Cave v. Home Insurance

35 S.E. 577, 57 S.C. 347, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 13, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 35 S.E. 577 (Cave v. Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cave v. Home Insurance, 35 S.E. 577, 57 S.C. 347, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 49 (S.C. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

On the 7th day of November, 1896, one E. M. Vogel procured the defendant to issue a policy of insurance for $600 to protect his two-story wooden building, in the town of Barnwell, S. C., for which he paid the usual premium. The term of the policy was for one year. By the stipulation of the policy, loss under it was to be paid to Mrs. Emma Camp. On the day of February, 1897, the mortgagee, Mrs. Camp, for value, assigned her note and mortgage to William M. Cave, who at once notified defendant’s agents at Barnwell of such assignment of said mortgage to him, whereupon said agents indorsed in writing upon said policy that loss, if any, under said policy should be payable, to the said William M. Cave. On the 17th February, 1897, the Old Dominion Fire Association of Alexandria, Virginia, also issued a policy of insurance upon said building for $500, for one year. On the 20th March, 1897, the London, Liverpool and Globe Insurance Company also issued a policy of insurance on said building for $600, but this policy was taken [352]*352in the name of Mrs. A. H. Vogel, to whom the said E. W. Vogel had sold and by deed conveyed the said house and lot to the said Mrs. Vogel, his wife. Under the policy issued by defendant, which is on the printed New York standard, in accordance with provisions of the act of the General Assembly of this State, the value‘of the buildings insured was fixed at $1,000, and the insured and the insurer agreed to fix the total amount of insurance to be carried on the insured building (including this policy) at $6oo. On the polic}'- issued by the Old Dominion Fire Insurance Association no reference was made to the requirements of the act of 1896; but on the policy issued by the London, Liverpool and Globe Insurance Company, in accordance with the provisions of said act of 1896, the insurer and insured agreed that the actual value of the building insured was $3,000, and also agreed to fix the total amount of insurance to be carried on the insured building (including the policy issued by the London, Liverpool and Globe Co.) at $1,700. There was no indorsement upon the policy by any agent of the defendant that the defendant had any knowledge of, or waived its right to object to, the sale of the building by E. H. Vogel to his wife, Mrs. E. H. Vogel, or that it consented that the insured should increase, by one or more policies, the insurance carried on said building. The building insured was burned on the day of October, 1897. When the plaintiff brought suit against the Home Insurance Company of New York, as the only defendant, to recover the $600, with interest thereon from the 15th March, 1898, at seven per cent, interest, the said defendant answered, denying any liability under its policy, because it alleged that no indorsement in writing on the said policy showed its consent to the change of ownership from E. H. Vogel to his wife, or its consent to the increase of the insurance by another or more policies of insurance upon said building. To this position by the defendant, the plaintiff by its testimony showed that the attorney for Mrs. Vogel and of-the plaintiff informed the firm of Calhoun, Butler & Co., as agents of the defendant, of said sale by Mr. Vogel to his [353]*353wife, and also that the plaintiff informed said agent that the increased insurance would be taken, to which no objection was made, but consent was given. The agents denied that Mr. O’Bannon, as attorney, had ever informed them of such change of ownership, and also denied that the plaintiff had asked them if Mr. O’Bannon had informed them of such change of ownership of the building insured, and that they admitted to the plaintiff that Mr. O’Bannon had so informed them. Such agents also denied that the plaintiff had told them at the time, Or afterwards, of the increase in the insurance and that they agreed thereto. These were issues of fact, which were solved by the jury in favor of the plaintiff. When the Circuit Judge submitted his views of the law to the jury, he calmly and clearly pointed out to them that it was their duty, under the testimony, to determine what kind of an agency for the defendant the firm of Calhoun, Butler & Co. were; that if the scope of such agency permitted such firm of Calhoun, Butler & Co. to waive the stipulations of the policy issued by the defendant, by consenting to a change of ownership of the building, while such policy continued, or an increase in the amount of insurance on the building, by writing on the policy of insurance such waiver, that then such agents could waive such change in ownership and of the increase on the building by parol. The jury had testimony of this character before them as to agency of the firm of Calhoun, Butler & Co. for the defendant. First. A notice in the policy itself, signed by the president and countersigned by the secretary of the defendant company, that “This policy shall not be valid until countersigned by the duly authorized agent of the company at Barnwell Court House, S. C.,” and that the firm of Calhoun, Butler & Co. were such agents. Second. That Calhoun, Butler & Co., such agents, actually indorsed in writing on said policy issued tp the plaintiff, a change of the person to whom the loss, if any such, should be paid, and that William M. Cave, the said assignee of the mortgagee, saw said firm of Calhoun, Butler & Co., as such agents, so indorse such change on the policy. Third. That [354]*354the policies issued for the defendant by said firm of Calhoun, Butler & Co. were denominated not only as a policy issued by “Barnwell, S. C., Agency of the Home Insurance Company of New York,” but that such policies were numbered according to the policies issued by such firm, and that the policy issued to plaintiff was numbered “399,” thus manifesting the scope of such agency.

1 2 The jury found that such agency was invested with full power to waive stipulations in writing' and also by parol. The Circuit Judge was .careful throughout'his charge to limit the power of the agency to the scope of such agency as created by the defendant itself. The Circuit Judge followed faithfully the decisions of this Court, in Wilson v. Ins. Co., 51 S. C., 540, quoting the exact language used by this Court, at pages 547 and 548 of the case cited. We do not care to comment to any extent upon the act of an agent who has been clothed by its principal with full power to represent its principal in the matter of issuing such policies of insurance, indorsing changes in writing upon such policies,and also waiving certain stipulations orally and notin writing. We must always remember that a policy of insurance is nothing but a contract, for a valuable consideration, to hold the insured harmless from the effect of the fire during a stipulated period of time on a certain piece of property by the insurer. When these contracts are made by corporations, they must of necessity act through agents. When agents are clothed with sufficient power by the corporation, they can do anything within the scope of their agency, and thereby bind the principal, who is the insurer. The verdict of the jury was in favor of the plaintiff for $643.16. But we fear the Circuit Judge was in error when he declined to grant a new trial or a new trial nisi, because the jury failed to carry out his direction that fhe defendant was only entitled to pay to the plaintiff his “pro rata

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 S.E. 577, 57 S.C. 347, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cave-v-home-insurance-sc-1900.