Judges: Bradley, Bárkek, Haight, Smith
Filed Date: 10/15/1884
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The plaintiff, residing in the city of Lockport, applied to Elijah Holt, an insurance agent of that city, for insurance on his opera-house block, etc., situate there. Thereupon Holt spoke to Robert C. Ellis, a broker, residing in the city of Buffalo, about furnishing a policy for $1,000. Ellis said he could and shortly after and on the 10th day of December, 1880, Ellis called upon the firm of Eish & Armstrong, agents at Buffalo for the defendants, and applied to them for the policy, and they issued it and Ellis handed it to Holt, who, on the same or the next day delivered it to the plaintiff. When the application was made by Ellis to Eish & Armstrong they, as appears by the testimony of the latter, first objected to taking the risk, and after discussing it told him they would take it condition-. ally; that they would report the risk to the company; that they would issue the policy of insurance; that it should be subject to the approval of the company; and that if the company disapproved it the policy was to cease and be returned immediately.
They did communicate with the defendant, and on seventeenth December received from it a letter of date fourteenth December addressed to them saying: “We cannot accept line on opera-house,
“ Buffalo, December IT, 1880.
R. C. Ellis, Esq., Loekport:
“ Dear Sir — The Security Insurance Company have ordered their policy, 2683, for J. Hodge, Hodge Opera House, canceled. Please return it to- us at once and oblige,
“Yours, very truly,
“ EISH & ARMSTRONG, Agents.”
which was received by Ellis, and he shortly after saw and requested Holt to take up the policy, but no communication was made by either of them, nor by the defendant’s agents to the plaintiff.
The building and contents were destroyed by fire on the 5th day of January) 1881. ■ The requisite notice and proofs of loss were given and furnished to the defendant, and after the sixty days’ grace, given by the policy, this action was commenced. The complaint contains the usual allegations in such cases. The answer does not deny the issuing of the policy, but alleges that the policy was procured by the agent of the plaintiff and the contract therefor made by such agent in behalf of the plaintiff with the defendant’s agents ; that the policy was delivered to the plaintiff’s agent for his benefit; that no part of the premium was or has been paid, and that pursuant to the provisions there referred to of'the policy the defendant terminated the insurance represented by the policy ,in the exercise of its optional right by giving the plaintiff, through his authorized agent, notice to that effect. The defendant’s counsel contends:
1. That the policy did’ not become operative, and that it was issued and taken under an executory arrangement, which did not permit it to become effectual unless and until the risk was approved by the defendant.
2. That if otherwise, then the notice given had the effect to terminate the policy.
3. That the premium was not'- paid and no credit was actually-given and none can be inferred under the circumstances.
The defendant’s agents having power to issue the policy, and
In support of the contention that the preliminary negotiation and arrangement which resulted in the issue of the policy defeated its operation in the hands of the plaintiff the defendant’s counsel cites Wood v. Poughkeepsie Insurance Company (32 N. Y., 619) as controlling authority. The question there was whether or riot there was a waiver of a condition in a policy, and the court held there was not. The policy in that- case was not delivered to the assured named in it, but was in his absence left with his clerk with specific instructions and upon the condition that when the assured returned home he should pay the premium, if accepted, otherwise return the policy. That case does not seem to apply materially to the question under consideration.
Here there was a delivery to the plaintiff’s agent without any instruction or condition having relation to any provision of the policy, which by its terms was to be performed as a condition precedent to its effectual operation, and no qualified delivery was in that manner made. The talk and arrangement between the defendant’s ■agents and Ellis in legal effect had no reference to the delivery of
The question arises whether the notice to Ellis was notice to the plaintiff. If it was, the insurance was terminated and the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. The policy provides that “ the insurance may be terminated at any time at the option of the company on giving notice to that effect.” In making the application to the defendant’s agents, and in taking the policy and handing it over to Holt, Ellis must be deemed acting for the plaintiff and as his agent. In that respect the policy provides that any person other than the assured who may have procured this insurance to be taken by this company shall be deemed to be the agent of the assured named in the policy, and not of the company, unless he shall have received a commission signed by the officers of this company appointing him agent.”
The contention of the learned counsel for the defendant is that for the purposes of the notice Ellis continued to be and was the agent of the plaintiff, and that the communication to him of the direction of the defendant in respect to the risk was effectual to {emanate the insurance, and in support of his position cites: The Standard Oil Company v. The Triumph Insurance Company (64 N. Y., 85), and McLean v. The Republic Fire Insurance Company (3 Lans., 421). In those cases the persons acting for the plaintiffs were actually employed by them, and their relations to the plaintiffs were practically those of general agents, so far as related to the procuring and looking after the insurance of their property. The power of those agents in that respect was ample, and the exercise of it was not dependent upon- special instructions. They in fact represented their principals in that department of their business. The situation of Ellis was very different. There was no conven
Tbe case last cited is quite directly in point. There a broker was employed to procure insurance. He did so and tbe policy was delivered to tbe assured, and shortly after the broker who procured tbe policy was notified by tbe agent of tbe company that it refused to carry tbe risk and required tbe return of the policy, and be gave the agent to understand that it would be returned. Tbe court held that when the contract was consummated by the' delivery of tbe policy tbe person so procuring it ceased to be tbe agent of the assured, and that the notice given was not notice to the latter. That is so here. Tbe plaintiff bad no notice of tbe purpose of the company to tei’minate tbe risk taken by tbe policy in question. And tbe question of custom which the defendant sought to establish as existing between ,the insurance agents and brokers in tbe city of Buffalo, of giving and taking notice of termination of insurance obtained by tbe latter, has no importance. They could not create a custom that would have tbe effect to vary the terms of the contract of insurance. That required notice to tbe assured to terminate tbe operation of tbe policy. A notice to somebody else with no authority to receive it for him could not by any custom of which be bad, no knowledge, and without his consent, prejudice bis rights. (Grace v. Am. Central Ins. Co., 109 U. S., 278; Standard Oil Co. v. Triumph Ins. Co., 61 N. Y., 91.)
In respect to the non-payment of the premium, the evidence justified tbe conclusion that tbe prepayment of it was waived. The-
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.