Flynn v. . Equitable Life Ins. Co.

78 N.Y. 568, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 951
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 18, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 78 N.Y. 568 (Flynn v. . Equitable Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flynn v. . Equitable Life Ins. Co., 78 N.Y. 568, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 951 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Church, Ch. J.

The principle that a party seeking to rescind a contract for fraud must return what he has received, has no application to this case.

The plaintiffs have brought an action upon a contract entered into between the deceased and the defendant. The defense is that the contract has been violated by the intestate, and hence no action can be maintained upon it. The plaintiffs are seeking to enforce the contract, and performance on the part of their intestate is a condition of a right to recover. The right to a return of the premiums paid, is uot necessarily involved in the action. The plaintiffs must establish a cause of action upon the contract, if they fail to do this, they cannot recover, irrespective of the question whether they are *573 entitled to a return of the premiums or not. A very material point in the case is whether the evidence was sufficient to justify the submission to the jury of the question whether Dr. Yedder is to be regarded as the agent of the company, to take and receive the application for insurance, and hence that the latter is chargeable with his acts and omissions, in performing that duty. When the case was here before (67 N. Y., 500) it was held that such agency did not appear; that as medical examiner he had no authority to take the application, or to bind the company by any act in connection with it. On the last trial it is claimed that additional and sufficient evidence was given to justify the submission of the question to the jury, and to warrant a finding in favor of the plaintiff. It would have been more satisfactory if the real facts bearing upon the question had been presented, so that the court and jury could have arrived at a reasonably certain conclusion upon it, but both parties seemed disinclined to produce the evidence presumably within their power, and we must grope our way as best we can by such meagre light as the parties have seen fit to furnish. It is not disputed that Dr. Yedder was the authorized medical examiner of the company, and made the medical examination upon which the policy was issued. He Avas never appointed by the company agent to solicit, or receive applications. The evidence relied upon, to warrant the inference that he had authority to take this application, is that he received the blank application from one Cory, who requested him to take the application. Cory was an agent of the company, but it is disputed that he had power to appoint subagents, or to delegate his own powers. He is recognized as agent in the policy itself. One condition is “ that this policy shall not be binding until delivered by the society’s cashier," or by its agent A. B. Cory,” to which is attached a certificate signed A. B. Cory, that he had received the premiums, and delivered the policy. Indorsed upon the policy under the head of “notice to the assured,” it is stated that the duties of agents are simply the reception and transmission of policies and premiums under *574 Instructions of the society. From this it might be inferred that the designation of Cory as an agent, implied no more than an ordinary soliciting agent, and as such he would have no power to delegate his authority, and the company would not be bound by any delegation he might make unless they knew of and ratified- his acts. Circumstances were shown from which it is claiined that an inference may be drawn that he had more than the power of a common soliciting agent. This consists of some correspondence with Vedder, in which he approves of the manner of filling up the application of Flynn, and requests him in substance to interest himself in taking other applications, and specifies his compensation. Nothing is said expressly about appointing him agent, but the letters may be regarded to some extent as negotiations on Cory’s part for his acting as such. In addition to these letters, an envelope is produced, in which was enclosed a letter from Cory to Vedder, on the back of which is printed a direction to the postmaster, to return it to the company if not called for, and an envelope is produced which had been sent' by Cory for Dr. Vedder to use, on the back of which in lithograph is the name of Cory-, described in printing as the general agent of the company. Dr. Vedder at first testified that he had received payment for taking the application, but upon the production of a receipted bill, it seems that it was only for the medical examination. Upon the first trial some of these circum- ■ stances were shown, but not as fully as upon the last, and it did not appear how Dr. Vedder got the application. It is argued that Cory as a simple soliciting agent had no power to delegate his authority and that the additional evidence produced, to show that he was a general agent, are the acts of Cory only, and that he cannot establish either his agency or authority by asserting it, or by his acts unless they are ratified by the principal with knowledge. On the other hand it is insisted that the inference is a legitimate one, either that Cory had sufficient power to authorize Vedder to take this application for the company, or that the company *575 knew of, and approved his acts in respect to it, and the facts that letters written by him imported to come from the defendant’s principal office in New York, and letters were addressed to him at such office, in blank envelopes sent out by him, tend to show that he transacted business in that office, and that his acts in respect to this policy which was issued by the company were known to it, and were approved by it. While this evidence is far from conclusive, and may be regarded as slight, we are inclined to think the conceded fact that he was an agent of the company, with the other circumstances alluded to, were sufficient to cast the burden upon the defendant of showing the real facts, and upon its failure to do so, to justify an inference against it. Cory was not produced, and no reason is shown why not. Presumably it was in the power of the company to produce him, and the company had the power to show precisely what authority Cory possessed, and failing to do this, it ¡cannot complain that adverse presumptions should be inclulged. Cory was confessedly an agent; he held himself out and acted to some extent as a general agent, and he appeared to be an occupant of the company’s principal office. We think that the onus was fairly cast upon the Ídefendant to show the real truth or take the consequences ] which the law infers from the omission.

The defense interposed was a breach of warranty by the assured, contained in several answers to the questions propounded to him in the application. These answers are made warranties by the terms of the policy, and are to be regarded as such. Some of the answers were not strictly true, and the presiding judge charged the jury that unless the company was bound by the acts of Dr. Vedder in preparing the answers, the defendant was entitled to a verdict. It seems that, the interrogations were read by Dr. Vedder to the assured, and upon receiving the answer of the assured to the respective questions, he wrote the answers to the interrogations in the application himself, and that the assured did not see the answers as written. To the fifteenth interrogatory *576

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 N.Y. 568, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flynn-v-equitable-life-ins-co-ny-1879.