Fame Insurance v. Mann

4 Ill. App. 485, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 230
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 Ill. App. 485 (Fame Insurance v. Mann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fame Insurance v. Mann, 4 Ill. App. 485, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 230 (Ill. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

Bailey, P. J.

When the record in this cause was first filed in this court, the bill of exceptions failed to show the instructions to the jury, the motion for a new trial, the decision of said motion, and the defendant’s exceptions thereto. Subsequently, the defendant, on due notice to the plaintiffs, entered its motion in the court below to amend the bill of exceptions by inserting therein the matter thus omitted, which motion was granted against the objection and exception of the jilaintiffs, and the bill of exceptions amended accordingly. The amended record having been brought to this court, the plaintiffs have filed cross-errors, assigning for error the decision of the court granting the amendment. On this point it is sufficient to say that the practice of amending bills of exceptions subsequent to the term at which they are signed and filed, on due notice to the opposite party, in order to correct errors or supply omissions therein, has been repeatedly sanctioned by the Supreme Court, and cannot now be successfully called in question. Wallahan et al. v. The People, 40 Ill. 103; Brooks v. Bruyn, Id. 64; Goodrich v. City of Minonk, 62 Id. 121.

This suit was brought by Joseph and Henry Mann against the Fame Insurance Company on a policy of insurance against fire, issued by the'defendant to one David J. Thomas, and containing a provision that the loss, if any, should be payable to the plaintiffs, as their interest might appear. The question of the right of the plaintiffs to bring suit on such policy in their own names is expressly waived by the defendant, and so need not be considered.

The policy in suit was for the sum of $1,000, and covered a certain building occupied by said Thomas, and described as “ his two-story frame, shingle-roof, clothes-pin and broom-handle factory building,” and also certain machinery and fixtures contained in said building. The defense is based upon certain alleged false representations or concealments by the assured in procuring his policy of insurance, relative to the title and occupancy of the property covered by ■ the policy. The property was insured upon a written application for insurance signed by said Thomas, in which, to the question, “"Is it viz: the property to be insured, owned and occupied by the applicant?” he answered, “Yes;” and to an inquiry as to whether there was any incumbrance on the property, a negative answer was given. The premises were also named and described in the application as “ a clothes-pin and broom-handle factory;” and to the question: “ What is the precise kind of goods made, and of what material?” the answer, “ clothespins and broom-handles” was given.

The evidence shows that'said building was erected by Thomas on land belonging to the Wisconsin Central Railroad Company, and that at the time some arrangement existed between him and the Company for the purchase of said land; and that the plaintiffs purchased and paid for the same, faking the title in their own names, and agreed with Thomas to hold the title as security for a large indebtedness owing from him to them. Said indebtedness, to an amount exceeding the insurance, remained unpaid at the date both of the policy and the loss. The evidence further shows that at the date of the policy and from thence up to the date of the loss, a portion of the building was occupied and used by Thomas as a shingle factory.

The circumstances attending the execution of the policy, as shown by the record, are substantially as follows : One Taylor, who at that time was doing an insurance business, having his office at Menasha, Wis., but who does not appear to have been in the employ of the defendants, as agent or otherwise, called upon said Thomas, at Colby, Wis., where the latter resided, and where the property described in the policy was situate, to solicit from him an application for insurance. The interview resulted in the execution by Thomas of an application written upon a printed blank of the Planters’ Insurance Company. The application was addressed to the Mercantile Insurance Company of Chicago, but Taylor was instructed by Thomas to place the insurance with any good company he might select. It does not appear that the name of the defendant company was mentioned, nor that any claim was made by Taylor of authority to act as its agent. The application was transmitted by Taylor to one Eastman, an insurance broker, doing business in Chicago, and by him presented to an agent of the defendant, who issued and delivered to Eastman, for Thomas, the policy in suit. It appears that Eastman subsequently paid the premium to the defendant’s agent, and also that Thomas paid the premium to Taylor, but there is no evidence of the payment of said money by Taylor to Eastman. On these facts, the court, after refusing to give to the jury the instructions asked on behalf of the defendant, gave to them, on his own motion, an instruction, the material part of which was as follows:

“ The contest is over the facts that a shingle factory was carried on on the premises, and that Thomas was not absolute owner of the property. If Taylor solicited Thomas to insure, and Thomas got the policy from him and paid the premium to him after getting the policy, and if the defendant delivered the policy before receiving the premium, and did not get it from any other source than the money paid by Thomas to Taylor, and if Thomas did not employ Taylor to apply to any company for insurance, then Taylor is to be regarded, so far as Thomas and the plaintiffs are concerned, as the agent of the defendants; and if he knew or was informed, before sending in the application by Thomas, or any copy thereof, of the real facts as to the business and the ownership, and if shingles were made on the premises, and if Thomas was entitled to the property upon 2)aymeut of the indebtedness, then the defendants cannot object that the business or ownership was not truly stated in the application or policy. But if Taylor wras not informed, and did not know that shingles were made upon the premises, or that Thomas had not the title, then the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover.”

We are unable to perceive how injury could have resulted to the defendant from this instruction so far as concerns Thomas’ title to the property. It was unnecessary for the plaintiffs to establish the relation of principal and agent between Taylor and the defendant, in order to charge the defendant with notice of the true state of the title. The policy being made specifically payable, in case of loss, to the plaintiffs, as their interest should appear, conclusively establishes notice to the defendant of some interest in the plaintiffs in the property insured. It is true, the nature and extent of that interest is not defined, but the defendant being put upon inquiry by the terms of its own policy, is chargeable with notice of all such facts in relation to plaintiffs’ interest as a proper and diligent investigation would have develo]3ed.

There is no evidence of notice to the defendant of the occupancy of a portion of the building insured as a shingle factory, unless the defendant is chargeable with notice of such facts as were within the knowledge of Taylor. That Taylor knew of such occupancy at the time he received the application is sufficiently shown. If, then, under the evidence, Taylor is to be regarded, so far as Thomas and the plaintiffs are concerned, as the agent of the defendant, the defendant is chargeable with such notice, otherwise not. ' That any such agency existed in fact is not pretended.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ill. App. 485, 1879 Ill. App. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fame-insurance-v-mann-illappct-1879.