Aiken Petroleum Co. v. National Petroleum Under Writers of Western Millers Mut. Fire Ins.

36 S.E.2d 380, 207 S.C. 236, 1945 S.C. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 13, 1945
Docket15789
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 36 S.E.2d 380 (Aiken Petroleum Co. v. National Petroleum Under Writers of Western Millers Mut. Fire Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aiken Petroleum Co. v. National Petroleum Under Writers of Western Millers Mut. Fire Ins., 36 S.E.2d 380, 207 S.C. 236, 1945 S.C. LEXIS 39 (S.C. 1945).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This action, based upon the amended and supplemental complaint, was brought to reform and to enforce as reformed, an insurance policy issued by the de *240 fendant in 1943, covering certain properties owned by the plaintiffs which were destroyed by fire on October 20, 1943. The reformation sought is the elimination from the policy in question, and also from a policy written in 1942, of a one hundred per cent, co-insurance clause, which 'the plaintiffs allege was improperly, inequitably and fraudulently inserted. The general theory of the complaint is based upon the doctrine of imputed knowledge, and it was upon this theory that the case was tried. The defendant contends that the policy as written, including the co-insurance clause represents the real contract of the parties, and it offered to pay the sum of $2,-138.93, which is the amount due on the policy with the coinsurance clause included.

Plaintiffs recovered judgment against the defendant for the full amount of their loss, with interest, and the defendant has appealed.

The plaintiffs, Geddings Cushman and Lois D. Cushman, are co-partners trading as Aiken Petroleum Company, wholesale distributors of petroleum products. In 1937, their business was conducted as a corporation under the name of Aiken Petroleum Company, with Geddings Cushman as the manager. Geddings Cushman and his wife, Lois D. Cushman, were the only stockholders. In 1938, the charter of the corporation was surrendered, and the business was conducted in the same manner and in the same name as a partnership, Mr. Cushman being at all times the active manager thereof.

Some time in the year 1937 Mr. Cushman desired to procure fire insurance on the bulk plant and warehouse of the company situated in the City of Aiken, and interviewed a local insurance agent, Mr. Durban, with this in view. Pie was told by this agent that it would be necessary that a co-insurance clause be attached to the policy, the effect of which would be to limit the liability of the insurance company writing the policy in the event of fire, to about fifty per cent, of *241 the loss. Cushman was altogether unversed in insurance matters, and up to that time ignorant of the character and effect of a co-insurance clause. As a result of the information given to him by the insurance agent, he determined that he would never take out any policy of insurance with such a clause in it.

Some time during the same year, but subsequent to his conversation with Mr. Durban, Mr. Perry Moses, Jr., of the firm of Perry Moses & Son, of Sumter, South Carolina, general agents for a number of mutual insurance companies, visited Mr. Cushman at Aiken upon his own initiative, and solicited the business of writing the insurance on plaintiffs’ warehouse and contents, consisting of gas and oil. He was told by Mr. Cushman of his insuperable objection to any fire insurance policy containing a co-insurance clause, and of his determination never to take out insurance with such a provision included in the policy.

According to the testimony offered by the plaintiffs, Mr. Moses, in order to obtain the business of the plaintiffs, agreed and guaranteed for the mutual company in which he would write the policy insuring the plaintiffs, and for any mutual company that he would write future policies in, that the rate charged would be low, and that no co-insurance clause would ever be inserted in any policies that his company or companies would ever write on any properties owned 'or controlled by Mr. Cushman. In August, 1937, the Perry Moses Agency issued to the plaintiffs a policy of fire insurance on their warehouse and tanks, with the National Petroleum Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Philadelphia as insurer, which policy contained no co-insurance clause. This policy expired a year later. A similar policy in the same company was issued by the Moses Agency in 1938; and a third policy was likewise issued without the co-insurance clause in the year 1939.

*242 In the year 1940, the National Petroleum Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Philadelphia was taken over by the defendant, Western Millers, which absorbed its business and continued its policies. Western Millers was likewise represented by Perry Moses & Son, as its general agents.

In August, 1940, Western Millers' issued to the plaintiffs its policy insuring the property of the plaintiffs against loss by fire, such policy containing no co-insurance clause. Upon the expiration of this policy in 1941, it issued a similar policy which also excluded the clause objectionable to the plaintiffs. However, the renewal policies issued in 1942 and 1943 covering plaintiffs’ property included a co-insurance clause, which the plaintiffs assert was included fraudulently and without notice to them.

The evidence for the plaintiffs tends to show that after examining the first three or four policies and noting that no co-insurance clause was embodied in them, Mr. Cushman did not inspect the policies issued by the defendant in 1942 and 1943, but filed them away in his safe, relying upon the agreement he had with the Moses Agency, and the knowledge of such agreement imputed to the defendant, that no such clause would ever be included in the policies issued on his property. It was only after the fire which destroyed the property that he learned that a co-insurance clause was embraced in the policies issued in 1942 and 1943.

During all of these years — from 1937 to 1943 — tire plaintiffs’ dealings with the initial insurance company, National Petroleum Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Philadelphia, and later with the defendant, were transacted and conducted solely through Perry Moses, Jr., of the firm of Perry Moses & Son, general agents for both of the named companies. All of the policies referred to were issued and countersigned by Perry Moses, Jr., and the letterheads of this firm carried the *243 inscription that this company was general agent for the National and also for Western Millers.

Several letters were introduced in evidence: On July 8, 1940, which was the first year the insurance was written by the defendant, Mr. Perry Moses, Jr., in a letter to Mr. Cushman, enclosed a policy, stating that it “is renewal of insurance on your bulk plant we have been carrying for the past several years.” In a letter of November 4, 1940, again writing for the defendant, Western Millers, Mr. Moses, inquiring for certain information from Mr. Cushman, assured him that “upon receipt of this information we will issue endorsement accordingly, and we want to assure you that this coverage is binding as of November 2, and that you have the protection that you desire.” Again, in a letter of March 22, 1941, plaintiffs’ insurance was renewed by the defendant through the Moses Agency for an increased amount, and in forwarding the policy the statement was made, “we are granting complete protection under the new contract.”

On February 18, 1942, the following letter was written to Mr. Cushman, and was introduced in evidence by the defendant :

“Mr. Geddings Cushman
Aiken Petroleum Company
Aiken, South Carolina. February 18, 1942.
Dear Mr. Cushman:

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.E.2d 380, 207 S.C. 236, 1945 S.C. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aiken-petroleum-co-v-national-petroleum-under-writers-of-western-millers-sc-1945.