DocketNumber: File No. 5925
Judges: Pouley
Filed Date: 1/28/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
This action 'was brought to recover -on a fire insurance policy for -damages to a frame building situated on two certain lots in the city o-f P'ierre. The policy -was issued to plaintiff on the 22d of August, 1921. At the time of the issuance of the policy, and for some five or six years, prior thereto, the title to the insured property had been in the Union Savings Association. But on the 7th day o>f July, 1920, said association entered into- a contract with plaintiff for the sale of said property to- plaintiff for the sum- of $4,000, of which amount $300 was paid when the contract was entered into, and the balance of $3,700 and- interest was to be paid in monthly installments of $50 per month, and title was to be conveyed to plaintiff when all payments had been made. Plaintiff was given possession of the property at the time, of en
Plaintiff, in her complaint, alleged a total destruction of the property, and' claimed that because of such destruction defendant was indebted to plaintiff and' the said association in the sum' of $4,000; with interest thereon from and after the 18th day of March, 1922. The defendant association interposed a separate answer, in which it alleged .substantially the facts set out in the complaint and asked the same relief as the plaintiff.
Defendant insurance company filed a separate answer in which it set up as a defense such misrepresentation and concealment of facts in procuring said policy as to render it void. Defendant also claimed that the fire that injured the said building had been started through the connivance and procurement of plaintiff, and that for that reason she was not entitled to recover.
Verdict and judgment were in -favor of the plaintiff and the defendant association and- against the insurance company. From this judgment and an order denying a new trial, the insurance company appeals.
The first of the above-named defenses is based on the following facts and- circumstances. Title to- the property involved was acquired by the association through foreclosure proceedings in 1915. The property consisted of two building lots, a story and half frame building with a basement story bu-ilt of brick, and a sub-basement containing a heating plant. Annexed to the said building and a part of said property was a greenhouse, consisting of two -glass covered structures, one 21 feet by 90 feet and the other 14y2 feet by 77 feet.
For a considerable length of time prior to the making of- the contract with plaintiff the association had been endeavoring to dispose of the said property. Just prior to the making of the contract for the sale of the property to plaintiff the association
In June, 1921, the said Vandagrift was appointed by the defendant insurance company to act as its agent to- write fire insurance and issue policies in the name of said company, and' it was the said Vandagrift who, on the 22'd day of August, 1921, issued the said policy. Attached to said policy was a rider entitled, “Mortgage clause with full contribution,” which contained the following provision:
“Loss or damage, if any, under this policy, shall be payable to Union Savings Association, of Sioux Falls, S'. Dt, as mortgagee, as interest may appear.”
In his “daily report” to- appellant said Vandagrift referred to this policy and set out the said mortgage clause, from which it appeared that plaintiff was the owner of said property and was the mortgagor, and that the said association was the mortgagee.
Vandagrift’s appointment as agent for appellant was in writing, and with such appointment was a set of instructions specifying his duties and limiting his authority as such agent. Said instructions contain the following paragraphs:
“Daily reports must be mailed to us on the day the risk is bound, and contain statement of additional and exposing lines and all other information pertaining to the risk, fully and faithfully stated. The form should be an exact copy of what is written on or attached to- the policy, with duplicates of all clauses attached thereto.
Ait the time the policy was written, plaintiff was not the owner in fee of the property and had no interest therein other than such as she had under her contract to purchase. After entering into this contract, plaintiff sold the greenhouse thereon and the same was removed from the premises. For this she received something over $800, $500 of which was applied on the purchase price of the property. At the time of the fire she was in arrears with her monthly installments and interest on the principal more than $800. Vandagrift knew this fact, and he also knew when he issued the policy that the former fire insurance policy on the property had been canceled because plaintiff could not pay the premium. Such policy was canceled on the 20th day of August, 1921. Notice of such cancellation was mailed to the association' at 'Sioux Falls on the same day, and on the 22d day of August, Vandagrift issued the policy involved in this suit, but without any application or solicitation thereto by the plaintiff. The premium on this policy was afterwards paid by a former husband of the plaintiff. In the issuance of this policy Vandagrift appears to have acted wholly on his own initiative and solely on behalf of the association and the plaintiff.
It is contended by appellant that the amount of the policy was greatly in excess of the value of the property insured, and that this fact was known to the plaintiff and the association when the policy was issued. And in this contention appellant is borne out by the record. By his written instructions Vandagrift was expressly instructed not to insure property for more than its present cash value. In this case Vandagrift, acting as the managing officer of the association, haidi contracted to sell the entire property consisting of the frame structure, the brick basement, the subbasement and heating plant, the greenhouse, and the two' lots for $4,000. The evidence on behalf of plaintiff and the association showed the lots to be worth $300 each, and the greenhouse was
It is contended -by the appellant that Vandagrift, in issuing the policy involved, -was attempting to act as agent for both the insurer and the insured; that in attempting to so act he was violating the well-established rule- that an agent cannot represent adverse interests, in the same transaction, in other words, that he cannot “serve two- masters” at the same time. Of course, to this rule there are exceptions, but -where an agent undertakes to- represent adverse parties, it must be done with knowledge-, actual or implied, of such parties, and' the -utmost good faith must be^sho-wn. It is contended by respondents that Vandagrift had the consent of appellant to write-insurance on. property owned by the association.
“An agent can never have authority, either actual or ostensible, to do an act which is, and is known or suspected by the person with whom he deals, to be a fraud upon the principal.” Section 1246, Code of 1919.
In issuing the policy in this case Vandagrift, while assuming, to act for and on behalf of appellant, as a matter of fact, was acting solely in the interest of the respondents and against the interest of appellant. This amounted to a fraud upon the appellant, and plaintiff not only had reason to suspect such fraud but had actual knowledge of the same. Under these circumstances, the policy was void from its inception and the court should have directed a verdict for appellant.
This disposes of the whole case, and it is not necessary to consider the numerous other errors disclosed by the record.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.