Ferguson v. Hartford Live Stock Ins. Co.

39 So. 2d 108, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 669
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 24, 1948
DocketNo. 7238.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 39 So. 2d 108 (Ferguson v. Hartford Live Stock Ins. Co.) 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
Ferguson v. Hartford Live Stock Ins. Co., 39 So. 2d 108, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 669 (La. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinions

This suit involves the alleged right of the plaintiff to recover on a policy of insurance issued by defendant, on a Hereford bull owned by plaintiff. The issue turns upon whether the policy contract became effective while the bull was physically in an insurable condition.

The facts of the case, except in one minor respect, are not in dispute. Plaintiff purchased the bull and it was delivered to him on September 11, 1947. Two days later, through defendant's agent, B. S. Landis and Company, in the Town of Winnsboro, Louisiana, he signed written application to defendant for insurance on the animal in the amount of $800.00. At the agent's suggestion, plaintiff had a veterinarian examine the bull to ascertain the condition of its health. This was found to be satisfactory and written statement to that effect, signed by the veterinarian, accompanied the application which was promptly mailed to defendant's office in Chicago, Illinois. The application received favorable action and policy based thereupon issued at once. It was mailed to said agent with instruction to countersign and, presumably, to deliver to the plaintiff upon payment of the premium. It was countersigned by the agency on September 18th and mailed to plaintiff about the hour of 4:00 P.M., September 20th. He received it about 10:30 the following morning.

Plaintiff discovered at about the hour of 1:00 o'clock, P.M., September 20th, that the bull was very sick although he had noticed for two or more days prior that it was off diet; — was not eating as much as it should have. He immediately called a veterinary surgeon who examined the animal and prescribed medicine for him. The malady was diagnosed as being anaplasmosis. The bull died not later than the hour of 5:00 o'clock the following morning which was approximately twelve hours after the policy was posted.

Plaintiff's position is that when the policy was countersigned by defendant's agent on September 18th, two days prior to definite manifestation of illness of the bull, delivery of the policy for all legal intents and purposes, was effected, notwithstanding it did not reach his physical possession while the bull was well, and notwithstanding the first year's premium had not been paid by him.

Defendant resists the suit on these grounds, viz.:

That the policy was not delivered while the bull was in sound physical condition as required by the application for the insurance and the policy executed pursuant thereto; that the first year's premium had not been paid, a condition precedent to the effectiveness of the policy contract; and, alternatively, that plaintiff, as required by the policy, on discovery of the bull's illness, did not by telegram give immediate notice thereof to defendant at its office in Chicago, as was stipulated in said application and policy.

The court rejected the urged defenses, and gave judgment for the plaintiff from which the defendant appealed.

The application for insurance, which is made a part of the policy contract, contains these agreements, viz.:

"We understand and agree that the policy to be issued hereon shall be founded entirely upon the representations and statements contained in this application.

"It is agreed that the agent of the company who takes this application is a special agent with limited authority, and is not authorized to make written or oral contracts, or to accept any risk, or to bind the company by any oral or written statement, or to waive, alter, change or modify anything contained in this application or the policy which may be issued thereon.

"It is agreed that this insurance shall not be in force or effect until and unless this application shall be accepted and favorably passed upon by the above-named insurance company, policy of insurance issued by said company and the premium paid thereon, and policy delivered to me/us *Page 110 while the animal or animals covered by said policy is/are in good health, and entirely free from sickness or injury."

On the first page of the application conspicuously positioned, appears the following statement:

"This is not a binder, but merely an application for insurance, which is effective only upon delivery of policy while animal or animals are in absolute health."

Section 3 of the policy, inter alia, says:

"Under no circumstances shall this Company be liable under this policy for any loss * * *; nor for the death of any animalnot in absolute health when this policy is delivered."

It appears certain from the contents of the application for the insurance that four conditions must have been fulfilled before it would become effective, to-wit: the application must have been approved by the home office; the policy must have been countersigned by the local agent; the premium must have been paid, and the policy must have been delivered to the assured at a time when the bull was in good health.

The first two of these conditions were met. It is admitted that the premium was not paid or tendered prior to the animal becoming sick. Arrangement with the local agent for such payment was not made at the time of the application nor thereafter. The premium was tendered the day following the animal's death, but, of course, declined.

As to whether the policy was delivered to the assured, in contemplation of law, while the animal was in good physical condition, serious controversy exists. We have reached the conclusion that the admitted facts of the case do not sustain plaintiff's contention on this question.

It may be conceded that when the policy was mailed to the insured this amounted to a delivery of it to him, but when this was done the animal was in a dying condition. Therefore, such a delivery was abortive as a factor contributing to the effectiveness of the insurance.

The policy was not entrusted to the local agency merely as a vehicle for its transmission to the insured. If nothing had remained to be done or looked to precedent to delivery of the policy, then it could be said that automatic with it being signed by the local agent, the policy evolved into a mutually binding obligation. But this was not the case. The policy was to be delivered only after the payment of the premium and at a time when the insurable condition of the animal existed. Collection of the premium was the duty of the agent and to no extent did it become the agent of the insured simply because chosen as the instrument for the final consummation of the contract and delivery thereof under its terms and conditions, and those of the application therefor. Under express stipulations in the application and the policy the agent was inhibited from waiving or altering any of the conditions or agreements of either. It did not have the right to surrender the policy to the insured without collecting the premium. Its act in doing so certainly was not binding on the defendant and did not have the effect of waiving such payment as a condition precedent to the policy's mutually binding character.

The countersigning of the policy by the local agent, in Louisiana being one of the conditions precedent to its effectiveness, the policy thereby became a Louisiana contract. Under the laws of this state payment in some manner, of premium due on a policy of insurance, is indispensable to the binding character of the contract. See Coci v. New York Life Insurance Company, 155 La. 1060, 1068, 99 So. 871.

We know that as a matter of general practice, insurance policies of all kinds are delivered by local agents without prior or contemporaneous payment of the first premium due thereunder, but in so doing the agent acts on his own responsibility and as between him and the assured, the relation of debtor and creditor arises.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. McCullough
235 Cal. App. 2d 195 (California Court of Appeal, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 So. 2d 108, 1948 La. App. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-hartford-live-stock-ins-co-lactapp-1948.