Engel v. State Mutual Rodded Fire Ins.

275 N.W. 231, 281 Mich. 520, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 913
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1937
DocketDocket No. 31, Calendar No. 39,268.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 275 N.W. 231 (Engel v. State Mutual Rodded Fire Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engel v. State Mutual Rodded Fire Ins., 275 N.W. 231, 281 Mich. 520, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 913 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

*522 North, J.

Plaintiff, on trial before the court without a jury, had judgment. The counts on which the case was submitted are in tort and charge that plaintiff sustained damage because of negligence, fraud and deceit on the part of the defendant mutual fire insurance company, the charge being the company led plaintiff to believe that certain property was insured in defendant company when in fact it was not so insured and in consequence thereof plaintiff sustained a fire loss of the uninsured property. The judgment, seemingly on the ground of estoppel, was for $2,300, this being the amount for which plaiutiff supposed the property was insured. Defendant has appealed.

For approximately five years prior to his death, April 22, 1925, Robert C. Engel was an agent of defendant insurance company. On July 30, 1924, he insured in defendant company his farm dwelling for $1,200 and its contents for $1,100. There was total loss by fire on July 22, 1929. Robert C. Engel by will left his property to plaintiff and four children, but the rights of all have been assigned to plaintiff and she may be considered the sole party in interest. She was named in the will as executrix and was so appointed June 17, 1925. Subsequent to the death of Robert C. Engel (of which defendant was promptly notified) notices of accruing annual assessments were addressed and mailed either to. Robert C. Engel or to plaintiff, there being some dispute in this particular in the testimony. All such assessments due prior to the fire loss were timely paid by plaintiff or by her son who acted for her in some instances. The remittance of 1926 purported to come from Robt. C. Engel; that of 1927 from Mrs. Robt. C. Engel; and the one in 1928 from the son of the insured, Chas. J. Engel. Under the terms of the insurance contract it continued in force, if the *523 policy requirements were complied with, after the death of the insured until assignment or distribution of the property of which the insured died seized. The by-laws provision reads:

“Section 9. The policy of a deceased member shall remain in full force and effect so long as the property remains as the estate of the deceased, and so long as the estate is unsettled and the requirements in the charter and by-laws are complied with. ’ ’

The letter by which defendant was informed of the death of Robert C. Engel shortly following his death was written by the latter’s son, and was confined to inquiry as to what disposition should be made of the blank forms, supplies, etc., which at the time of his death were in the possession of Robert C. Engel as agent of the defendant company. Aside from this letter and the reply thereto no other communication relative to the death of the insured passed between these parties prior to the fire. Notwithstanding defendant was advised of the death of the insured, it mailed the notices of assessments for 1926, 1927 and 1928, and received payment from plaintiff in the manner hereinbefore stated. In each instance the notice in substance read:

“Robt. C. Engel,
Ewen, Box 122, .
Mich.
July — 1926—Notice of Assessment.
Policy No. 39173.
Ass’t $23.64.
“Dear Sir: This assessment is due and payable
on or before the last day of August. Should we not receive it on or before the last day of August, your policy will stand suspended as provided in article 10 of the charter.”

*524 Defendant claims the manner in which the notices of assessments, the remittances and payments, and the receipts therefor, were handled was in accord with its regular method and with the provisions of the insurance contract which, in event of the death of the insured, continued pending probate proceedings and distribution or assignment of the insured property. The order distributing or assigning the Engel estate was made February 17, 1926; but defendant had no notice or knowledge of such order until after the fire (July 22, 1929) when its representative undertook adjustment of the loss. The adjuster at once advised plaintiff he did not think the insurance company was legally bound to pay the loss because the ownership of the insured property had been transferred by assignment of the Engel estate more than two years prior to the fire. A compromise settlement for $1,200 was suggested by the adjuster, but after taking legal advice, such contemplated compromise was rejected by plaintiff. Shortly thereafter plaintiff, as executrix of the Engel estate, began a suit against the defendant herein, but that suit was later dismissed. This litigation has been before this court on two former appeals, Engel v. State Mutual Rodded Fire Ins. Co., 257 Mich. 245; State Mutual Rodded Fire Ins. Co. v. Engel, 269 Mich. 348. On December 4, 1930, before the instant case was commenced, defendant tendered its checks to plaintiff in repayment of the premiums received for the years 1926, 1927 and 1928, but these checks were returned. Again at the trial defendant tendered in cash repayment of these premiums.

As before stated, plaintiff now relies solely upon her suit in tort. As outlined in her brief, the negligence relied upon is that the defendant insurance company, having knowledge of the death of Robert O. Engel, failed within a reasonable time thereafter *525 to cancel the policy issued to the deceased or to accept plaintiff as a member of the defendant mutual company and issue a policy to her prior to the fire, or in the alternative reject her as a member of defendant company so that she might secure insurance elsewhere; also acceptance and retention of the assessments for 1925, 1926, 1927 and 1928, and failing to notify plaintiff that she was not a member of defendant company and was not protected by the policy theretofore issued to her husband, and in failing to return the assessments and to notify plaintiff that she was not insured under said policy; and further by negligently holding out to plaintiff that she was a member of defendant company and insured therein by sending notices of assessments (as claimed by plaintiff) to Mrs. Engel for the years above noted, and accepting and retaining payment of such assessments.

A count in the declaration for fraud and deceit is based upon substantially the same facts as alleged in the count for negligence with the addition that such conduct on the part of the defendant company is alleged to have been false, fraudulent and deceitful.

Consideration of the legal aspect of this case must start from the undisputed fact that prior to the fire loss neither plaintiff nor those who have assigned their rights to her were members of or insured in the defendant mutual company, nor were any of them applicants for membership therein. For this reason many cases cited in appellee’s brief are not in point.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 N.W. 231, 281 Mich. 520, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engel-v-state-mutual-rodded-fire-ins-mich-1937.