of insurance they concluded that condition 10 which gave a
right to either party to terminate the policy at will, could
not be considered a usual condition. They observed that
this was not a condition usually included in English
policies and appeared to be in vogue in colonial and
underdeveloped countries. They felt that if the fire policy
was extended to cover risk of flood, etc., the new risks
should have been made expressly subject to condition 10 just
as fire risk ’was made subject to it and that by merely
extending a
508
fire policy to cover other risks, the assured was made to
amend and construe each separate clause. Holding condition
10 to be unreasonable they held that the company could not
cancel the policy on the 6th July because till then there
was no policy in existence and the cover note which referred
to the policy had automatically worked itself out. They
finally hold that the cancellation, in any event, was after
the risk had commenced and could not be upheld. For these
reasons the claim was decreed. The Trial Judge has found
that there was no attempt to fix the amount of damages but
the Divisional Bench reconsidered the matter and gave its
own findings.
Although the Divisional Bench went into a detailed
discussion (some of which was perhaps not altogether
necessary) the problem of liability in this case was well-
scanned by counsel appearing for the parties. They argued
the case under three distinct heads which are:
(a) Did condition 10 apply to the facts;
(b) If it did, how is it to be construed;
and
(c) Was the cancellation of the policy valid
in law?
We consider the matter under these three
broad heads.
The application of condition 10 depends on how far the terms
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of the policy can be said to be incorporated in this
contract of insurance between the parties. The facts
relating to the formation of the contract are clear except
on the one point relating to the cover notes, and that, in
our opinion, has been given undue prominence by the
Divisional Bench. It makes no essential difference whether
the. cover notes accompanied the letters of acceptance or
were sent two days later. It is possible that the letters
of acceptance themselves were sent on June 5. It often
happens that two letters delivered at the same time bear
different dates. The letters of acceptance referred to
’relative covers’, but the word ’relative is not to be
stretched too far. Its use here is an instance of
unnecessary legalese and it does not add to the purport of
the communication that a cover note was being sent. It is
obvious that if in the period during which the cover note
was operative there was refusal to insure, the assured could
not have demanded a policy or, insisted that there was
insurance without a policy, standard or otherwise, and not
subject to any conditions by reason of the acceptance. The
cover notes could have been sent later without impairing the
effect of the reference to them in the letters of
acceptance. By the fortuitous chance of omission to enclose
the cover notes the assured did not got any additional
rights under the letters of acceptance. Insurance of
property is not a bet but a well-known commercial deal.
Acceptance of the proposal read with the cover notes clothed
the assured with a right to demand a policy in relation to
the kind of insurance he
509
had bought and he could only claim to be covered against
risk in the manner laid down in the policy. To avoid this
consequence the learned Additional Solicitor-General,
arguing on behalf of the the assured faintly suggested that
the endorsement at the back of the letter of acceptance was
the cover note and it did not refer to any policy. This
position was clearly unsustainable. The cover notes were an
integral part of the acceptance of the proposals and the two
had to be read together.
A contract of insurance is a species of commercial
transactions had there is a well-established commercial-
practice to send cover notes even prior to the completion of
a proper proposal or while the proposal is being considered
or a policy is in preparation for delivery. A cover note is
a temporary and limited agreement. It may be self-contained
or it may incorporate by reference the terms and conditions
of the future policy. When the cover note incorporates the
policy in this manner, it does not have to recite the term
and conditions, but merely to refer to a particular standard
policy. If the proposal is for a standard policy and the
cover note refers to it, the assured is taken to have
accepted the terms of that policy. The reference to the
policy and its terms and conditions may be expressed in the
proposal or the cover note or even in the letter of
acceptance including the cover note. The incorporation of
the terms and conditions of the policy may also arise from a
combination of references, in two or more documents passing
between the parties. Documents like the proposal, cover
note and the policy are commercial documents and to
interpret them commercial habits and practice cannot
altogether be ignored. During the time the cover note
operates, the relations of the parties are governed by its
terms and conditions, if any. but more usually by the terms
and conditions of the policy bargained for and to be issued.
When this happens the terms of the policy are incipient but
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after the period of temporary cover, the relations are
governed only by the terms and conditions of the policy
unless insurance is declined in the meantime. Delay in
issuing the policy makes no difference. The relations even
then are governed by the future policy if the cover notes
give sufficient indication that it would be so. In other
respects there is no difference between a contract of
insurance and any other contract except that in a contract
of insurance there is a requirement of uberrima fides i.e.,
good faith on the part of the assured and the contract is
likely to be construed contra proferentem that is against
the company in case of ambiguity or doubt. A contract is
formed when there is an unqualified acceptance of the
proposal. Acceptance may be expressed in writing or it may
even be implied if the insurer accepts the premium and
retains it. In the case of the assured, a positive act on
his part by which he recognises or seeks to enforce the
policy amounts to an affirmation of it. This position was
clearly recognised by the assured himself, because he wrote,
510
close upon the expiry of the time of the cover notes, that
either a policy should be issued to him before that period
had expired or the cover note extended in time. In
interpreting documents relating to a contract of insurance,
the duty of the court is to interpret the words in which the
contract is expressed by the parties because it is not for
the court to make a new contract, however reasonable, if the
parties have not made it themselves. Looking at the
proposal, the letter of acceptance and the cover notes, it
is clear that a contract, of insurance under the standard
policy for fire and extended to ,cover flood, cyclone etc.
had come into being.
The letters of acceptance clearly mentioned that cover notes
were being sent. The contract of insurance was based upon
the cover notes for the period covered by the cover notes.
Nothing happened in the 30 days during which the cover notes
operated. It is true that the letters of acceptance showed
that the risk was covered for the whole year and not for 30
days. This was an unfortunate way of expressing that the
acceptance of the proposal would operate in the first
instance for 30 days only during which the company would be
free to decline the policy. The four essentials of a
contract of insurance are, (i) the definition of the risk,
(ii) the duration of the risk, (iii) the premium, and (iv)
the amount of insurance. See Macgillivray on Insurance Law
(5th Edn.) Vol. 1, paragraph 656, page 316. But the policy
which is issued contains more than these essentials because
it lays down and measures the rights of the parties and each
side has obligations which are also defined. In a policy
against fire the purpose is not so much to insure the
property but to insure the owner of the property against
loss. The policy not only defines the risk and its duration
but also lays down the special terms and conditions under
which the policy may be enforced on either side. Even if
the letter of acceptance went beyond the cover notes in the
matter of duration, the terms and conditions of the proposed
policy would govern the case because when a contract of
insuring property is complete, it is immaterial whether the
policy is actually delivered after the loss and for the same
reason the rights of the parties are governed by the policy
to be, between acceptance and delivery of the policy. Even
if no terms are specified the terms contained in a policy
customarily issued in such cases, would apply.: There is
ample authority for the proposition. In Corpus Juris
Secundum (Vol. 44, p. 953) the following occurs:
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"Where the contract to insure or issue a
policy of fire insurance does not specify the
terms and conditions of the policy, it is a
general rule that the parties will be presumed
to have contemplated a form of policy
containing such conditions and limitations as
are usual in such cases......
511
paragraph 390. In Eames v. Home Insurance Co. (1) the
Supreme Court of the United States observed:
"If no preliminary contract would be valid
unless it specified minutely the terms to be
contained in the policy to be issued, no such
contract could ever be made or would ever be
of any use. The very reason for sustaining
such contracts is, that the parties may have
the benefit of them during that incipient
period when the papers are being perfected and
transmitted. It is sufficient if one party
proposes to be insured, and the other party
agrees to insure, and the subject, the period,
the amount and the rate of insurance is
ascertained or understood, and the premium
paid if demanded. It will be presumed that
they contemplated such form of policy,
containing such conditions and limitations as
are usual in such cases, or have been used
before between the parties. This is the sense
and reason of the thing, and any contrary
requirement should be expressly notified to
the party to be affected by it.
In General Accident Insurance Corporation v. Cronk(2), it
was also ruled that a person making a proposal must be taken
to have applied for the ordinary form of policy issued by
the company. It is only when there is a condition precedent
that the policy must be delivered that the assurer is not on
the risk otherwise he is. See Macgillivray (Vol. 1, p. 325,
paragraph 675). In such a case acceptance is merely an
intimation that the assurer is willing to issue a policy but
there will be no binding contract (ibid paragraph 679, p.
328). In the present case, there was no such condition
precedent and the company was on risk throughout. As
insurance was asked for on the policy of the company the
usual policy would have issued and as the insurance was from
June 3, 1950 the policy would have related back to that
date. The insurance of the policy does not add to the
contract. The incipient terms and conditions of the
contract later merge in the policy and the terms and
conditions then become express.
The attempt of the assured in this case, therefore, has been
to establish that the cover notes having expired, did not
bind the parties and the reference to the policy being in
the cover notes and not in the letters of acceptance, the
terms and conditions of the policy were not attracted. We
are satisfied that this is not the true position. The
letters of acceptance expressly mentioned the cover notes
and the cover notes expressly mentioned the policy.
Therefore both during the period of 30 days when the cover
notes operated and also thereafter, the terms and conditions
of the policy governed the relationship between the parties.
We have already held that as there
(1) 24 L.ed. 8. (2) [1901] 17 T.L.R. 233.
512
was only one standard fire-policy,the use of the plural word
’policies’ made no difference and the delay in sending the
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cover notes, if any, was also immaterial. The terms and
conditions of the usual policy accordingly governed the
relations of the parties, and made condition 10 applicable.
It was, however, contended that the policy itself never came
into existence, because it was cancelled before it was
issued and the endorsement of cancellation was engrossed and
incorporated with the making of the policy. It was argued
that condition 10 would not come into operation at all,
because the policy itself was cancelled before it was
engrossed. In other words, the contention is that condition
(10) could not operate between the parties till the policy
was signed and delivered to the assured and as this never
happened the cancellation was improper. This argument is
scarcely open, because, the assured is obviously basing his
suit on the policy. In his plaint he invoked the policy.
The assured cannot sustain the suit except by basing it upon
the policy, because unless one reads the policy and the
terms on which it was effective, mere reading of the
proposals and the letters of acceptance would not give any
terms. Further when a contract of insuring property is
complete, it is immaterial whether the policy is delivered
or not for the rights of the parties are regulated by the
policy which ought to be delivered. In this way also the
terms and conditions of the standard fire-policy would apply
even though the policy was not issued.
It was next contended that the expression "usual conditions
of the Society’s policies" could not be read to include
condition 10 which was not a usual condition where it gives
a right to terminate the policy at will to the company.
This is not correct. Suck a condition is mentioned in
almost all the books on the law of Insurance. See
Halsbury’s Laws of England (3rd Edn.) Vol. 22, page 245
paragraph 474; Macgillivray on Insurance Law (5th Edn.) Vol.
2, page 963, paragraph 1981; Welford & Otter-Barry’s Fire
Insurance (4th Edn.) pp. 178, 179; and Richards on Insurance
(5th Edn.) Vol. 3, p. 1759, paragraph 531. In The Sun Fire
Office v. Hart and Others(1) such a condition is not only
mentioned but also discussed. An identical condition in a
fire policy was also mentioned and discussed in a decision
of this court reported in The Central Bank of India
Ltd.v.Hartford Fire Insurance Co.Ltd.(2). Therewas thus
nothing unusual in the inclusion of such a condition in the
policy and the reference to the usual conditions would,
therefore, include a reference to condition (10).
This condition gives mutual rights to the parties to cancel
the policy at any time. To the assurer it gives a right to
cancel the policy at will. It was contended that such a
condition was so unreasonable that it could not be allowed
to stand. It was argued
(2) A.I.R. (1956) S.C. 1288.
(1) [1889] 14 A.C. 98.
513
on the authority of Sze Hai Tong Bank Ltd. v. Rambler Cycle
Co. Ltd.(1) that the extreme width of the condition must be
cut down by an implied limitation which was that the main
object and intent of the contract should not be allowed to
be defeated and that object and intent was the insuring of
the property against floods and cancellation of the policy
when floods had started would defeat the main object and
intent of the contract. This argument mixes up two
situations. The first is a question of pure principle.
There is nothing wrong in including such a mutual condition
for the cancellation of the insurance. An assured nkay like
to invoke sit a condition when the policy is found to differ
from the policy he agreed to accept or it contained a term
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or condition to which he did not agree. He may not accept
the same policy from another company to which he did not
make a proposal. He may invoke this condition if the
company transfers its assets and business to another. Just
as the assured may like to terminate the policy without
assigning any reasons and at his will, the assurer may also
do likewise.
Such a clause was considered by the Privy Council in Sun
Fire Office v. Hart(2). That was a case of a policy of
insurance against fire. Certain fields of sugar cane were
insured against fire. After insurance 3 fires happened and
an anonymous letter was received that more fires would take
place. The policy contained a condition that the insurers
might terminate the policy by notice ’by reason of such
change, or from any other cause whatever’ and the insurers
cancelled the policy under that condition. The object of
such a condition was stated by Lord Watson to be-
their contract during its currency, leaving it
in full vigour down to the time of notice.
The words in which the power of determination
is expressed, taken by themselves, are very
wide and comprehensive. According
to their
primary and natural meaning, they import that,
in order to justify the exercise of the power,
nothing is required except the existence of a
desire, on the part of the insurers, to get
rid of future liability, whether such desire
be prompted by causes which prevent the policy
attaching, or by any other cause whatever."
in dealing with the further question whether any reasons
should be assigned and if so assigned whether they should be
such as must satisfy a court of law, it was further
observed:
"The question remains whether the clause gives
the insurers the right to act upon their own
judgment, or whether they are bound, if so
required, to allege and prove to the
satisfaction of a Judge or Jury, not only that
a
(1) [1959] A.C. 576.
(2) [1889] 14 A.C. 98.
514
desire exists on their part, but that they
have reasonable grounds for entertaining it.
If the determination of the policy would be
for the advantage of its business, that would
obviously be a reasonable ground for the
office desiring to put an end to it; and a
priori, one would suppose that the insurers
themselves must be the best if not the only
capable judges of what will benefit their
business. An insurance office may deem it
prudent, and resolve to limit its outstanding
engagements, and, unless the words of the
clause clearly imply the contrary, it cannot
be presumed that the parties meant to make
such a question of prudent administration the
subject of inquiry in a court of law."
The learned Judges of the Divisional Bench did not follow
the decision of the Judicial Committee because they found it
unacceptable. But a similar view of an identical condition
was taken by this Court in the Hartford Fire Insurance Co.
case (1). Sarkar J. there pointed out that a clause in this
form was a common term in policies and must therefore be
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accepted as reasonable and that the right to terminate at
will cannot, by reason of the circumstances, be read as a
right to terminate for a reasonable cause. In that case the
Hartford Office insured certain goods against fire between
March 20, 1947 and March 1948 in the town of Amritsar. The
policy was extended to loss by riot or civil commotion.
Riots occurring in July 1947 in the Punjab, a godown in
Bakarwana Bazar in Amritsar where insured goods were stored
was looted and some goods were lost. The Hartford Office
was informed and on August 7 1947 they wrote saying that
the goods be removed to a safe place or the policy would
stand cancelled after August 10, 1947, under condition 10
which was similar to condition 10 here. On August 15, 1947,
the goods were lost by fire. The Hartford Office was held
to be protected by the said condition. The reason of the
rule appears to be that where parties agree upon certain
terms which are to regulate their relationship, it is not
for the court to make a new contract, however reasonable, if
the parties have not made it for themselves. The contract
here gave equal rights to the parties to cancel the policy
at any time and the assurers could therefore invoke the
condition to cancel the policy.
it was contended (and it has been so held by the Divisional
Bench) that this cancellation was ineffective, because risk
had already commenced and the policy could not be cancelled
after the liability of the company began. As a general
proposition, this is perfectly right. Condition 10 is
intended to cancel the risk but not to avoid liability for
loss which has taken place or to avoid risk which is already
turning into loss. It is obvious that
(1) A.I.R. 1956 S.C. 1288.
515
a fire policy cannot be cancelled after the house has caught
fire. But it is equally clear that unless the risk has
already commenced or become so imminent that it must
inevitably take place, such a clause can be invoked. If
property is insured against flood, it is not open to the
insurance company to send couriers on motor cycles ahead of
the floods to cancel the policy. But if it is thought that
a particular dam was not quite safe, the insurance company
will be entitled to cancel the policy against flood before
the dam has actually started to crumble or has crumbled.
Cancellation is reasonably possible before the liability
under the policy has commenced or has become inevitable and
it is a question of fact in each case whether the
cancellation is legitimate or illegitimate.
In the present. case, it was always clear that the Ganges
would get into the floods in the rainy season, but it was
not clear that it would begin to erode the bank in such a
way that these houses, which were at a distance of 400/500
feet from the bank would inevitably be washed away. The
question thus is whether the cancellation was done after
liability of the assurer under the policy had commenced or
the loss had become inevitable. Here we must look at the
evidence which was summarized earlier.
We are concerned with two dates in particular and they are
June 18, 1950 when Ghose visited Dhulian and July 6 when the
policy was cancelled. The houses according to Lalchand Jain
(P.W. 1) were 400/500 feet away when the proposal was made.
The river remained calm till the second week of June. It
only began to rise in the third week of June. Thus on June
18, when Ghose visited the place, there was no flood and no
erosion. Ghose’s report has not been produced but he could
have only estimated the possibility of loss and no more.
Even in the third week of June there was no erosion and it
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began by the end of June. Even on July 15 the distance
between the river and the houses was 250 feet (see Q. 179).
As the rate of erosion was about 20/25 feet per day (vide
Bijoy Kumar P.W. 4) the houses were 400/500 feet away even
on July 6. In these circumstances, it cannot be said that
the loss had commenced or that it had become so certain as
to be inevitable or that the cancellation was done in
anticipation and with knowledge of inevitable loss. The
cancellation was done at a time when no one could say with
any degree of certainty that the houses were in such danger
that the loss had commenced or became inevitable. There is
no evidence to establish this. This case, therefore, falls
within the rule of the Sun Fire Office(1) and the Hartford
Fire Insurance Company(2) cases. The assurers were,
therefore, within their rights under condition 10 of the
policy to cancel it. As the policy was not ready they were
justified in executing it and cancelling it. The right of
the plaintiff to the policy and to enforce it was lost by
the legal action of cancellations.
(1) [1889] 14 A.C. 98.
(2) A.I.R. 1956 S.C. 1288.
516
In the result the appeal must succeed. It is allowed. The
decree passed by the Divisional Bench is set aside and the
judgment of G. K. Mitter, J. dismissing the suit is
restored. Although costs must follow the event, we think in
the special circumstances, of this case we should make no
order about costs.
Appeal allowed.
M 10 Sup.Cl/66-25,00-28-1-67-GIPF.
517