Kentucky Macaroni Co. v. London & Provincial Marine & General Ins.

83 F.2d 126
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 1936
DocketNos. 6936, 6937
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 83 F.2d 126 (Kentucky Macaroni Co. v. London & Provincial Marine & General Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Macaroni Co. v. London & Provincial Marine & General Ins., 83 F.2d 126 (6th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

SIMONS, Circuit Judge.

The appellant sued in the court below upon two policies of fire insurance. The cases were consolidated for trial, since they involved the same issues, and, upon motion for directed verdict made by each of the parties at the conclusion of all of the evidence without reservation, the court instructed for the defendants. From the judgments which followed, the plaintiff appeals.

The controversy concerns itself with the status of the broker who delivered the policies, as to whether he was agent for the insurers or the insured, and, as now presented, involves also a question of collusion between the broker and the policyholder. An understanding of the issues requires narration of the circumstances under which the policies were executed and delivered and exposition of the relationship to one another of the several parties concerned in the transaction. It is the contention of the insurers that no contracts of insurance were concluded with the insured at the time of the loss by the execution and delivery of the policies here involved.

The Kentucky Macaroni Company, plaintiff, is a Kentucky corporation doing business at Louisville. The defendants are foreign corporations licensed to do business in Kentucky. Their local agent in Louisville was the firm of Gaunt & Harris, representing also other companies in the general insurance business. The Rosa-Beeier Company was a corporation engaged in the [127]*127general real estate and insurance business in Louisville. Romano Rosa, its principal stockholder, was also largely interested in the Macaroni Company, but was never active in the insurance business, that being operated entirely by his associate, J. Argyle Beeler, although Rosa may have been instrumental in securing the Macaroni Company’s line for the Rosa-Beeler Company.

At the time with which we are concerned all of the insurance of the Macaroni Company had for some time been written by the Rosa-Beeler Company. It amounted to $155,000, exclusive of the policies here involved. The Rosa-Beeler Company represented through Gaunt & Harris only one insurer, the Travelers, all other insurance coming to its office in excess of what the Travelers would take being placed through Gaunt & Harris in other companies represented by the latter. The practice on such insurance was for Gaunt & Harris to bill Rosa-Beeler for premiums and for RosaBeeler to bill its own customers and pay Gaunt & Harris the net premiums after deducting agreed commissions. Customary credits were extended by Gaunt & Harris to Rosa-Beeler, and Rosa-Beeler extended its own credits to its customers.

• The Louisville Board of Fire Underwriters is a local organization of insurance agents which the companies maintain for the purpose of promoting proper practices in the insurance business. It recognizes two classes of agents, member agencies and solicitors. Gaunt & Harris held a member agency. At its instance a solicitor’s certificate was issued to Beeler individually on April 3, 1931, which certified that Gaunt Sc Harris had been granted permission to engage J. Argyle Beeler to solicit applications. The certificate was sent to Beeler by Gaunt & Harris on April 10, 1931. It was the contention of the defendants that the solicitor’s certificate authorized Beeler as a solicitor of insurance for the Travelers Insurance Company only, and not for other companies, though the certificate is not thus limited. In respect to other companies Beeler, they say, was merely a broker.

During the continuance of the relationship between Gaunt Sc Harris and the RosaBeeler Company a large number of policies had been issued, including many in each of the defendant companies. Among the policies issued by Gaunt Sc Harris to the Macaroni Company through Beeler was one in the Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society for $6,000, and another in the Boston Insurance Company for $5,000. On or about March 12, 1932, Gaunt Sc Harris decided to surrender their agency for these companies, whereupon the companies requested cancellation and return of all policies written for them. Gaunt Sc Harris rewrote the Norwich policy with the appellee London Sc Provincial and the Boston policy with the appellee Royal. The new policies were then sent to Beeler with the request that they be substituted for the old policies and the latter promptly returned for cancellation. Nothing having been heard from Beeler by April 14th, a followup letter was sent in respect to each policy with a request that the matter be given immediate attention. Shortly thereafter Beeler interviewed Harrison, office manager for Gaunt Sc Harris, and urged that some arrangement be made by which cancellation of the old policies might be avoided so as to make it unnecessary for the assured to accept new policies at increased rates. Harrison undertook to secure the consent of the companies to reinsure the Norwich and Boston policies. This was later obtained, and confirmed by the Gaunt Sc Harris letter of May 17th, wherein Beeler was informed that it would not be necessary to disturb the existing contracts. No request for return of the new policies was made. In the meantime, however, Beeler, claiming that Harrison had relieved him of the instructions to pick up the old policies, sold the new ones to the plaintiff as additional insurance in the latter part of April. The new policies had been billed to Beeler on both the April and May billings of Gaunt & Harris, though Beeler had not informed Gaunt Sc Harris that they had been sold. On May 28th the insured property was destroyed by fire. The next day Beeler sent a check to Gaunt Sc Harris for his account, but on July 10th Gaunt & Harris sent a check to Beeler for the amount represented by the premiums on the questioned policies.

Under the facts thus outlined the controversy is reduced to narrow compass. There was no dispute about the amount of the loss, and it is not contended that the plaintiff was overinsured. Decision must rest upon a determination as to whether Beeler was an agent of the defendants and, if so, whether delivery of the new policies to the plaintiff came within the scope of his authority. The plaintiff contends that, even if limited to the application of common-law principles governing agency, Beeler was the agent of the insurers. Though this [128]*128contention was rejected below, we are not required to pass upon it by reason of section 633, Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, which we think controls decision as to Beeler’s status. It is printed in the margin.1 It will be noted that the language of the section is of great breadth and without qualification, and that “whoever solicits and receives applications for insurance on behalf of any insurance company, or transmits for any person other than himself an application for insurance, or a policy of insurance to or from such company, or advertises that he will receive or transmit the same, or who shall, in any manner, directly or indirectly, aid or assist in transacting the insurance business of any insurance company, shall be held to be an agent of such company within the meaning of this article, anything in the policy .or application to the contrary notwithstanding.” It will be observed that the statute prescribes a certain legal effect to be given to definite acts in respect to insurance, its solicitation, the transmitting of policies, or, more generally, the aiding or assisting in the transacting of insurance business.

Statutes of like import have been applied and held valid against constitutional-objection in the courts of the United States and in those of the states. Controlling upon us is American Fire Insurance Co. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 F.2d 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-macaroni-co-v-london-provincial-marine-general-ins-ca6-1936.