delivered the opinion of the court.
The facts in this cause (with an exception hereinafter noted), and the points of law arising upon them,» are substantially the same as in the case of the same plaintiffs against the Connecticut Insurance Company, in which an opinion is filed contemporaneously with this {ante, p. 511). The exception referred to relates to the proofs of loss.
It appears from the testimony that, in March, 18S4, this defendant issued a policy upon the same property of Plippin, mentioned in the Connecticut Insurance Company’s policy, providing that the loss, if any, should be paid to Lehman, Abraham & Company, as their interest might appear. This policy was numbered 1,180, and was soon afterwards cancelled. Another policy was then issued on the same property, and provided for payment of the loss, if any, to Meyer & Aronson, or order, as their interest might appear. This new policy was numbered 1,184. After the fire, papers purporting to be proofs of loss under policy 1,180 were forwarded by Plippin to the defendant, but no proofs were ever sent which purported to have been made under policy 1,184, on which this suit is founded. About two months after the fire, a letter was written to the defendant on behalf of the plaintiffs, as follows:
“St. Louis, April 15, 1885.
“Phoenix Insurance Company, of Brooklyn,
“Care T. J. Burch, 164 Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill.
“Gentlemen:—
“ I am informed by the attorneys of Martin V. Plip-pin, at Texarkana, Texas, that he has made and forwarded to you iiroofs of loss by fire at Texarkana, under your policy, number 1,184, which policy, as you have been informed by my previous notice and letters, is held. *539by P. M. Parks and others, trustees of the Mechanics5 Bank. I ha.ve been unable to obtain copies or any definite description of those proofs, or their contents, and, as Mr. Flippin has heretofore assumed a position hostile to my clients, I am desirous of knowing what sort of proofs he has made, and, of course, if you find them satisfactory. I should be greatly obliged to you if, at my cost, you would furnish me with a copy of the proofs that have been received by you. If, however,' you do not see fit to take that trouble, I will- ask you, so soon as those proofs have been examined, to inform me whether they are satisfactory ; if not só, in what respect they are unsatisfactory. I-should not call upon you for the favor of furnishing me copies, if I could obtain them from Flippin, but having requested them from his attorneys, and having no reply, I fear I can only obtain them through you.
“Yours truly,
“[Signed] Edward Cunningham, Jr.,
“Attorney for B. M. Parks et.al., Trustees.”
It does not appear from the testimony what, if any, answer to this letter, was ever received by the plaintiffs. The court instructed in this connection as follows :
“2b. The court declares the law-to be, that if the plaintiffs, by their attorney, wrote, and sent to the defendant the letter read in evidence of February 21,1885 ; and if the defendant received the same; and if, on said twenty-first day of February, 1885, and thereafter, Charles E. Beard was the general agent of the defendant, attending to, and managing, its insurance business in Texarkana, Texas; and if, within two or three days after the fire, on February 21, 1885, the said Beard, being the agent of the defendant-, as aforesaid, notified and informed Flippin, the insured in the policy in suit, that his said policy had been cancelled ; and if, at about that time, said Flippin suggested to said Beard that he- would *540write to the defendant concerning liis insurance; and if, thereupon, the said Beard, being the agent of the defendant, as aforesaid, told said Flippin that his policy had been cancelled; and if the defendant, prior to April 10, 1885, had received proofs of loss, or what purported to be proofs of loss, occasioned by the fire of the twenty-first of February, 1885, in Flippin’s building, insured by the policy in suit, and if the defendant made no objection thereto; and if, thereafter, the defendant received the letter of Edward Cunningham, Jr., as attorney for the plaintiffs, dated April 15, 1885, and made no response thereto, then the defendant thereby, so far as these plaintiffs are concerned, waived any further or different proofs of loss under the policy sued on; and the fact that no further or different proofs were furnished constitutes no defence to this action.”
It does not appear that the defendant was, in any way, prejudiced by this ruling. The policy required that, in the event of a loss by fire, the company should be informed of the fact, with certain particulars, and under certain limitations, but contained no stipulation for an exact designation of the policy, by number or otherwise. The company had full knowledge of its in-( surance undertaking with reference to the property described in the proofs. The number or other designation of its policy was wholly immaterial to any question of its liabilities or immunities in connection therewith, and a wrong designation might easily be understood to have resulted from a harmless clerical error. It is not shown that there was any other defect in the proofs tendered. We think that the instruction was proper, and that the defendant can make no just complaint of its application to the conclusion reached by the tidal court.
For these reasons, together with those set forth by us more fully in the case of the Connecticut Insurance Company, the judgment in this cause is affirmed, with the concurrence of all the judges.