Ferguson v. Home Insurance

236 S.W. 402, 208 Mo. App. 422, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 121
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 402 (Ferguson v. Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferguson v. Home Insurance, 236 S.W. 402, 208 Mo. App. 422, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 121 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

— This is a suit on a policy of insurance. Defendant is a foreign insurance company licensed to do business in this State.

On June 3, 1916, defendant issued its policy of insurance in the sum of $3400, on the improvements upon the farm of D. B. Calhoun in Moniteau county, Missouri, against loss or damage by wind storms, cyclones or tornadoes for a period of five years. Among the items covered by said policy, and the only ones under consideration in this suit were $1,000 on a barn and $100 on machine shed and buggy house. It was stipulated in said policy that “in case any change shall take place in title or interest or possession ... of the property herein named, or if the assured shall not be the sole and unconditional owner in fee of said property or if this policy shall be assigned without written consent hereon, then in each and every one of the above cases this policy shall be null and void. . . . This policy is not assignable for the purpose of collateral security, but only when there has been an actual sale or transfer of the title to the property insured, and no assignment to the new owner will be valid until written consent is endorsed hereon by the company at its Western Farm Department office in Chicago, Illinois.”

The agent of the defendant company through whom the said policy was written was one F. C. Harra at Cali *424 fornia, Mo. On the transfer of the title to the property from- Calhoun to Ferguson the former, in the presence and under the direction of the said agent, assigned all his right, title and interest in and to said policy of insurance to the latter, as provided in the proper blank on the back of said policy, for such purpose. The said assignment blank was filled out by agent Harra.

Plaintiff Ferguson, testified that after the loss he signed some papers under the direction of Harra, the exact character of which he is unable to designate but thinks they might have been proof of loss. Harra testified that they were notice of loss and that he notified the company of the loss.

The policy was held by agent Harra after the assignment from Calhoun to Ferguson and was not sent to the Western Farm Department at Chicago for endorsement of consent to such assignment, as provided by the policy because, as agent Harra states, he was waiting for Ferguson to indicate what “changes he might want to make in the policy,” or “if he wanted to be protected.” During the period in which defendant’s agent was so waiting, the storm occurred by which the property in question was destroyed.

One Phillips, the adjusting agent of defendant, after notice of loss to the company as above indicated, went to the premises, viewed the damage, and advised Ferguson that defendant was not liable and would not pay the loss. After the loss of the property, as stated above, Ferguson sold and conveyed the land to J. F. Procter and W. J. Hahn, at the same time verbally agreeing that said 'purchasers should have the amount provided for loss under said policy to be used in replacing the property destroyed. Said Procter and Hahn were thereupon made parties plaintiff to this suit as having an interest therein.

The allegations of the petition are substantially as above set out.

The answer of defendant admits its corporate existence and the issuance of the policy as pleaded, and as *425 an affirmative defense pleads the provisions of the policy relating to assignment and transfer, as above stated, and also that proof of loss had not been filed as.required by the terms of the. policy. Further the answer admits the sale of the farm by Calhoun to Ferguson and that the transfer of title had been made and alleges that the property was attempted to be assigned by Calhoun to Ferguson before the wind storm occurred, but that such attempted transfer was made without defendant’s knowledge or written consent endorsed on said policy as provided therein, and that said policy became, and was, void at the time of said wind storm. The answer also denies that proof of loss, as required by the terms of the policy, was ever furnished, and that by reason of such failure to furnish such proof of loss, the policy is now void.

The reply was a general denial. The cause came on for trial to the court, a jury having been waived. Judgment was for plaintiffs in the sum of $1100, the amount sought to be recovered. Motions for new trial and in arrest were overruled and defendant appeals.

The controversy between the parties is based upon the question of the validity of the assignment by Calhoun to Ferguson. Defendant urges that the said assignment is not valid because it had not the sanction of defendant. Plaintiffs urge the validity in that while defendant did not sanction same, defendant’s agent Harra knew of the assignment, sanctioned it, and thus defendant waived any objections it might have had to the assignment. As this is the main contention in the case we will consider it first, regardless of the order in which the points are presented.

It may be conceded that the policy of insurance provides, as pleaded in defendant’s answer, that any assignment of the policy was void unless the written consent of the company was endorsed on the policy as provided therein. This position is correct provided the acts of defendant’s agent were not such as to waive this requirement.

Section 6315, Revised Statutes, 1919, provides: “Foreign companies admitted to do business in this State *426 shall make contracts of insurance upon property or interests therein only by lawfully constituted and licensed resident agents, who shall countersign all policies so issued. And any such insurance company who shall violate any provision of this section shall suffer a revocation of its authority by the superintendent of insurance to do business in this State, in addition.to the penalty prescribed in section 6322, such revocation to be for the term of one. year.” [R. S. 1909, sec. 7047.]

Defendant, being a foreign corporation licensed to to business in this State accepts such license under the provisions of the statute, and any rules, requirements or provisions in its policies that may run counter to the statutes are of no force and effect on policies written in this State. Applying this statute, this court held in Prichard v. Fire Ins. Co., 203 S. W. 223, that in view of the authority conferred upon an agent of a foreign insurance company by this section, the agent may bind the company by an oral contract.

In Sheets v. Ins. Co., 153 Mo. App. l. c. 632, it is said:

“The meaning of the statute is clear and one does not have to go far to ascertain the legislative intent that prompted its enactment. Obviously one of its main purposes was to put a stop to the irritating and unjust practice indulged in by some insurers of adroitly phrasing their agency contracts in a way to bestow general powers on their agents who come in direct contract with the public, when such powers relate to benefits flowing to the company, and to invest such agents with no power to represent the company when the benefits of the insured are involved.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 402, 208 Mo. App. 422, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-home-insurance-moctapp-1921.