Augusta Insurance & Banking Co. v. Abbott

12 Md. 348, 1858 Md. LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 22, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 12 Md. 348 (Augusta Insurance & Banking Co. v. Abbott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Augusta Insurance & Banking Co. v. Abbott, 12 Md. 348, 1858 Md. LEXIS 33 (Md. 1858).

Opinion

Bartol, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

This action was instituted by the appellee, on a policy of insurance made by the appellant, upon a cargo of lumber per brig Orb, at and from Baltimore to Boston. The policy was issued in the name of ££Parker Fall, for whom it concerns;” and the first question presented for our consideration is, whether the appellee has such an interest in the policy as to give him a right of action upon it? The evidence shows that the brig was lying at the port of Baltimore, and that Frisbie, the captain and part owner, employed Parker Fall, as his agent at Boston, to obtain insurance on a cargo of lumber, in order to enable him to procure freight for the vessel; that the appellee had told Frisbie he would freight the brig with lumber if an insurance could be obtained upon it, but did not expressly authorize either Frisbie or Fail to obtain the policy in question, nor had he any knowledge of it until after it was issued, when he adopted it,, and, upon the faith of it, placed his cargo on board.

The assignment of the policy by Frisbie to Abbott, made on the 18th day of November 1852, not being made “-with the [373]*373previous consent inwriting of the insurers,” as required Ity its terms, conferred no right upon the assignee, and his interest in the contract must be determined as if that assignment, had not been made.

The law is Well settled, that a policy of insurance is not a negotiable security. The Court of Appeals have said, that “A policy in the name of one, with the general clause for whom it may concern, will cover and protect the interest of any person for whose benefit it was intended, and who authorized it to be effected; and if, in the absence of any express order or authority from the owner, or any previous communication with him on the subject, such policy is effected in his behalf, the intention at the time of the party effecting it to cover his particular interest, will so connect him with the policy as that his adoption of it afterwards, will cause it to inure to his benefit. The subsequent adoption of a policy by a party interested, and for Whose benefit it was intended, being deemed equivalent to his prior order for insurance. But no one can, by subsequent adoption, avail himself of such a poliejr who was not at the time in the contemplation of the party procuring the insurance, and for whose benefit it was not intended, notwithstanding any interest he may have in the thing insured.” Newson’s Admr. vs. Douglass, 7 H. & J., 451, 452.

In this case it is contended, on the part of the appellant, that the pol^ on which the action was brought, was not, intended to cover the particular cargo of Abbott; but that it was procured at the instance of Captain Frisbie, for the purpose of enabling him to obtain freight, and was designed to cover any cargo of lumber which he might obtain for the vessel, no matter from whom. If that be so, then upon the authority cited, the appellee cannot maintain his action upon it.

But it is properly a question for the jury to determine, from the evidence, whether the policy in question was or was not designed, when obtained, to cover the particular cargo of the appellee, and the Superior Court erred in taking that question from the jury. The second prayer of the plaintiff, which was granted by the court, treated the policy as if it had been issued to Abbott himself, or in his own name.

[374]*374The next question presented by the record, is whether, in obtaining the policy, there was misrepresentation or concealment of material facts connected with the condition of the vessel? This depends upon the particular facts and circumstances which attended the obtaining of the policy; but before proceeding to an examination of them, it is proper to say that we do not concur in the view taken by the appellee’s counsel in the argument, “that a difference exists between such a case as this and the case where a party desiring insurance applies for it by himself or his agent.” So far as the question of good faith in obtaining the insurance is concerned, the case where the policy is issued “for whom, it may concern,” stands upon the same ground as if the name of the assured were inserted. “Every such policy supposes an agency;” (7 H. & J., 450;) no one can avail himself of it, but he for whom it is intended, and although obtained without his knowledge, and without any previous authority to the agent, its adoption by him after-wards, binds him to the acts and representations of the parties or agents connected with the business of procuring it, to the same extent as if they had acted under his authority previously given. See Park on Insurance, 208.

In this case, therefore, the appellee is responsible for the acts of both Frisbie and Fall, in their dealings with the company, and if any misrepresentation or concealment of facts material to the risk, be shown on the part of either of them, the policy would be void, no matter how innocent the appellee might be in the transaction; and no matter whether such misrepresentation or concealment be fraudulent, or result from negligence or inadvertence on the part of the agents connected with the business of procuring the insurance. 12 Wheaton, 412. 4 Mason’s Rep., 74. 1 Term, 12. 3 Kent, 286.

This results from the nature of the contract: “The utmost good faith and fair dealing are of its very essence, and every fact and circumstance which can possibly influence the mind of any prudent and intelligent insurer, in determining whether he will underwrite the policy at all, or at what premium he will underwrite it, ought to be communicated to him.” 2 G. & J., 162.

[375]*375In this case, the representations of Parker Fall to the agent of the appellant, were made in answer to the question, “ Where is the Orb, and what is her condition as to seaworthiness?” The reply was, “She is at Baltimore, about ready to sail, (or she will sail soon.) She is a good old vessel; on the voyage before, she brought a freight of coal from Philadelphia to Charlestown, and the cargo was not insured; that the man for whom she brought the coal, never had his cargoes insured, as I understood.”

The policy was dated the 28th day of October 1852; the vessel did not sail till the 22nd day of December 1852.

The objection of the appellant, that the statement made as to the time of sailing, was a promissory representation which bound the assured, and that the breach of it vitiates the policy, is conclusively answered by the decision of the Court of Appeals, in the case of Allegre's Admr. vs. The Maryland Ins. Co., 2 G. & J., 159, and was abandoned by the counsel in the argument. The time of sailing is not, therefore, material in the consideration of this branch of the case. As to the statement that she was “a good old vessel,” according to our construction of those words, they import no more than that she was seaworthy, a fact the truth of which it was proper to submit to the jury upon all the evidence; but that is embraced in the implied warranty, and does not stand upon representation, which is always matter outside of the policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Md. 348, 1858 Md. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/augusta-insurance-banking-co-v-abbott-md-1858.