Hawkins v. Agricultural Insurance

190 A. 858, 58 R.I. 40, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 3, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 190 A. 858 (Hawkins v. Agricultural Insurance) 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
Hawkins v. Agricultural Insurance, 190 A. 858, 58 R.I. 40, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 5 (R.I. 1937).

Opinion

Moss, J.

This is an action of assumpsit, brought on an insurance policy-issued by the defendant to the plaintiff, to recover for the loss of an automobile covered by the policy- and rented by the plaintiff to a customer and never returned. At the trial in the superior court a motion for a *41 nonsuit was made by the defendant at the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff and was granted by the trial justice on the ground that it appeared from the evidence that no claim.for the loss was filed by the plaintiff with the defendant in accordance with the requirements of the policy. The case is now before us on- the plaintiff’s exception to this decision.

The policy was procured by the plaintiff, through a broker named Coe, from the general agent of the defendant company in the city of Providence in this state, by the name of Knibb, who maintained the defendant’s office in that city and signed the policy and its riders and put the whole insurance contract into effect. By its terms, as construed by us, the defendant, besides other coverage, insured the plaintiff against direct loss of or damage to any car therein described, from theft, fraudulent concealment or disposal by any person, not in the plaintiff’s service or employment, to whom the plaintiff had rented such car.

Among the provisions in the rider giving this coverage was one that the assured, upon becoming aware of any act or omission on the part of any rentee or lessee, which might be made the basis of a claim under the policy, must forthwith give notice in writing or by telegraph to the insurance company at its office in Providence and notify the police authorities, and, if required by. the company, should procure a warrant for the arrest of such rentee or lessee on a charge of larceny or embezzlement.' The rider also provided-that within ten days after the giving of such notice the assured must file with the company a signed and sworn statement of the facts about the rentee or lessee and his conduct and the car. There- was also a general condition in the policy requiring the assured, within sixty days after the loss or damage, to render to the company a signed and sworn statement of the claim of the assured, unless the time was extended in writing by the company.

The evidence showed that about 10 a. m. on June 21 the car was rented by the plaintiff to one McArdl-e, to be re *42 turned eight hours later. It was not returned, and the plaintiff at midnight reported the facts to the police, and the next morning reported them by telephone to Coe, the broker. The latter then talked with Knibb, the defendant’s general agent, and asked him to send a man to see the.plaintiff and have him sign a proof of loss and to take care of the details of the matter. Knibb agreed and two days later a man from his office came to the plaintiff with some papers to be signed about the matter; and the plaintiff then signed them and gave them to the man, with the rental agreement, signed by McArdle and containing detailed information about him; and also with an insurance blank, which the plaintiff had filled out.

The next information that the plaintiff received about the car came to him on June 29 in a telegram from the police in Pecos, Texas, which is near the westernmost corner of that State, that they had the car and McArdle there. The plaintiff then telegraphed to them, in reply, to hold both the car and McArdle; and Knibb was informed of both the telegram and the reply. On July 6 McArdle sent a telegram to the plaintiff’s employee who had rented the car to McArdle and was a friend of the latter’s brother. In this telegram the sender stated that he was “stranded”, and he asked this employee to help him get funds to return. The employee turned it over to the plaintiff, who turned it over to Knibb.

On July 14 the plaintiff received a telegram from the police in El Paso, Texas, farther west than Pecos, that they were holding the car and McArdle. They described the car and said that the Rhode Island state highway department had given the plaintiff as its legal owner. The plaintiff telegraphed back to the police to hold the car until advised differently by the insurance company or him. A few days after July 29 a letter of that date was received from the El Paso police about McArdle and the car and the prospect of selling it there for the plaintiff or the insurance company.

*43 Knibb was informed of these various matters, either directly or through Coe, and said that it would cost too much to bring the car back. He told the plaintiff that “they”, apparently meaning the insurance company; would sell it “down there” and that there was nothing more for the plaintiff to do about it. It was never brought back. After the letter came from the El Paso police, and apparently soon afterwards, the plaintiff received a letter from Coe or Knibb’s office that he should go to the federal district attorney’s office in Providence and swear out a warrant for McArdle’s arrest. He went there with Knibb but they were told that a warrant could not be issued for McArdle’s arrest in Texas.

At that time Knibb told the plaintiff that the latter had done everything that the policy called for and couldn’t do anything more. Relying on that statement, -the plaintiff did not file any signed and sworn statement of his claim of loss, with certain information, in compliance with the above-mentioned requirement of the policy that the insured must within sixty days file such a statement; and the time for its filing was not extended in writing by the company. But just a few days after the expiration of the sixty days the plaintiff, at the request of Coe, went to the latter’s office and filled out, signed and swore to such a statement and filed it in Knibb’s office, where it was received without objection and never returned. No objection was made to it, because of the lateness of its filing or for any other reason, until this, case was being tried in the district court, more than seven months afterwards. Knibb told Coe at one time that the plaintiff had complied with all the provisions of the policy.

It is not contended by the defendant that it did not receive promptly all the information that was needful or useful for it in this matter, but only that it was not received in the form and within the time required by the terms- of the policy and that for this reason the plaintiff was properly nonsuited in the superior court. It also contends that the *44 nonsuit was proper on another ground, not stated by the trial justice as a reason for the nonsuit, namely, that there was no evidence for the jury that the loss of the car was due to theft, fraudulent concealment or disposal of it by McArdle.

To take up first the former of these contentions, it is well settled that a provision, such as there was in this policy, that no officer, agent or other representative of the insurance company shall have power "to waive any of the terms of the policy, unless such waiver be written upon or attached thereto, does not apply to a waiver which is given after the assured has suffered a loss within the coverage of the contract of insurance, where the waiver relates to something to be done by the assured after suffering such loss. 7 Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, (2d ed.), 5945; 14 R. C. L. 1345, 1346, “Insurance”, §§ 517, 518.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 A. 858, 58 R.I. 40, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawkins-v-agricultural-insurance-ri-1937.