L. J. Arguimbau & Co. v. Germania Insurance

106 La. 139
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 13,454
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 106 La. 139 (L. J. Arguimbau & Co. v. Germania Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. J. Arguimbau & Co. v. Germania Insurance, 106 La. 139 (La. 1901).

Opinion

Statement oe the Case.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Monroe, J.

Plaintiffs shipped certain cattle and hogs to Havana, and, by reason of stormy weather, many of them were lost, and others were injured, on the voyage. They bring this suit to recover, under a contract of insurance, the value of the stock so lost and injured, together with the freight paid, and certain damages alleged to have been sustained by- reason of the non-payment of the claim; and they allege: “That, on the 3rd day of December, 1898, they insured said hogs and cattle * * * in the Germania Insurance Company * * '* through B. W. Sewall, an agent of said company, as evidenced by the certificates of insurance of same hereto attached and made part hereof, marked fiB.’ That they paid, as premium for said insurance, the sum of forty-four dollars and sixty-eight cents, as evidenced by the receipt of said B. W. Sewall, agent of said company, therefor, hereto attached and made part hereof, marked ‘G.’ That after paying the said premium, and the departure of the messenger bringing said certificate, they read the certificate, and noticing the type written slip attached thereto, they immediately wrote, and mailed, to the said B. W. Sewall, agent, a letter, refusing to receive said certificate with the limitation imposed by said type-written slip, and demanded the usual, regular, marjnel policy, against thie dangers of the sea. * * * That, upon the morning of December 4th, 1898, Alfred Isaacson, one of your petitioners, met said B. W. Sewall, agent of the said company, and inquired whether he had received said letter, and renewed, verbally, the protest against the type-written clause, and the refusal of your petitioners to receive said certificate of insurance with the limitations therein contained, and again demanded a policy with the usual marine risk. That said B. W. Sewall, agent of the said company, speaking and acting for said company, then and there agreed to, and accepted, in behalf of said company, said protest, and assured your petitioners that.fit would be all right; that such a clause was usual — it meant nothing; and that there would never be raised any question about it, by said company, if there should be a loss,’ with other and like [141]*141statements, which were calculated to lead your petitioners to believe, and were intended to make them believe, and did lead them to believe, that said type-written clause was a mere formality and was waived by said company; and that the certificate of insurance above referred to was one covering the ordinary and usual marine risks, and protected your petitioners as recited upon its face without said type-written clause.”

Then follow allegations concerning the value of the stock and the circumstances of the loss, etc.

The certificate of insurance upon which the suit is based, and which is annexed to, and made part of, the petition, is as follows, to-wit:

“Certificate of Insurance.
“This is to certify that the Germania Insurance Company, of New Orleans, La., hereby insures L. J. Arguimbau & Co., under and subject to all the conditions of policy No. —;- in the sum of $8000; on live stock, $6815.00; on freight, $1125.00, whilst contained in S. S. Miguel Jover, from New Orleans to Havana, for the term of voyage, from the 2nd day of December, 1898, to the-day of --, 189 — , at twelve o’clock, noon; loss, if any, payable to assured, or order, hereon, on return of this certificate. In testimony whereof, the company has caused these presents to be signed, this 3rd day of November, 1898.
(Signed) “O. T. Maier, Secretary.”
The “type-written slip,” referred to in the petition, is attached to the face of this certificate, and reads:
“Warranted by the assured that claims under this policy shall only be made for total loss; no claim will be allowed (sic) for animals killed or disabled by reason of storms or shipping of seas.
(Signed) “O. T. Maier, Secretary.”

The defendant admits the contract as set forth, but denies the alleged ^modification, and denies that B. W. Sewall was its agent, or that he was authorized to make any concession or waiver in its behalf. And it alleges that, on the contrary, he was an insurance broker, the extent and limitation of whose authority was .well known to the plaintiffs, etc. An exception of “no cause of action” was maintained by the lower court as to the claim for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the failure of the defendant to make prompt, settlement, and that part of the claim is abandoned.

[142]*142The only witnesses examined in the case were Alfred Isaacson and L. J. Arguimbau, members of the plaintiff firm, and Otto Maier, the secretary of the defendant company. B. W. Sewall, through whom the insurance was effected, was not called or examined as a witness by either side.

Arguimbau testifies only as to the handling of the stock between here and Havana and the injury and loss sustained. Isaacson, alone, for the plaintiffs, testifies as to the contract. He states that B. W. Sewall, through whom his business with the defendant was transacted, is his nephew, and, whilst he does not tell us, specifically, how the particular contract in question was made, he makes the following general statement, which, we assume, applies to the instant case, to-wit: “We would do it in this way — my office is at the stock landing, some four or five miles from the city, and my nephew has an office up town, and when we found that we were going- to make a shipment, I would write a letter to him, asking him to place so much insurance with his company, telling how much on cattle, etc., and when the vessel would sail, and he would send down the certificate and his bill.”

It further appears, from the testimony of this witness, that the live stock in question was shipped on board the S. S. Miguel lover on December 2nd, and that on December 3rd, 1898, Mr. Ledbetter, a messenger from Mr. Sewall’s office, delivered to the witness the certificate of insurance here sued on, with Sewall’s bill for the premium; that the witness noticed the type-written slip attached upon the face of the certificate, and sent, by Ledbetter, a verbal message of objection concerning it to Sewall, and that he also and at the same time, sent, by Ledbetter, a cheek for the premium; but that he retained, and has continued to retain, the certificate, with the slip attached, in his possession. It also appears from his testimony that upon the same evening he wrote, and mailed, a letter to Sewell as follows, to-wit:

“December 3, 1898.
“B. W. Sewell, Agent, Germania Ins. Go.—
“Dear Sir — Your certificate received, and is not satisfactory. I want your policy to be a regular marine one, against the dangers of the sea, like any other freight. If the cattle die or hurt one another that is another thing, but if a storm should occur and cattle are killed, ■w lost, by same, we expect pay for it, so arrange shipment that way.”

.Upon the following day, which was Sunday, the witness casually met Sewell at the postoffice, and gives the following testimony as to [143]

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Bluebook (online)
106 La. 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-j-arguimbau-co-v-germania-insurance-la-1901.