Hurd v. Maine Mutual Fire Insurance

27 A.2d 918, 139 Me. 103, 1942 Me. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 27, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 918 (Hurd v. Maine Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurd v. Maine Mutual Fire Insurance, 27 A.2d 918, 139 Me. 103, 1942 Me. LEXIS 47 (Me. 1942).

Opinion

Worster, J.

On motion and exceptions by the defendant. This is an action of assumpsit against a domestic mutual assessment fire insurance company, on an alleged contract to insure against loss by fire or hghtning, where no policy had been issued.

Verdict was rendered for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,220. No question is raised as to the proof of loss, or the amount of the verdict.

The motion for a new trial and the exceptions to the refusal to direct a verdict for the defendant present the same question and will be considered together.

It appears that on August 14,1939, the plaintiff, a resident of Webster Plantation, made a written application to the defendant, through Mr. Campbell, its agent at Kingman, for insurance for a term of three years from said date, against loss by fire or lightning, on the plaintiff’s dwelling house, ell, shed and furniture, all of which is hereinafter, for the sake of brevity, called property. The application and the assessment note, with authority to the defendant’s secretary to fill the blanks in the note, were both signed by the plaintiff, and were mailed that day by Mr. Campbell to the defendant, at Lisbon Falls, where it has its home office.

The property was burned August 17,1939. The application was not received by the defendant at its home office until [106]*106August 18,1939, when it was rejected, and so no written policy covering this property was ever issued to the plaintiff.

It is the contention of the plaintiff, briefly stated, that the defendant, through its agent, Campbell, orally insured said property against loss by fire or lightning, from the time the application was signed until such time as the plaintiff should be notified by the defendant that it had accepted or rejected the application. The defendant denies that Campbell so covered the property with temporary insurance, and, going further, it contends that even if he did make such a contract, it is not binding on the defendant. Although there are several counts in the writ, yet apparently the case was in fact tried below on the issues just stated.

As a general rule, in the absence of statute or charter provision to the contrary, a contract for insurance may be made orally, even although the statute or charter expressly provides that the policies shall be signed by certain designated officers. Walker v. Metropolitan Insurance Company, 56 Me., 371; See, also, The City of Davenport v. The Peoria Marine and Fire Insurance Company, 17 Iowa, 276, 284.

It is provided in one of the defendant’s bylaws that

“The conditions of the policy or contract between this Company and the assured shall consist of the By-Laws of the Company, the application for insurance, the Maine Standard Policy and all riders and endorsements attached or detached.”

Oral contracts are plainly not included in this bylaw. “Or” is used in the sense of “to wit,” and the word “contract” is only interpretive or expository of the word “policy” and means the same thing. Commonwealth v. Grey, 2 Gray (Mass.), 501, 502, 61 Am. Dec., 476; The People ex rel. v. Nordheim, 99 Ill., 553, 560; Blumenthal v. Berkshire Life Ins. Co., 134 Mich., 216, 96 N.W., 17, 18; Bryan v. Menefee, 21 Okla., 1, 95 P., 471, 475.

And so that bylaw did not deprive the defendant of its common law right of making an oral contract of insurance, any [107]*107more than was the Metropolitan Insurance Company (56 Maine, 371, supra) deprived of that right by the statute which provided that “all policies of insurance shall be signed” in a certain manner by certain designated officers. Neither that bylaw nor that statute were concerned with oral contracts of temporary insurance, but only with formal policies of insurance.

The mere fact that an application was made for a policy of fire insurance, does not preclude the applicant from showing that at the time he signed the application he was temporarily insured pending acceptance or rejection of his application. Koivisto v. Bankers’ & Merchants’ Fire Ins. Co., 148 Minn., 255, 181 N.W., 580; Nertney v. National Fire Ins. Co., 199 Iowa, 1358, 203 N.W., 826.

And the same rule applies in mutual insurance cases, in the absence of any statutory or charter provision to the contrary. Brown v. Franklin Mutual Fire Insurance Company, 165 Mass., 565, 43 N. E., 512, 52 Am. St. Rep., 534; Zell v. Herman Farmers’ Mut. Ins. Co., 75 Wis., 521, 44 N.W., 828.

Whether or not an oral contract for temporary insurance was made, was a question of fact for the jury (1 Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, page 560) and, since such contracts are usually of a very informal nature (32 C. J., page 1100) all of the facts and surrounding circumstances must be taken into consideration in determining that question.

The record here discloses that Mr. Campbell had been representing mutual fire insurance companies for about thirty years. At the time in question he was, and previous thereto had been, an agent of the defendant company. As such agent he was not intrusted with policy blanks to be filled out and delivered but was furnished by the defendant with application forms and assessment note forms, to be forwarded by him to the defendant for approval or rejection when signed by the applicant. Mr. Campbell was also agent of the York Mutual, in which the plaintiff’s barn was insured, and of the Oxford Mutual, a Grange company, in which the plaintiff had been carrying in[108]*108surance on his dwelling house. That insurance expired August 10,1939, and Campbell, who had been doing the plaintiff’s insurance business for quite a number of years, was instructed by the latter to renew his policy in the Oxford Mutual, but that company refused to renew it because the plaintiff was not then a Granger in good standing, which is required of all persons insured in that company, and Campbell so notified the plaintiff. Thereupon the plaintiff went at once to see Campbell, to obtain other insurance on the house, which Campbell knew was then uninsured.

There is a sharp conflict in the testimony as to what was said at that interview. Mr. Campbell claims that the plaintiff sat near him while the answers to the questions in the application were typed by Campbell. This is denied by the plaintiff and his son. They testify, in substance, that the son drove the plaintiff into Campbell’s dooryard in an automobile; that the plaintiff then had a broken leg, which was in a cast, and that he did not get out of the car; that Campbell came up to the car and talked with the plaintiff; that they agreed the risk should be placed with the defendant company, and, thereupon, Campbell went into the house for an application which he afterward brought out to the plaintiff, having already typed in the required answers. The plaintiff says that he was not then wearing his glasses, which he was accustomed to wear; that he did not read the papers, but signed them as directed by Campbell, and passed them back to him. With reference to that occasion, the plaintiff testified:

“... When I passed him back the application, I passed him the application and asked him what there was to do, and he says, ‘It is all done now.’ I says, ‘When am I covered?’ Efe says, ‘Just as soon as you sign that, and I will take it now and put it in the post-office.’ ”

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Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 918, 139 Me. 103, 1942 Me. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurd-v-maine-mutual-fire-insurance-me-1942.