Bunten v. Orient Mutual Insurance

8 Bosw. 448
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 29, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 Bosw. 448 (Bunten v. Orient Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bunten v. Orient Mutual Insurance, 8 Bosw. 448 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court—Woodruff, J.

The testimony of James Bunten, Jr., given on the trial, was to the effect that at ór about the 1st of October, 1855, he applied to the agent of the defendants, in Quebec, for insurance on a cargo of lumber in process of being laden on board the barque Azoff. That the agent gave him a tariff of rates of premium varying Avith the days named therein for the sailing of vessels, doivn to the tenth of November, and said that the premium of insurance would be according to [452]*452those rates. That he then agreed to the insurance at those rates, and the agent told him to consider the cargo insured, provided the vessel sailed before the tenth of November. That the amount insured, as then agreed, was the invoice cost of the cargo, increased by the addition of ten per cent, but that the actual amount or sum could not be ascertained until the lading was completed. That the day of sailing could not then be fixed, and the agent agreed that the premium should be fixed according to the tariff which the agent handed to him. That in the agreement there was no warranty as to the day of sailing, though the witness understood at the time that the agent could not take a risk on a vessel to sail after the tenth of November. And with that qualification the agreement was that he should pay the premium which was chargeable according to the tariff, and according to the time the vessel actually sailed or proceeded to sea.

If such an agreement as this was made by the agent of the defendants, and he had authority to make such an agreement, I perceive no ground upon which the defendants can refuse to perform it.

That this agreement was made was testified in unqualified terms, and the agreement is one which disposed of every material particular, and enabled the parties to say, the moment the lading was completed, to what amount and upon what terms the plaintiff was insured, and, even while the day of sailing remained undetermined, the scale of prices furnished the certain and precise test of the amount of premium so soon as the day of actual sailing should be known. Here are all the elements of a valid, binding agreement, certainty in its provisions, consideration and mutual assent.

That this agreement was made is also testified by McLirnont, the defendants’ witness, their agent in the transaction. He says the insurance was agreed to, that the only condition was that the vessel should sail on or before the tenth of November following. That the rate of premium was not absolutely fixed, but that it was to be in accord[453]*453anee with the tariff of rates which he produced on his examination, and was to depend on the day of the sailing of the vessel. That if she sailed on or before the tenth of October, the rate was to be three per cent, if after that date and before the tenth of November, the rate was to be higher aud in accordance with such tariff. That the day of sailing of the vessel was not fixed by the contract, except that it should not be later than the tenth of November. And the precise amount or valuation of the cargo was not fixed, because the agent of the plaintiff had not received his invoice of the cost and could not ascertain such cost until the time when, her lading being completed, the vessel should sail.

Here is the testimony of the plaintiff’s agent and of the defendants’ agent and witness, and to the same purport, in respect to this agreement; and to this testimony there is no contradiction.

To my mind it establishes a valid binding agreement, under which the defendants became bound to execute a policy, insuring the plaintiff to the amount of his invoice cost with the ten per cent addition, and by which the plaintiff was bound to pay to them such premium as according to the tariff of rates above referred to was chargeable according to the time when the vessel should sail, provided, however, the agent of the defendants had authority to take a risk for them upon those terms.

The only apparent discrepancy between these witnesses in relation to these interviews is, that Bunten, the plaintiff’s agent and witness says, that McLimont, the defendants’ agent, gave him the tariff of rates, while McLimont says he did not exhibit to Bunten the list or tariff of rates of premium, but informed him what the rate of premium would be. This discrepancy is of little moment—it still leaves the important fact that the rates were communicated and agreed to, and. whether it was done orally or by showing the paper on which the tariff was written, is of no moment—it is a particular in respect to which either of those two witnesses might be mistaken, without weak-[454]*454erring’ the force of their united, testimony to the agreement itself, including all its essential details and particulars, and McLimont furnishes in his testimony the means of making the contract definite as to premium, by annexing to his deposition the tariff referred to, which he says was approved by the defendants, according to which vessels sailing between the 1st and 10th of October inclusive, were to be charged three per cent premium, and vessels sailing between the 10th and 20th inclusive, were to be charged four per cent premium, and the rates increased thereafter for successive periods to and including the 10th of Hovember.

How, that the defendants’ agent had authority to bind the defendants as insurers upon risks like that offered to him by the plaintiff, cannot be denied. The letter of authority under which he acted, dated Dec. 14th, 1854, after stating the commissions to be allowed to him, and the reliance of the defendants upon his caution and discretion in the risks he should take, declares as follows : “We agree to your taking risks for us to the following extent;” * * * “3d, upon cargoes of lumber, Quebec to Great Britain and continent of Europe, in good vessels ranking not lower than A. 2, and avoiding such new vessels as are on their first trip or slightly put together, not more than $5,000 by each, with a discretion of going as-far as $7,500, on such as you consider more than ordinarily desirable,” and, after mentioning other risks he might take, the letter adds, “We approve the tariff of rates you have presented us as applicable to the several classes of risks # * * reserving our right of making such modifications as we may deem necessary.”

It is not claimed that the risk taken by the agent upon the lumber for the Azoff was not a proper risk to be taken under this letter of authority; and if so, then the utmost that the defendants can claim is, that their agent must, in fixing the premium for the risks he took, conform to the tariff referred to in the letter, or to such modifications as the Company might afterwards make. Even this is [455]*455asking a great deal. What that tariff was does not appear in the case, and it did not appear in the defendants’ letter of authority, and it is not easy to see how, when the defendants had given to their agent the very large discretion which the terms of their letter import, they could have expected him to secure to them any business whatever, where the security of customers would depend upon his conforming, in respect to rates of premium, to an arrangement between the Company and him, which was not disclosed in the letter of authority, but was contained in a letter held by the Company, the customers having no means of information except perhaps the assurance of the agent himself, which alone would be insufficient to prove his authority, if proof should be necessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Bosw. 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bunten-v-orient-mutual-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1861.