Arkansas Insurance v. Bostick & Ryan

27 Ark. 539
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 27 Ark. 539 (Arkansas Insurance v. Bostick & Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Insurance v. Bostick & Ryan, 27 Ark. 539 (Ark. 1872).

Opinion

Bennett J.

This was an action on what is called an open or running policy of insurance; trial had; -verdict and judgment in favor of Bostick & Ryan; motion for a now trial by defendants overruled, and appeal granted.

The facts in the case, as appeal’ on and admitted in the-bill of exceptions, are as follows: The plaintiffs below, Bostick & Ryan, were manufacturers of tobacco at Fort Smith,. Arkansas, and in the Indian country, west of Arkansas. On' the first of May, 1868, they took out and received from the-defendants, the Insurance Company, an open policy, or, what is sometimes called a running policy of insurance, which was; to continue for one year from that date. About the first of April, 1869, Bostick & Ryan ordered a shipment of tobacco from Leopold & Co., of Louisville, Kentucky, which was,, by Leopold & Co., shipped on hoard the steamboat “ G. A_ Thompson,” which was a good and insurable boat, and was then hound for Fort Smith. The invoice of these goods was. received by Bostick, one of the firm of Bostick & Ryan, the-consignees, at Fort Smith, on Sunday, the lltli day of April,, 1869, and, on Monday the 12th, immediately after breakfast hours, lie (Bostick) reported theshipment to James II. Sparks,, who was the acting and accredited agent of the company at thátplacc, for the purpose of being indorsed as insured under the policy. Sparks examined the invoice, and asked Bostick whether he desired the goods to be insured from Louisville., or only from Memphis, when Bostick said he was satisfied to have them take the risk only from Memphis, or words to that effect. Whereupon, Sparks indorsed the goods as insured, under the policy, from Memphis to Fort Smith, and forwarded the application or report to William II. Fulton,, secretary of the company, at Little Rock, and which reached the secretary on the 14th of April. The “ G. A. Thompson/'’ with these goods on board, proceeded along her voyage, passed Memphis, entered the Arkansas river, and proceeded to a. point about forty miles up the river (below Little Rock), where she struck a snag, sunk and was burned, and the goods; were a total loss. The boat was lost during the night of the-9th, or early in the morning of tile 10th of April; and it was proven that the loss occurred l>3 the perils insured against. The loss was fully known to the company at Little Rock when Bostick’s report or application was received from the agent, Sparks, on the 14th of April, but was not known to either Sparks or Bostick, or to any of the plaintiffs at the time Bostick reported the goods to Sparks for insurance, as aforesaid, on the 12th day of April. When Fulton, the secretary, received the report from Sparks it was regularly spread upon the book of risks, but there was a protest against allowing the insurance or paying the claim by members of. the company; but it was agreed that it shouldbe spread upon the books (which -was the regular course according to the rules and the course of business of the company, for all such reports of goods insured) until the plaintiffs should have notice, in order that they might have a hearing on the question • of rejecting the application and refusing the insurance. After-wards, the report was rejected, the insurance s.et aside and the plaintiffs’ policy cancelled by the board of directors of the company, and the plaintiffs’ claim for pay for the value of the goods was rejected and refused,' and notice of this was served on the plaintiffs through the agent of the company, Sparks, at Fort Smith, on the 2.6th day of July, 1869. But previous to receiving this notice, plaintiffs had shipped other goods and reported them to Sparks in the same manner for insurance under the policy, and Sparks had received them, charged up the premiums and forwarded them to the secretary 'at Little Rock, and they were duly entered on the book of risks, but were afterwards set aside, together with the setting aside of the risks on the lost goods, as aforesaid. At the time of reporting the goods to Sparks for insurance, no premiums were paid, but were charged up by Sparks to plaintiffs in a regular account book which he kept for that purpose; and it was the regular custom of the. company, with those who held policies of this kind, to charge up the premiums on the report of shipment of goods, and the account of premiums were collected quarterly. It was further proven that the plaintiffs, after taking out this policy and before the shipment of the goods which were lost, made two or three other small shipments of goods which they did not report to the company, and the company did not receive premiums'on them; they did this with a view of taking the risk of these small shipments themselves. It was further proven that one shipment of goods made by them, after the issuing of the policy and before the shipment' of the lost goods, was'insured in another company, at Louisville; but that shipment was made by the order of the plaintiffs, sent by mail, and the insurance in the other company was effected by the consignors, in Louisville, unknown to the plaintiffs, and the ■ plaintiffs, on receiving the invoices, reported the goods, as usual, to the company, through the agent, Sparks, and the premium was regularly charged and paid to defendant by plaintiffs. Further, it was proven that the goods lost were worth the invoice price, to-w-it: $1000. Further, it was proven, by the rules and regulations of the company, that persons holding open ■policies of the company wore required to report their goods immediately on receiving the invoices, but not at the time the shipment was made, except when the policy holder was the consignor.

. The bill of exceptions and motion for a new trial present but three material points for adjudication.

First. It is contended that the company are Tiot liable on their policy, because the goods were lost before the shipment of them was reported to Sparks, the agent, or the company’s officer at Little Rock, Arkansas.

An indorsement upon the policy requires a report of each shipment to be made to the office of the company, at Little Rock, Arkansas,, by mail or otherwise the same day the shipment is made, or, if on goods and merchandise to be received, the same day advice or the invoice of the shipment comes to hand, for entry on the office records and for protection purposes.

In the body of the policy is found the following stipulation : “ That the Arkansas Fire, Marine, Life, Accident and General Insurance Company do, by these presents, cause Bostick & Ryan to be insured, lost or not lost, etc.”

In the determination of our first proposition, it will be necessary to fully understand the meaning and import of the clause “lost or not lost.” Policies are frequently effected, not only on ships and goods in home ports, but on those, also, which are in foreign ports, or actually at sea on. their way either to this or other countries, and with regard to which, it is, of course, uncertain whether they may not actually have been lost b.efore the policy was effected. These words have been inserted in all marine insurance. Arnold, in his work on Insurance, vol. 1, p. 26, says: “This clause, however’, though never’ omitted, does not appear to be strictly neees-. sary,'as there can be no reason why a previous loss of the subject insured should prejudice an insurance subsequently effected, if both the assured and the underwriters were equally ignorant of the loss at the time.” This opinion of the author is sustained by [Marshal], in his work on Insurance, pp. 338, 340, 1 Phill. Ins. 72, 438; 3 Kent (6 ed.) 258, note c.

It was decided by Lord Denman, in the case of Mead vs.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Ark. 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-insurance-v-bostick-ryan-ark-1872.