Glens Falls Insurance v. Founders' Insurance

209 Cal. App. 2d 157, 3 A.L.R. 3d 1058, 25 Cal. Rptr. 753, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1670
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1962
DocketCiv. 20148
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 209 Cal. App. 2d 157 (Glens Falls Insurance v. Founders' Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glens Falls Insurance v. Founders' Insurance, 209 Cal. App. 2d 157, 3 A.L.R. 3d 1058, 25 Cal. Rptr. 753, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1670 (Cal. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

MOLINARI, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $9,327.26 in favor of respondent, Glens Falls Insurance Company, a corporation, against appellant, Founders’ Insurance Company, a corporation. The cause was tried by the court without a jury. Four witnesses were presented at the trial, to wit: Raffaela Dorothea Brucato, hereinafter referred to as Mrs. Brucato, Francis Freitas, Edgar Peterson, and Ernest Vedovi, all of whom testified by way of depositions taken before trial.

The Facts

Mrs. Brucato was the owner of an apartment house on Avila Street in San Francisco. The said building was covered by fire insurance with the respondent, Glens Falls, in the total sum of $38,000, represented by four different policies in varying amounts each of which was for a term of three years. Two of the policies bore expiration dates of January 9, 1953; one expired on September 19, 1953; and the other on May 17, 1954. One of these policies provided for additional coverage in the sum of $2,000 for fire insurance on furniture and contents. A Mr. Vedovi was the insurance broker on these policies. Mrs. Brucato also carried an insurance policy with the respondent company on another piece of property. In 1951 a claim was presented by Mrs. Brucato to the respondent under the latter policy. The adjustment of the claim was entrusted by the respondent to a Mr. Frost who was an independent adjuster. Several discussions were had between Frost and Mrs. Brucato concerning the claim. Frost finally told Mrs. Brucato at her home that the respondent would not honor the claim, whereupon Mrs. Brucato told him “ ‘. . . I shall call up and cancel all of these policies as of now.’ ” (On the day previous she had stated to him “ . . I will cancel every policy with that company, if that is the way they take care of a small claim. . . .’ ”) She then, in the presence *160 of Frost telephoned the Glens Falls office and stated “to someone on the telephone” that “ ‘ [a]s of today I shall cancel all these policies if you will not take care of this claim. ’ ” On examination Mrs. Brucato testified that in this conversation she did not state that the policies were then and there can-celled but only told them that she would cancel in the event the claim was not taken care of. This conversation occurred in the spring or early summer of 1951. Mrs. Brucato thereafter had no other personal contact with the respondent company nor was her claim ever honored or paid.

Several months after the aforesaid telephone conversation and, as Mrs. Brucato testified, “nothing was still done,” she enlisted the aid of a Mr. Freitas, who was an insurance broker. (Freitas testified that he undertook to attempt to bring about a settlement of the claim early in 1952.) She stated, on examination, that until she sought the aid of Freitas she allowed more time to see what Glens Falls was going to do, stating, “I still allowed more time to adjust it.” Mrs. Brucato ' testified that when Freitas told her he was unsuccessful in settling the claim she told him that she “was going to cancel every policy with Glens Falls”; “I told him to cancel the policies and keep me covered. ’ ’ She testified further that she told him she wanted “the same amount that I had,” stating that it was her intention to have the property insured for the said sum of $38,000, and not twice that amount, i.e., $76,000, and that it was her intention that the new policy which Freitas would place on the Avila Street property would be the only insurance she would have on said property. Upon reexamination by counsel for respondent the following questions were directed to Mrs. Brucato, and she gave the following answers: “ Q. Anyway, you did tell Mr. Freitas that you wanted to cancel all of the policies with the Glens Falls Insurance Company on the building? A. If they didn’t pay the claim. Q. And you told Freitas that you wanted them cancelled; isn’t that correct? A. I was going to cancel them if they didn’t pay the claim. Q. And you told Mr. Freitas that you wanted the Glens Falls Insurance to be replaced with another company? A. To cover the property with insurance. Q. For the $38,000 ? A. To keep me covered. Q. That was in the amount of $38,000. A. $38,000 was our intention.”

Mrs. Brucato testified that she had no further dealings with Yedovi after she consulted Freitas. She further testified that she herself did not personally act or do anything toward the cancellation of the Glens Falls policies or about seeking any *161 return premium from said company, but that she looked to Freitas “to take care of all this” for her.

Freitas testified that Mrs. Brueato first came to him in the early part of 1952; that after he had not been able to adjust the disputed claim, Mrs. Brueato “asked me to cancel all of her insurance out and to replace it”; that these instructions were oral and had reference to all the insurance that was carried with Mr. Vedovi and Glens Falls; that he attempted to dissuade her from so doing because she would recover only a “short rate premium” refund rather than a pro-rated one if she cancelled the policies, it being to her advantage to allow the policies to continue to their expiration period; and that she was adamant, telling him that if he “didn’t want to write the business on her terms, she would get herself another broker.” He testified further that there was no question in his mind that she wanted to cancel the policies and replace them. Freitas testified also that in March or April of 1952 he visited Mrs. Brueato at her beauty salon and told her that Glens Falls definitely would not entertain her claim, whereupon she then telephoned the Glens Falls office in his presence. He described the conversation as follows: “And she notified the Glens Falls that if the claim were not paid, as she understood it was not going to be, that she did not want anything more to do with Glens Falls and she wanted all of her contracts cancelled and she hung up.” Freitas testified further that he himself had told “someone” at Glens Falls, in addition to telling Mr. Frost, that unless the claim was paid the policies would be cancelled. He stated on examination, however, that during his conversations with representatives of Glens Falls he did not tell them he was authorized to cancel the policies or that the policies were then and there cancelled because he was not so authorized. He testified, moreover, that they told him that they couldn’t talk to him as a broker because Mr. Vedovi was the broker of record, and that at most all he told them was that Mrs. Brueato would likely cancel at some future date. Freitas did nothing further about cancel-ling the Glens Falls policies nor did he get in touch with said company again to tell them that Mrs. Brueato wanted the policies cancelled. His explanation was that “It was very definite that if we did not have the claim paid, she was going to cancel.”

Freitas subsequently placed a $38,000 fire policy on the said property with Founders, the effective date being March 19, 1952. This policy was issued with a loss payable clause *162 in favor of Aetna Life Insurance Company with whom Mrs. Brucato had in the meantime refinanced a loan on the property. The Glens Falls policies bore a similar endorsement, providing that the loss was payable to the previous mortgage holder. Glens Falls was not notified of this change in loan companies nor were its policies endorsed to indicate the change.

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Bluebook (online)
209 Cal. App. 2d 157, 3 A.L.R. 3d 1058, 25 Cal. Rptr. 753, 1962 Cal. App. LEXIS 1670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glens-falls-insurance-v-founders-insurance-calctapp-1962.