Community Stores of Louisiana, Inc. v. Associated Indemnity Corp.

144 So. 909
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 1932
DocketNo. 1056.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 So. 909 (Community Stores of Louisiana, Inc. v. Associated Indemnity Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Community Stores of Louisiana, Inc. v. Associated Indemnity Corp., 144 So. 909 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LE BLANC, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment in the district court condemning it to pay plaintiff a loss of $133.73 on a robbery insurance policy.

The policy covered the period from July 1, 1931, to July 1, 1932, and protected the plaintiff against loss by robbery on a number of retail merchandise stores; the place and location of each being specifically designated in an indorsement attached thereto. On August 14, 1931, by a subsequent indorsement annexed to the policy, which stipulates that in consideration of an added premium of $20.90, additional stores were included in the protection afforded by the policy. This indorsement also specifically designates each store by a fe'roper location and supplements entirely the first indorsement that had been attached. Among the twenty-two stores protected according to this last indorsement, the vast majority were in the city of Baton Rouge, street addresses being given in each instance, and among these latter was a store described as being located at 800 Main street.

The policy contains a waiver clause which reads as follows: “No condition or provision of this policy shall be waived or altered except by endorsement attached hereto, signed by the President and Secretary and- countersigned by a duly authorized representative of the company; nor shall notice to any representative, nor shall knowledge possessed by any representative, or by any person, be held to' effect a waiver or change in any part of this policy.”

It may be pertinently remarked here that the two indorsements, before referred to as being attached to the policy, complied with the stipulations of that clause. *

Plaintiff alleges in its petition that during the month of August, 1931, the date not being mentioned, it discontinued the operation of its store located at 800 Main street, and transferred the same to Plank toad opposite Fair-field subdivision-in the city' of' Baton Rouge. This allegation is contained in paragraph 5 of the petition, which is categorically denied by the defendant. The precise date of the change in location of that store is not Shown. Mr. Hause, president of the plaintiff company, and the only witness, does not even refer to the alleged transfer of the store; he simply testifying to the fact that the store at 800 Main street was no longer in operation, and that he did not recall the daté at which it was discontinued. Granting, however, that the change in location was made in August, 1931, as alleged, it is obvious that it was subsequent to the 14th of that month, as otherwise the new location instead of the old would have been inserted in the indorsement of that date. There was no indorsement covering the change in location of this store annexed to the policy, although plaintiff alleges that verbal notice thereof was given to the defendant’s local agent, G. G. Wilkes, who on November 5j 1931, acting within the scope of his employment, acknowledged the same by letter.

On December 3, 1931, within the life of the policy, this store on Plank road was robbed and claim was promptly presented for the loss sustained, payment of which was refused. Plaintiff’s contention is that the acknowledgment of the notice by defendant’s agent and his promise to obtain a formal indorsement constituted a waiver of the terms of the policy as it were, and that the. defendant is now estopped from denying liability for the loss. This-proposition of law is disputed and denied by the defendant. It is admitted on.information'that the agent wrote a letter to the plairitift, but it is also averred affirmatively that the agent had no authority to bind defendant thereby, and as a further disclaimer *910 of -liability, the waiver clause in the policy heretofore quoted in full is especially pleaded.

The issue presented therefore involves a consideration of the clause concerning a change in .the condition of the policy and of the limitation of the authority of the local a'gent of the insurance company in regard thereto.

Such clauses, although couched in different verbiage, are generally to the same effect in all insurance policies, and they have very frequently been the subject of litigation before our courts. It occurs to us, in reading the various decisions, not only of our own courts but those of the other states as well, that generally where it is held that there had been a waiver, it was because the waiver or change in condition of the policy related to matters that came up at the time of the confection of the contract, which of course was the policy itself, or that the insurance company had accepted and retained the premium paid by the insurer after having obtained knowledge of the change in condition, or because the company was found to have consented to the change in some other form than required under the terms of the policy or was held estop-ped from denying liability by reason of some deception or misrepresentation, either express or implied, on its part, such for instance as lulling the insured into the belief that the agent had authority to bind it. Otherwise, full .effect seems to have been given to the .waiver and restriction of authority clause, and the company was held to be without-liability where the requirements of that clause were-not complied with.

' The principle that an assured is bound by such a clause which appears in and forms part of his policy is well' expressed in the cake of Murphy v. Royal Insurance Co., 52 La. Ann. 775, 27 So. 143, from the-syllabus of which we quote: “An insurance company, like an individual, may limit the authority of its agents; and where direct notice of such limitation, or any notice which, a prudent man is bound to regard, is brought home to the assured, he is bound by it, and relies upon ■any act in excess of such limited authority at his peril.” , ■ .

- From the body of the. decision, supporting the syllabus, we quote further: “That an agent may waive a forfeiture is well established by authorities. But where a limitation is imposed upon the power of an agent, upon -the face of the policy, of which the assured, as a prudent man, ought to know, and there .is no evidence that the agent has been accustomed to act in excess of such power, with the express or implied, consent of the insurer, the insured is not. justified in dealing with him in reference to such matters, and his acts, as to the excess of authority, are not binding on the company.”

In People’s Bank of Donaldsonville v. National Fire Insurance Co., 130 La. 951, 58 So. 826, 827, we find a still more forcible expression which we think is especially pertinent, and which we quote:

“The cases upon which counsel for plaintiff appear to rely deal, for the most part, with questions of preliminary agreements for the issuance of policies of insurance; whilst here we are dealing with a case where the policy was issued, and plaintiff is seeking to enforce it in contravention of its terms. In some other cases, the courts seem to have gone rather far, as it seems to us, in holding (to quote from counsel’s brief an excerpt from one of the eases cited) that: ‘An insurance agent may -orally waive conditions in the policy, though the policy requires the waiver to be indorsed thereon’ — which is to say that an agent may bind his principal in a matter, or in a manner, in respect to which the authority so to bind is expressly withheld, to the knowledge of, and under a written contract with, the party with whom the agent deals.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/community-stores-of-louisiana-inc-v-associated-indemnity-corp-lactapp-1932.