Basta v. Farm Property Mutual Insurance

252 N.W. 125, 217 Iowa 240
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 12, 1933
DocketNo. 42067.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 252 N.W. 125 (Basta v. Farm Property Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Basta v. Farm Property Mutual Insurance, 252 N.W. 125, 217 Iowa 240 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Donegan, J.

Michael Basta, plaintiff, was the owner of a farm near Monteith, in Guthrie county, Iowa, on which his co-plaintiff, Anderson Fenimore, held a mortgage for $2,000. The house upon said farm was insured in the defendant company for $1,000. The house was occupied by Arthur Volz and Elsie Volz, his wife, as tenants of Michael Basta. On the evening of September 10, 1931, Mr. and Mrs. Volz, having returned to the home and found a fire in the kitchen, hastened to get the help of neighbors, and the fire was supposedly put out after having damaged the walls near the kitchen stove and in two adjoining rooms. Mr. and Mrs. Volz did not remain in the house but spent the night with neighbors. They also remained away from home on the following night on account of the damage which had been done, and on this night-, September 11, 1931, the house was completely destroyed by fire.

The defendant company having refused to pay the loss, this action was commenced by the plaintiff on the 19th day of January, 1932. In his petition and amendment thereto the plaintiff alleged the occurrence of the fire resulting in the complete destruction of the house, and alleged that the defendant company had waived the filing of proofs of loss as provided in the policy. The defendant *242 company answered, denied generally the allegations of the petition, and expressly denied that any verified proofs of loss had been filed or that there was any waiver of such proofs by the defendant. The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount of the policy and interest. From the judgment entered upon such verdict, the defendant appeals.

The real question at issue in this case is whether the defendant insurance company waived the filing of verified proofs of loss. The application for the policy in question was made out for the plaintiff by one Meyer, a soliciting agent for the defendant company at Menlo, Iowa. Meyer testified that Mr. Stanley, an officer of appellant company, had told him that whenever there was a fire loss to telephone the company or notify them by mail so they would know about the claim. On September 11th, the day following the first fire, Meyer, after visiting the premises, taróte the defendant company to send an adjuster “to settle the claim of Roy Hays, Menlo, Iowa, and Mike Basta and Arthur Volz, 11/? miles north and 1 mile west of Monteith, as they had a partial loss on household goods on September 10, 1931, about ten P. M”. The defendant company held a policy of insurance on the household goods of Arthur Volz as well as on the house owned by Basta. Meyer also wrote Fenimore and told him of the fire. Fenimore lived near Peru, in Madison county, Iowa.

About September 17, 1931, J. H. Bayne, a representative of appellant company, called upon Meyer and told him that he came to look about a couple of fires. At that time Meyer told Bayne that the house in question was a total loss and Bayne said he would go out and see it. Bayne did visit, the scene of the fire that afternoon, and talked with Elsie Volz, wife of the tenant, on whose furniture appellant also had written a policy of insurance. Later, on the same day, Meyer saw Bayne at Stuart, Iowa, and testified that Bayne told him “that there was a total loss out there and they had to pay this claim and he would go out and hunt Mike Basta up and for me not to worry about it”. Bayne denies that he made this statement. On receiving word from Meyer that the house had been destroyed, Fenimore went to see Meyer, but did not find him. He then went to see Basta, who was working near Winterset, Iowa, told Basta of the fire, and Basta told Fenimore to look after the insurance. Following this visit of Fenimore to Basta, Fenimore met Meyer in the office of a Mr. Strong in Stuart, Iowa, and there Meyer *243 told Fenimore that Bayne had told him (Meyer) that he would look after the claim, and that it would be paid, and that Bayne had told him that Bayne would go- out and find Mike Basta and settle the claim. At this meeting, which it is claimed took place September 25, 1931, there was present, besides Meyer and Fenimore and Mr. Strong, a Mr. Hill. Fenimore told Meyer to look after the insurance and Meyer said that he would do so. ' At that same time, in the presence of Fenimore, Strong, and Hill, it is claimed by appellee that Meyer wrote a second letter to the defendant company, containing statements that Fenimore, Strong, and Hill told him to write, stamped it, and mailed the letter in the post office in Stuart, Iowa. The defendant company admits the receipt of the letter of September 11th, notifying it of the first fire, but denies that it received the last above-mentioned letter which Meyer claims to have written and mailed from Stuart, Iowa.

I. Appellant alleges that the court erred in permitting the witness Meyer to testify to the conversation between himself and J. H. Bayne in which he claims that Bayne told him “that there was a total loss out there and that they would pay this claim and that he (Bayne) would go and hunt up Mike Basta and for me (Meyer) not to worry about it”, on the ground that it is not shown that Bayne had any authority to bind the insurance company. In support of its contention, appellant introduced its contract with Bayne. The contract thus introduced contained provisions to the effect that “said J. H. Bayne shall give his entire time to the appointment of agents and soliciting of insurance only. * * * He shall have no authority to adjust losses or handle them in any way excepting such as may be referred to him, and then only as directed in any individual case”. In addition to this, appellant introduced the testimony of Forest Huttenlocher, the president of appellant company, and of J. H. Bayne, who both testified that Bayne had no authority to adjust losses except when specifically authorized to do so. It appears in the evidence, however, that the appellant company had no other full-time employee except Bayne who adjusted losses, and that, although Huttenlocher stated that he was the only adjuster for the company, except as he appointed them for particular matters, he had, according to his own testimony, “spent maybe three or four weeks out of the whole year in adjusting losses”, in 1931. On cross-examination of Bayne, the reports made by him to the company were introduced and showed a practically continuous course of ad *244 justments made in behalf of the company by Bayne during the entire year of 1931. Moreover, Bayne was sent to the scene of the fire in question in response to Meyer’s letter which told the company to “send the adjuster out at once to settle the claim of Roy Hayes, Menlo, Iowa, and to Mike Basta and Arthur Volz 1% miles north and 1 mile west of Monteith”. Regardless of the terms of the written contract between appellant and Bayne, the appellant would he bound by the acts of Bayne, which those with whom he dealt bad a reasonable right to believe he was authorized to do. In Nertney v. National Fire Ins. Co., 199 Iowa 1358, 203 N. W. 826, we said:

“It is often said that an insurance company must act through agents who deal directly with those whose property it insures. They look to and rely upon the agent as the full and complete representative of the company in all that is said and done in making the contract, and have a right to so regard him.

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Bluebook (online)
252 N.W. 125, 217 Iowa 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basta-v-farm-property-mutual-insurance-iowa-1933.