Arff v. Star Fire Insurance

25 N.E. 1073, 125 N.Y. 57, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 366, 80 Sickels 57, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1841
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 1073 (Arff v. Star Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arff v. Star Fire Insurance, 25 N.E. 1073, 125 N.Y. 57, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 366, 80 Sickels 57, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1841 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

This is an action to recover upon a policy of insurance issued by the defendant upon certain personal property belonging to the plaintiff. A loss having occurred, .and plaintiff having made a demand upon defendant for payment under th^ policy, the defendant refused to pay because it •appeared that other insurance had been taken subsequent to "the issuing of the policy in question, and, as defendant claimed, no notice had been given to it of the taking of such insurance. There was a clause in the policy by which the plaintiff agreed to notify the company if, at the making of this insurance, or at any time during its continuance, there shall be any ■other insurance applied to the property herein described, or any part thereof, whether the same be valid or not.” It was also provided that the policy should become void if the assured neglected to comply with its terms, conditions or covenants. There was also a provision in the policy that “ only such persons as shall hold the commission of this company shall be considered as its agents in any transaction relating to this insurance or any renewal thereof,, or the payment of premium do the company. Any other person shall be deemed-to be the ■agent of the assured, and payment of the premium to such person shall be at the sole risk of the assured.”

The plaintiff claimed upon the trial that he had given the notice required by the company. He had in fact given it to •one Werner Strecker, and whether or not that notice is sufficient is the only question in the case.

The plaintiff was nonsuited on the ground that he had not .given the notice as required by the policy, and that judgment of nonsuit has been affirmed by the General Term, and the plaintiff appeals here.

It appeared in evidence that Macdonald & Van Alstyne were the duly commissioned agents of the company in the city *61 of Troy at the time when this policy was issued. Mr. Van Alstyne swore that his firm had authority as agents of the defendant to give permits for additional insurance and to consent to assignments for transfers of insurance. He also stated that their authority as agents of the defendant was to do a general insurance business for the company, collect premiums, give receipts and consents and indorsements on insurance policies. They had been agents of the defendant for five or six years at the time in question. When this policy was issued,, and up to the time of the occurrence of the loss, tins firm had been doing business in the city of Troy for the defendant as general insurance agents, and during that time Mr. Van Alstyne said that they “had in their employ, among others, this Werner Strecker,” and he designated the manner of his employment as working for us as a broker; I mean soliciting insurance on commission; he was soliciting insurance for our firm, and our firm only, on a commission; his compensation was regulated by certain commission on business he brought. He did not do other fire insurance that I know of; what he would do would be to go and solicit insurance and bring it to our office; if we approved it, we would take it and pay him his commission; that was all. He was not soliciting fire insurance for anyone else. His arrangement about his working for us in the way of fire insurance was that he was employed by us to solicit insurance for our office exclusively, upon which we paid him a commission upon the business he brought in.” He also said that Strecker had a desk in their office during this time, “ not one of his own, but he used one that was in the office, the same as any person; when he happened in, he came in and used a desk there the same as any broker; he had a desk that he used pretty much all the time for himself.”

Mr. Strecker himself testified that he was in the insurance business principally in 1884; fire and life both; working for Macdonald & Van Alstyne, and for no one else, not in fire insurance; I was paid according to the business I brought in; if I did a great deal of business I got a great deal of money, and if I didn’t, I got less; during that year, I do not know *62 whether it could he called working under a salary or not; it was always regulated by the amount of business; there was a desk in the office I usually occupied; the nature of iny employment was soliciting.”

■ He solicited from Mr. ArfE an application for the policy in question, and it was after the issuing of the policy that the plaintiff informed Mr. Strecker that other insurance had been taken through Mr. Fromann.

It was also stated by Mr. Van Alstyne that, under their agreement with Mr. Strecker, “ he was at liberty to work for any other insurance company, if he pleased; he could place his business with other insurance companies, if he -chose; he could place such business as he solicited with other companies, if he chose, with other agents; he had, for some considerable period anterior to 1884, acted for us in the matter of soliciting fire insurance; his office was located with us; he had a desk in our office; prior to this, he had been in our employ since 1880, doing business exclusively for our company, and having a desk in our. office during that time.”

There was thus evidence from which the jury could infer that Mr. Strecker was solely in the employ of these agents, and that the kind of employment in which he was engaged was the soliciting for them of policies of-insurance and for them exclusively, and that his compensation for the services performed by him for them depended upon the amount of business which he was able to ¿o, or, in other words, the number-of applications which he secured for them and which they accepted. It is true that Mr. Yan Alstyne denominated this kind of service as the service of a broker, and he also stated that Mr. Strecker was at liberty to work for any other insurance company if he pleased. If he meant that Mr. Strecker had the power to violate his agreement with them, and instead of working exclusively for them, work for others, why that is a self-evident proposition, and has no bearing upon the question as to the capacity in which he was then employed by them. If he meant to assert that he was not exclusively -employed by them, then it is a contra,diction of what the wit *63 ness had already several times stated to be the truth, and also a contradiction of the testimony of Mr. Streeker himself, and the fact of exclusive employment, if material, should have been left to the jury to determine. If the witness Streeker were really nothing but an ordinary insurance broker, notice to him of subsequent insurance would not be notice to the ¡company. (Mellen v. Hamilton Fire Ins. Co., 17 N. Y. 609; D evens v. Mechanics', etc., Ins. Co., 83 id. 168.)

"What is understood under the designation of an insurance broker is one who acts as a middleman between the insured and the company, and who solicits insurance from the public under no employment from any special company, but having ¡secured an order he either places the insurance with the company selected by the insurer, or in the absence of any ■selection by him, then with the company selected by such broker. Ordinarily, the relation between the insured and the broker is that between the principal and his agent, and according to Arnould on Insurance (Vol. 1, chap. 5, pg. 108, of the 2d ed.):

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 1073, 125 N.Y. 57, 34 N.Y. St. Rep. 366, 80 Sickels 57, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arff-v-star-fire-insurance-ny-1890.