Citation Numbers: 128 A. 33, 102 Conn. 370, 1925 Conn. LEXIS 52
Judges: Wheeler, Beach, Curtis, Keeler, Kellogg
Filed Date: 3/6/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The motion to correct is granted substantially as set forth in reasons of appeal fourteen, fifteen, seventeen, twenty-three, twenty-four, twenty-six and thirty-one, and the corrections incorporated in the statement above. Paragraph thirty-five, that Stowell was not the agent of plaintiff, is stricken out as not established; he was to a limited degree his agent. Plaintiff also alleges error in failing to strike out paragraph thirty-seven, reciting that the policy of insurance was issued under a mutual mistake, etc. The trial court adjudged that the policy be reformed to comply with the character of the ownership of the plaintiff, "and that there shall be deemed to have been attached thereto a slip or rider, as is provided by § 4073 of the General Statutes, signed by the plaintiff or its agent, stating that ``it is understood and agreed that the automobile, the subject of this insurance, was purchased by Jacob Mishiloff, the assured, from the Platt Libbey Company, under a conditional bill of sale and was owned by the said Mishiloff on the date on which this policy was executed subject to said conditional bill of sale, and this policy shall not, on that account, be considered null and void, notwithstanding any provisions to the contrary herein contained.'"
Reformation of the policy was made by the trial court upon the ground of a mutual mistake on the part of the parties to the contract. The court could exercise its power of reformation only in a case in which the mistake was common to both parties, and by reason of it both had done what neither intended. Snelling v.Merritt,
The court rests its judgment of reformation upon its finding in paragraph thirty-seven, "It was due to a mutual mistake of the parties that the insurance policy was not written in accordance with the facts," and upon the fact that the policy does not represent what each of the parties intended. The court has not found that either Stowell or Quinn had any knowledge that the automobile was held by the plaintiff under a conditional bill of sale; in fact the contrary appears. The policy as issued was the policy the defendant intended to issue, and one of its conditions was that it should be void if the interest of the assured in the automobile was other than that of "unconditional and sole ownership." The plaintiff, upon the facts found, believed that his interest in this automobile was insured, and did not know otherwise until after its loss. There was then no basis for a conclusion that there had been a mistake common to both parties, nor a basis for a finding that each of the parties made a contract which neither intended. The facts found support the conclusion that the defendant intended one contract of insurance and the plaintiff another. In such a situation we say, in Snelling v. Merritt,
If paragraph thirty-seven be regarded as a finding of fact, it is not supported by the evidence. If it be regarded as a conclusion of fact, it is not supported by the subordinate facts. We regard its statement as a conclusion of law, and since it does not appear in the finding, directly or by inference, that the parties *Page 376
made a common mistake in making this contract and thereby did what neither intended, the conclusion as one of law cannot be sustained. Other principal assignments of error are based upon the proposition that the policy was null and void ab initio and never took effect, because the interest of the assured in the property, being that of a vendee under a conditional bill of sale, was not the "unconditional and sole ownership" which was made a condition of the policy. The attempt to construe this provision as referring to subsequent changes in the title must fail. "The words used refer to the present and not to the future, and the conditions relate to facts as they exist at the date of the policy." Parsons, Rich Co. v. Lane,
Though the construction of these words be as we hold, plaintiff asserts that defendant has waived the right to insist upon the breach of condition, by issuing the policy without inquiry as to the title of plaintiff. A waiver is defined as the intentional relinquishment of a known right. It presupposes the possession of some right which is of value, and which one voluntarily relinquishes. Knowledge of the existence of the right and the intent to relinquish it are its essential elements. In the present case no facts are found tending to show that Stowell, who was the broker effecting this insurance, or Quinn, defendant's local agent, knew that plaintiff's title was that under a sales agreement. Neither the insurance company, nor its agent Quinn, knew of plaintiff's title except as Stowell, the broker, informed them. When plaintiff applied to Stowell for insurance, he requested the issuance of a policy on "his new automobile." Stowell believed from this that plaintiff was the unconditional and sole owner of this automobile and he was justified in so believing. Some courts have held that where no representations were made by the applicant, and no knowledge possessed by the insurer of the title of the applicant, it was the duty of the latter to make inquiry, and, in the absence of such inquiry by the insurer, the fair inference is that it issued the policy with such information as it had, and hence waived the "unconditional and sole" provision of the policy. We think the ratio decidendi of these decisions is faulty. We do not stop to analyze them, since the facts present in this case take the case out of the setting of facts upon which these decisions were made; we merely cite a few of the leading authorities which support the contrary view that no duty of inquiry is placed upon the insurer under such circumstances *Page 379 Parsons, Rich Co. v. Lane,
Stowell, under General Statutes, § 4287, was an insurance broker, and as such he was the agent of the insurer merely as to the premium and for nothing else, he was the agent of the insured in negotiating for this policy. Allen v. German-American Ins. Co.,
The policy also provided: "No person shall be deemed an agent of this company unless specifically authorized in writing by the company." Since Stowell was not an agent of the insured except for the limited purposes already specified, he could not bind the insurer, nor could a waiver of this provision arise through his action or nonaction. Stowell accepted the insured's statement that he wanted a policy of insurance on his car, and procured the number of the car, and telephoned Quinn the name of the owner, the number of the car, and the amount of the insurance, and Quinn relied upon this statement and made no further inquiry. No reason is suggested why Quinn should not have relied upon Stowell's statements, since he was the agent of plaintiff, and none occurs to us. Moreover, "the policies themselves, containing, as they did, *Page 380 the contracts that they should be void if the interest of the assured had not been truly stated to the company, or if it was not truly stated in the policy, or if it was not the sole and unconditional ownership, and a description of it was not indorsed on the policy, were pointed inquiries of the assured whether their interest was the sole unconditional ownership of the property described, and their silence and acceptance of the policies was the answer." Syndicate Ins. Co. v. Bohn, 12 C.C.A. 531, 537, 65 F. 165.
The insurance policy issued to the plaintiff insured, limits the power of its agents to waive its terms, and in no event to waive its terms unless such waiver be written upon or attached to the policy. Such a provision has no application to a waiver implied from conduct. If the situation does not create a waiver, plaintiff claims that defendant insurer is estopped to contest the validity of this policy. To create an estoppel in this case, facts must be present and known to the insurer, and have been relied upon by the insured to his injury. Fidelity Casualty Co. v. Palmer,
The defendant received and retained the premiums *Page 381
upon this policy, without offer to return the same until after this action had begun. The action was begun on February 19th, 1923. The date upon which the offer to return was made does not appear, merely that it was after this action was begun. Neither does it appear when the defendant first knew of the fact that plaintiff was not the unconditional and sole owner of this car at the time of the issuance of the policy. Knowledge of a breach of a provision in a life insurance policy and the continued acceptance of the premium upon the policy for three years, was, we held, a complete waiver of the breach. Bevin v. Conn. Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
In Hoxie v. Home Ins. Co.,
There is error in part, and the Superior Court is directed to render judgment for the plaintiff for the premium paid by him to defendant, with interest and costs.
In this opinion the other judges concurred, except KELLOGG, J., who concurred in the result, but died before the opinion was written.
Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Palmer , 91 Conn. 410 ( 1917 )
Buffalo Forge Co. v. Mutual Security Co. , 83 Conn. 393 ( 1910 )
Ledvinka v. Home Insurance , 139 Md. 434 ( 1921 )
Matthie v. . Globe Fire Ins. Co. , 174 N.Y. 489 ( 1903 )
Allen v. German American Insurance , 123 N.Y. 6 ( 1890 )
Salvate v. Firemen's Insurance Company , 42 R.I. 433 ( 1920 )
Bernhard v. Rochester German Insurance , 79 Conn. 388 ( 1906 )
Hennessy v. Metropolitan Life Insurance , 74 Conn. 699 ( 1902 )
Lee v. Casualty Co. of America , 90 Conn. 202 ( 1916 )
Benanti v. Delaware Insurance , 86 Conn. 15 ( 1912 )
Petello v. Teutonia Fire Insurance , 89 Conn. 175 ( 1915 )
Snelling v. Merritt , 85 Conn. 83 ( 1911 )
Weed v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance , 116 N.Y. 106 ( 1889 )
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Fidelity Phenix Fire Ins. Co. of New York v. Raper , 242 Ala. 440 ( 1941 )
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Hoffman v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. , 125 Conn. 440 ( 1939 )
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Jenkins v. Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America , 152 Conn. 249 ( 1964 )
Chauser v. Niagara Fire Insurance , 123 Conn. 413 ( 1937 )
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Home Owners' Loan Corporation v. Stevens , 120 Conn. 6 ( 1935 )
State v. Bloomfield Construction Co., Inc. , 126 Conn. 349 ( 1940 )