American Glove Co. v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance

113 P. 688, 15 Cal. App. 77, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 12
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 776.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 113 P. 688 (American Glove Co. v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Glove Co. v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance, 113 P. 688, 15 Cal. App. 77, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 12 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial in an action brought by it upon a fire insurance policy issued by the defendant company.

The policy covered certain property located in San Francisco, and it was issued November 25, 1905, insuring the property in the sum of $1,500 for one year from November 30th following. It contained among others the following provision : “This policy shall be canceled at any time at the *79 request of the insured, or by the company giving five days’ notice of such cancellation.”

The property insured was destroyed April 19, 1906. The sole question in the case is whether or not the policy was in force at the time of the loss or had been canceled prior to that time by the defendant.

The evidence in the case upon the point was briefly as follows: R. W. Osborn was the Pacific Coast manager of the defendant. Ten days before the loss occurred, on April 9, 1906, the following notice was mailed to plaintiff:

“San Francisco, April 9th, 1906.
“Register.
“American Glove Co., 3648 19th street, S. F.
“Gentlemen:—We desire to terminate our liability under Policy No. 170062 issued in your favor for $1500, covering-on stock of gloves and machinery. The policy will be canceled on our books on the 14th inst., five days from date. Kindly return the policy to this office, together with the earned premium of $5.15 on that date. The plant being shut down permanently makes it undesirable. Bill enclosed herewith. Tours very truly,
“R. W. OSBORN,
I enclo.
Manager. ’ ’

This notice was received by plaintiff on April 11th, eight days before the loss. On April 13th a second notice was mailed to plaintiff, in which, referring to the earlier notice, it was said:

“April 13th, 1906.
“American Glove Co., 3648 19th street, S. F.
“Gentlemen:—We are in receipt of a copy of the cancellation notice mailed to you on the 11th day of April, wherein our policy No. 170062 was canceled. We hold your registered letter receipt for said letter, and we herewith beg to confirm said cancellation, and to advise you that no liability exists under the said policy. Please return it to this office in the envelope herewith.
“Very truly yours,
“R. W. OSBORN,
“I enclo.
Manager, F. C. ”

This second notice was not received by plaintiff until after the loss had occurred.

*80 Plaintiff first contends that the notice of cancellation was ineffectual because signed “R. W. Osborn,” and not “The Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Company, by R. W. Osborn, Manager.” With this we cannot agree. There can be no doubt that the notice was both given and received as a notice from the company. It notified the plaintiff that “We desire to terminate our liability under policy No. 170,062,” and that ¡five days thereafter the policy will be canceled on “our” books. This language of course referred, as the plaintiff must have understood, to the insurance company, which alone had any “liability under policy No. 170,062,” and on whose books alone a cancellation entry could be made, and on whose behalf the notice was signed by its manager.

The notice need not be in any particular form so long as it is distinct and unequivocal notice that the insurer has canceled the policy. (Colonial Assur. Co. v. National Fire Ins. Co., 110 Ill. App. 471.) “It is sufficient if the insured has notice that the proper local agent of the company has received instructions that the company will no longer be liable,

| directions to the agent to terminate the risk and cancel the policy when communicated to the insured being regarded as ^effective as the most express notice that the policy had been terminated. (Springfield Fire Ins. Co. v. McKinnon, 59 Tex. 507”; 3 Cooley’s Briefs on the Law of Insurance, 2793.)

¡ In one of the cases just cited—Colonial Assur. Co. v. National Fire Ins. Co.—the managers of the defendant company in New York had sent a letter to its special agent in Chicago asking them to release certain policies. This letter, when shown to the insured by the special agent, was held in itself to be sufficient “notice of such cancellation” within the requirements of the policy, the terms of which were the same in this respect as those of the policy in the present case. A subsequent notice to the insured signed “Worthington & Co., special agents,” and much less formal than the one here involved, was held sufficient.

We have no doubt of the correctness of the finding of the trial court that the notice of cancellation given in this case is sufficient.

Plaintiff in the same connection argues that the notice of April 9th was not a notice of cancellation, but merely of an intention to cancel, and therefore insufficient. But the notice *81 expressed defendant’s present “desire to terminate liability.” The policy required “five days’ notice of such cancellation,” and for this reason the form of expression was adopted that the policy “will be canceled on our books on the 14th inst., five days from date.” Moreover, the insured was asked to return the policy with the earned premium on that date. The meaning of this was in substance that the insurance company, desiring then to cancel the policy and to terminate its risk, thereby gave the insured the five days’ notice prescribed by the policy, at the expiration of which the cancellation would become effective.

Under many policies of insurance, and especially those considered in the earlier cases, no period of notice of cancellation is required, but it is provided that the insurance may at any time be terminated by the company on giving notice thereof to the insured. When such a provision has been involved, it has been uniformly held that the notice given the insured must show a present cancellation and not a mere intention to cancel in the future. Such a case is Van Valkenburgh v. Lenox Fire Ins. Co., 51 N. Y. 465, relied upon by plaintiff. In another case cited by plaintiff, Gardner v. Standard Ins. Co., 58 Mo. App. 611, the agent of the insurance company, having received instructions to cancel a certain policy, wrote to the insured that the company “will cancel the policy I sent you,” and that he would send a policy in another company when he received a certain survey. In that case the court said that this letter was never intended by the writer of it to be taken or interpreted as a cancellation of the policy, and “amounted to no more than information coming to plaintiff’s ears through any third person of the intention of the company to cancel the policy.”

It is clear that such cases are inapplicable to the case at bar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 P. 688, 15 Cal. App. 77, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-glove-co-v-pennsylvania-fire-insurance-calctapp-1910.