Citation Numbers: 20 F. 766
Judges: Wheeler
Filed Date: 7/10/1884
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/9/2022
From the allegations in the bill, which, on these demurrers, are to be taken aB true, it appears that the duly-author
On these facts the oratrix has not any claim, either at law or in equity, against the first defendant. The agents never entered into any preliminary contract to insure the oratrix in behalf of that company. If no companies had been named in the agreement with the oratrix, she probably might have held those which the agents intended to act for in that transaction, and the writing of the policies afterwards would be evidence of tho intention. But here the companies bound are expressly named; and the contract of the oratrix was expressly with them, without'leaving any room for implying any contract between her and other companies out of any intention or understanding of the agents, not known to or relied upon by her. And that company did not insure her, for the policy was not delivered to her, nor known of by her, until after the loss. She was not bound to receive it, and neither the agents or the company stood under any obligation to deliver it. Without delivery it was the act of but one party to it, which amounted to no contract at all as between the two, even if, with delivery, it would have been good after a loss not known at the time, without any contract providing for it previous to the loss. The contract with the other companies was an agreement to insure, not a contract of insurance.
The agreement to pay the premium at the rate specified was a sufficient consideration to make the agreement a binding contract. Generally, whatever is agreed to be done is, in equity, considered as done. The agreement to insure may in equity be treated as insurance. At law there could only be an action for the breach of the contract to effect the insurance. This might not be so full and complete a remedy as that which can be afforded in equity. The right to proceed in equity is well settled in such cases, in the courts of the United States, notwithstanding the statute establishing the boundaries of equity jurisdiction which has been in force from the beginning. Rev. St. § 723; Tayloe v. Merchants’ Ins Co. 9 How. 390; Commercial Ins. Co. v. Union Ins. Co. 19 How. 321. The jurisdiction depends upon the nature of the contract, and not, as has been argued, upon the difficulty or nature of the proof.
In this case the evidence is, apparently, in writing, and easy of production, while in some eases it has been in correspondence and oral communications, not so readily at hand for the purpose. But when the contract is made out, in any mode, to be a preliminary con
The contract is an entire one with the authorized agents of all the ■companies. The meaning of it may turn out to be that each should .insure for one-fourth; or that, as to the oratrix, all were bound in solido to the effecting of the insurance; or some other construction may prevail; but, whatever may be the ultimate result, all these defendants are' liable upon it to the oratrix, and have a common interest in regard to it as between themselves, and all appear to be proper parties to this suit to enforce.
The demurrer is sustained, and the bill adjudged insufficient as to the Fire Insurance Association; and the demurrers are overruled as to the other defendants, with leave to answer over by the sixteenth ■day of August.