Firemans Fund Insurance v. Rogers
This text of 33 S.E. 954 (Firemans Fund Insurance v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
An action was brought by Rogers against the Firemans Fund Insurance Company of San Francisco, the •object of which was, (1) to compel the defendant to specifically perform an alleged contract to execute and deliver to him a policy of fire-insurance, and (2) to obtain thereon a judgment ■against the company for a loss incurred by reason, of the destruction by fire of a building and the stock of merchandise therein contained belonging to the plaintiff. A demurrer filed [192]*192by the defendant to the plaintiff’s petition was overruled, and the case proceeded to trial, resulting in a verdict in his favor. The material facts brought to light at the trial were as follows: Branham was an agent of the company, having an office in the city of Waycross; and, as to property situated therein, he had authority to issue policies of insurance. He had no such authority, however, as to property elsewhere located, but could onty solicit applications for insurance and forward them to the company for approval or rejection. The plaintiff’s property was not in the city of Waycross. On the 9th day of May, 1896, he made out and delivered to Branham an application for insurance. It, among other things, recited that he desired insurance upon the property therein described “for the term of one year from.....................189......to ........................ 189......” This application was forwarded to one Wilson, the company’s general agent at Macon, Ga. On the morning of the 10th of May, the property described in this application was burned. In the afternoon of that day, the general agent at Macon addressed to Branham, the local agent at Waycross, a letter which, for the purposes of this case, may be treated as an approval of Rogers’s application and as authorizing Bran-ham to issue to him the desired policy of insurance. At the time this letter was written, Wilson was ignorant of the fact that the fire had occurred. Rogers testified at the trial that Branham, at the time of receiving his application, assured him that if the same was approved and accepted by the company, the insurance would be effectual from the date of the application. After the fire Branham refused to issue and deliver a policy to Rogers, and the company declined to recognize any liability on its part for the loss. Without dealing specifically with the questions raised by the demurrer, we will undertake to dispose of the case as developed at the trial.
Judgment reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
33 S.E. 954, 108 Ga. 191, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/firemans-fund-insurance-v-rogers-ga-1899.