Hawkeye Casualty Co. v. Frisbee

25 N.W.2d 521, 316 Mich. 540, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 284
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1947
DocketDocket No. 47, Calendar No. 43,332.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 N.W.2d 521 (Hawkeye Casualty Co. v. Frisbee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawkeye Casualty Co. v. Frisbee, 25 N.W.2d 521, 316 Mich. 540, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 284 (Mich. 1947).

Opinion

Boyles, J.

This is a suit in assumpsit brought by the Hawkeye Casualty Company, as assignee of thé United Automobile Insurance Company, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, against Dorr W. Frisbee, its general agent, to recover the amount paid by plaintiff to one G. Floyd Bradley and his attorneys, to satisfy a judgment against one 'Dr. Holcomb, the insured, on a policy of automobile insurance issued in the Grand Rapids company by the defendant as its agent. The essence of plaintiff’s claim to recover this amount from' Frisbee is' that Frisbee failed to send to the company the “daily report” required by his agency contract, showing the issuance of the Dr. Holcomb policy, until after Dr. Holcomb had been involved in an automobile accident resulting in fastening liability on the company. The case was heard without a jury, by the circuit judge who held that the defendant was not liable and entered judgment accordingly, from which the plaintiff appeals.

■Hawkeye Casualty Company, the plaintiff herein acquired the assets and assumed the liabilities of the *543 United Automobile Insurance Company, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, in February, 1939. The transactions which gave rise to the litigation in the instant case occurred between the United Automobile Insurance Company, of Grand Rapids, hereinafter referred to as the Grand Rapids company, and Dorr W. Frisbee, the defendant herein. No question involving the legality of the transfer from the Grand Rapids company to plaintiff Hawkeye Casualty Company has been raised.

At the time the transactions here involved were taking place, Frisbee had been engaged in the insurance business in Detroit for upwards of 15 years and was operating a large agency. In the latter part of March, 1938, the president of the Grand Rapids company went to Frisbee’s office in Detroit, and as the result of their conference an oral arrangement was entered into whereby Frisbee became the general agent of the company in Wayne county. Frisbee agreed to represent the company, solicit and write automobile insurance business and issue policies. It is disputed whether anything was said on that occasion about the sending of a daily report to the company. Frisbee started to write automobile insurance for the Grand Rapids company, and prior to April 9th had issued five policies. One of them was the policy which gives rise to this litigation, issued by Frisbee on April 2, 1938, to Dr. Clayton E. Holcomb and Helen E. Holcomb, effective on that date. These five policies were the only ones ever issued by Frisbee for the company. Under date of April 9th a written agency contract was entered into between the Grand Rapids company and Frisbee. The material part of this contract, in so far as it applies to the issue before us, is as follows:

*544 “7. Party of the second part (Frisbee) agrees to forward immediately to party of the first part all applications for' insurance secured or copies of dailies or policies written.”

Prior to April 2d, the day on which Frisbee issued the automobile policy in question to Dr. Holcomb, one of Frisbee’s solicitors, a Mr. Hambly, had written an automobile insurance policy for Dr. Holcomb which, however, was not written through the Frisbee agency. It was placed with the Citizens Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, through another agency represented by Mr. Hambly. Mi\ Hambly had taken over the business of another agency when it was closed out, while he also had a very substantial volume of business through the Frisbee agency. 'The Frisbee agency at that time also wrote policies in the Citizens Mutual, for 'which company Frisbee had also been an agent tor a number of years. Dr. Holcomb’s policy in the Citizens Mutual had been canceled by that company prior to April 2d, .for accident frequency. This fact was known to Mr. Frisbee as well as to Ms said solicitor, Mr. Hambly.

Prior to April 2d and as early as March 18th the Grand Rapids company had information in its files to the .effect that Dr. Clayton E. Holcomb was an undesirable risk. On March 18th the Grand Rapids company had- received notice from its Underwriters Service Association that Dr. Holcomb had had auto- . mobile insurance coverage canceled by two other automobile insurance companies, the “Ohio Cas” and “Wolverine Mut,” for accident frequency. Also prior to April 2d Mr. Hambly, the solicitor for Frisbee who wrote the policy here under consideration, had renewed a policy for Dr. Holcomb in the Citizens Mutual, which he knew had been canceled by the Citizens Mutual on account of Hoi *545 .comb’s accident frequency' record. All this was known to Mr. Hambly when he discussed Holcomb’s automobile insurance matters with Frisbee. Frisbee admits that he knew of Dr. Holcomb’s unsatisfactory accident record, but nevertheless concluded to write the policy here involved, in the Grand Rapids company. Frisbee testified:

“Dr. Holcomb’s business was discussed with me prior to the date of* this daily, April 2d. In this discussion I determined whether or not it was business that should be accepted. I had a long discussion with the solicitor and Mr. Hambly prior to the acceptance of that business. * * * Morton D. Hambly had been a solicitor of ours for quite some period of time before this transaction. In the course of his business he acquired the Proctor Agency that I have spoken about, but took over that business directly, writing' it directly through the Citizens’ Mutual Insurance Company. But he continued, in spite of the acquisition of that business to write through our agency. He came to see me with Dr. Clayton E. Holcomb’s insurance policy before I placed it with the United Automobile Insurance Company and told me that the Citizens’ Mutual of Howell either had cancelled or were about to cancel. He came to my office and discussed with me the acceptance of the Dr. Holcomb risk.
“I was going to put it in the United Automobile from the very beginning if I wrote it. If we accepted it we would have put it with the United Automobile. ’ ’

The Citizens Mutual Automobile Insurance Company had canceled the Holcomb coverage on March 16th, “because of the assured’s frequent accidents.” Seven accident claims had been presented, two of which were pending on that date. Frisbee admits that he knew of such cancellation when he wrote the Holcomb policy on April 2d. In explanation, he testified:

*546 ‘ ‘ I assume as other companies do that the United would make the usual investigation on the credit report method. ’ ’

It is not clear how Frisbee could “assume” that the Grand Rapids company “would make the usual investigation on the credit report method” in regard to the Holcomb risk, without having been advised that he, Frisbee, had written a policy in that company. Frisbee failed to give this information to the company until May 14th, the next day after liability had been incurred on the policy. His only excuse for such delay was that it was due to confusion and pressure of business in his office. Frisbee testified:

“I don’t think they would have had any way of knowing that we wrote any policies specifically until they received the daily, unless we discussed the risk with them.”

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.W.2d 521, 316 Mich. 540, 1947 Mich. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkeye-casualty-co-v-frisbee-mich-1947.