Altermatt v. Rocky Mountain Fire Insurance

279 P. 243, 85 Mont. 419, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 80
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1929
DocketNo. 6,475.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 279 P. 243 (Altermatt v. Rocky Mountain Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altermatt v. Rocky Mountain Fire Insurance, 279 P. 243, 85 Mont. 419, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 80 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE FORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by plaintiff to recover upon a policy of insurance alleged to have been issued by defendant on the twentieth day of April, 1923, covering a dwelling and contents situated near Chester, owned by plaintiff.

The complaint alleges the execution and delivery of the policy by defendant, a copy being attached to and made a part thereof; the payment of the premium thereon; the total destruction of the insured property on or about December 5, 1925; notice of loss and waiver of proof of loss by defendant; the refusal of defendant to pay the amount of the policy; and that plaintiff has performed all conditions precedent on his part to be performed before the commencement of the action. Defendant, by answer, denied all the material allegations of the complaint.

At the close of the testimony the court granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict; judgment was accordingly entered for defendant. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was denied, and he appeals from the judgment.

The motion for directed verdict presented the question of the sufficiency of the proof to show that defendant issued the policy in suit. On this issue the record discloses that a short time prior to April 20, 1923, plaintiff’s brother went to the First National Bank at Chester to renew a policy of insurance previously issued by defendant upon the property involved, and which was then about to expire. J. O. Berglin, president of the bank and defendant’s agent, was absent, and the matter was discussed with F. A. Pike, cashier of the bank and Berg *422 lin’s “right-hand man in everything he was interested in,” who stated that they were not taking any new business. About three weeks later plaintiff’s brother again called at the bank. The policy was then prepared by Pike from the old policy, countersigned “J. O. Berglin, P.” The signature was appended by Pike, in the absence of Berglin. The premium was paid to Pike and the policy delivered.

The testimony tends to show that the premium was deposited in the bank to the credit of Berglin, “Agent,” the account in which he deposited all insurance premiums collected by him for the various fire insurance companies he represented. The daily report required to be made to defendant was prepared but never mailed. It was found among the effects of Berglin a short time before the trial.

Leo P. McMeel, secretary-treasurer of defendant, testified: “He [Berglin] was our local agent with authority to write policies, solicit policies, collect premiums, receipt for premiums, insert provisions as to loss payable clauses; he had authority to cancel policies or to insert mortgagee provisions. He was authorized to transfer policies, but he must refer it to the home office or send us notice he had transferred it, but he could make notations on the policy itself. Plaintiff’s proposed Exhibit ‘C’ [being a copy of the policy in question] appears to be a fire insurance policy in the Rocky Mountain; it is on one of our forms and is number 23,833, which was one of the blank policies left with Mr. Berglin, our agent at Chester.”

Mr. Pike testified: “Q. What relationship, if any, did you have with Mr. Berglin with reference to the issuance of policies in fire insurance companies, with particular reference to the policies in the Rocky Mountain Fire Insurance Company? A. I actually handled a great deal of the detail work in connection with issuing the policies, although all new policies were O.K.’d by him. The renewals I handled without referring the policies to him. A good many of the policies were issued by me or under my direction, and whenever Mr. Berglin was not conveniently available to sign the policies, I signed Ms *423 name, indicating the fact that I had signed for him by the initial ‘P.’ This will apply to the several companies that Mr. Berglin was agent for, including the Rocky Mountain Fire Insurance Company.” This practice had prevailed for more than a year and a half; Berglin had authorized Pike to sign policies, as was done with the policy before us.

The Chester agency was terminated in the fall of 1923, and defendant attempted to check up the policy forms and blanks furnished to Berglin, but without success. McMeel, after stating the efforts made, testified: “But we couldn’t keep a man up there to do it in person.” In the spring of 1924, and while defendant was endeavoring to locate the blank policies, a special agent of defendant had a conversation with Berglin in which the Altermatt policy was referred to. Berglin died in May, 1924.

The first question presented is whether Berglin, defendant’s agent, had authority to delegate to Pike the right to countersign the policy in suit.

Whether an agent, in the absence of express authority, can appoint subagents to act for the principal, when judgment and discretion are required, has been the subject of much litigation and especially in insurance cases, and the authorities are not in harmony. This court, in Trent v. Siierlock, 24 Mont. 255, 61 Pac. 650, said: “It is the rule that in the absence of authority, either express or implied, to employ a subagent, the trust committed to the agent is personal, and cannot be delegated to another. * * * This is especially true where the performance of the agency requires the exercise of special skill, judgment or discretion.” However, all of the authorities agree that when, in the execution of the authority granted to the agent, an act is to be performed which is of a mechanical, ministerial or executive character, involving no element of discretion or judgment, the agent may have implied power to delegate his authority to a subagent. The rule is thus stated by Professor Mechem in his work on Agency: “Where in the execution of the authority an act is to be performed which is of a purely mechanical, ministerial or executive nature, involv *424 ing no. element of judgment, discretion or personal skill, the reason for the general rule does not apply, and the power to entrust the performance of it to a subagent may be implied.” (1 Mechem on Agency, sec. 315.)

In this state, unless specifically forbidden to do so, an agent can delegate his power to another person, “1. When the act to be done is purely mechanical, * * * or, 3. When it is the usage of the place to delegate such powers.” (Sec. 7971, Rev. Codes 1921. See, also, Joyce on Insurance, sec. 396; 5 Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, sec. 3988.) “A subagent, lawfully appointed, represents the principal in like manner with the original agent, and the original agent is not responsible to third persons for the acts of the subagent.” (Sec. 7973, Rev. Codes 1921.)

Here the policy is a renewal; the risk had been determined when the original policy was issued. The act of preparing the policy by filling in the blanks and collecting the premium was purely mechanical or executive, not requiring the exercise of judgment or discretion. The uncontradicted testimony shows that Pike was a clerk or assistant to Berglin and for a considerable period of time had handled much of the detail work in connection with issuing policies, and that he issued renewal policies without referring them to’ Berglin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 P. 243, 85 Mont. 419, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altermatt-v-rocky-mountain-fire-insurance-mont-1929.