Fliger v. Pennsylvania Fire Ins. Co.

137 A. 470, 48 R.I. 274, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 20, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 137 A. 470 (Fliger v. Pennsylvania Fire Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fliger v. Pennsylvania Fire Ins. Co., 137 A. 470, 48 R.I. 274, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 58 (R.I. 1927).

Opinion

*275 Stearns, J.

These actions of assumpsit are brought against three foreign insurance companies to recover for a loss of plaintiff’s stock of furs caused by a fire in his store on March 12, 1924.

The declaration in each case alleges that the defendant by its agent ag'reed to insure plaintiff from loss by fire and to issue a policy of insurance to him, for one year from February 15, 1924. The breach alleged is a failure to perform the oral contract of insurance and the issuance of a policy for one year from March 15 instead of February 15.

The cases were tried together by consent. The trial justice directed the jury to return a verdict in each case for-defendant. The cases are here on plaintiff’s bills of exceptions. The only question is in regard to the direction of the verdicts.

Plaintiff, a foreigner, claimed to be unable to read or write English. He conducted a fur shop in Providence. In December, 1923, plaintiff through one Winograd (hereafter referred to as W), an insurance broker, secured $2,000 fire insurance on his stock from the office of Clifford D. Paige (hereafter referred to as P) in Providence. P was a member of a firm which was the agent in this State of defendants and several other insurance companies. During the winter plaintiff increased his stock and needed additional insurance. February 15, 1924, he called W by telephone and asked him to come to his store. Plaintiff told him on his arrival that he needed $6,000 additional insurance and he wanted him to cover him at once for that amount. W went directly to P’s office, where he arrived shortly after five p. m. It was after office hours and P was alone in the office. W testified he told P he wanted to get $6,000 additional insurance on Fliger’s stock; that P asked if Fliger had that much stock in his shop; W replied that Fliger had bought a lot of furs and wanted more insurance to cover his stock at once and *276 that the insurance was to begin that day, February 15; that Paige said, "I guess it will be all right,” and then told him that he would either give or mail to him the policies the next day. P at that interview wrote a memorandum of some kind, but did not show it or communicate its contents td W; W then asked P if Fliger was covered the same as he was on other occasions. P replied, "Yes, it is covered from the day you put the order in.” On the next or the following day W received from P’s office by mail three policies in the standard form; W at once made out a bill to plaintiff for the amount of the premiums which, together with the policies, he mailed to plaintiff on February 17. The bill which was dated February 15, 1924, was on a printed form with headings as follows:

date............number of policy........company...... property insured............premium........under the different headings, in writing, was the date "2-15-24”, the number of the policy, the amount of insurance in each defendant company and premium due on each and at the bottom of the bill “expires February 15, 1925.” Plaintiff on receipt of the policies put them in his safe and sent his check to W for the amount of the premiums. W testified that according to custom any premiums due on insurance business were charged by P on W’s general account and he had sixty days in which to pay. After the fire, defendants refused to pay the insurance and claimed the risk did not attach until March 15, which was three days after the fire. Both W and plaintiff testified that they did not know abotit the change of date in the policies until after the fire. P testified that he was agent for the defendants and some other companies. He had power, without reference to his companies to accept applications for insurance, to issue binders, to countersign and issue policies and to settle losses, up to a certain amount. It was his custom to send a daily report, which is a copy of the policies issued, to each company for its information; that he told W if he wanted insurance at once it would be necessary for P to first consult with his *277 companies; that W then said the insurance was not wanted until the fifteenth of the next month; that it was agreed that a policy to run from one year from March 15 should be prepared and issued within a day or two. P said his reason for doing this was that if a company did not care to take the risk, it could cancel the policy and return the premium before the policy went into effect.

P introduced as an exhibit an order blank, part of which he said he had filled out at the time of the interview with W.

“C. D. Paige — Insurance .
Order Blank
Assured Max Fliger.................................
Location 17 So Angelí St.............................
Property Stock.....................................
Kind fire..........Date Mch 15......Term 1 yr ...
Amount $6000........Rate........Premium..........
Tenements, No........Roof........Chimneys..........
Remarks:
N Y Unders 3000
Glens Falls 1500
Penna 1500
Received..........................Winograd Broker.”

The rate “1.60” and premium “96.Ó0” were written in on the order by a clerk to whom P the next day, February 16, gave the order with instructions to issue the policies. The clerk, then filled out and countersigned, as attorney for P, three policies, in the standard form and for a uniform premium rate. These policies purported to insure plaintiff for the term of one year from March 15, 1924, to March 15, 1925. P further testified that W did not apply for insurance to run from February 15 and that the entry of the date on the order as March 15 was not due to any mistake; that he did not write to the companies about the insurance, but *278 did send them, promptly, notice of the policies by his daily report. No objection was made by the companies to the insurance; but when notified of the loss they refused to pay any insurance for the reasons stated.

Plaintiff’s actions are founded not on the policies, but on the alleged oral contracts of insurance made on February 15. His claim is that the contracts were for present insurance to begin at once, to be evidenced by policies in the standard form to be issued later. In Shabeck v. Standard Fire Ins. Co., 46 R. I. 121, a parol contract for renewal of insurance was held to be valid.. An oral contract for insurance does not differ in principle from a renewal and is valid, and is so held to be almost universally. 26 C. J. p. 43 and cases cited. Defendants’ attorney admits that P had authority to bind the several defendants by oral contracts, either to issue policies or to insure pending the issuance of policies, but claims that the essentials of a complete oral contract of insurance are lacking in the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 470, 48 R.I. 274, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fliger-v-pennsylvania-fire-ins-co-ri-1927.