Mastergeorge v. Utica Mutual Insurance

6 Conn. Super. Ct. 468, 6 Conn. Supp. 468, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 179
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1938
DocketFile #7444
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 468 (Mastergeorge v. Utica Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mastergeorge v. Utica Mutual Insurance, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 468, 6 Conn. Supp. 468, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 179 (Colo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

O’SULLIVAN, J.

During 1935, Joseph Ruitto, a dairy farmer, owned two trucks. One was a Dodge; the other, a Ford. The latter was used exclusively upon the farm; the former, to deliver milk to his customers. He carried liability insurance on each car with a Hartford company throughout 1935 until the policies were cancelled on December 30th. On that morning, which was immediately after receipt of the notice of cancellation, Ruitto’s son John, at his father’s orders, phoned the office of a Mr. Buggie, agent of the defendant insurer and authorized to bind risks, and asked Mrs. Buggie, who answered, to inform her husband that John’s father wished the agent to call at his home in Portland to talk about liability insurance on a truck. At noon when Buggie returned, his wife delivered the message, but due to other engagements he was unable to leave for Ruitto’s home until about 7 o’clock Jn the evening. At apparently the same time, Ruitto left for Buggie’s home in Cromwell, and, finding him absent, awaited his return from *471 Portland. When Buggie arrived they discussed the matter of insuring the Dodge, and after obtaining certain data, Buggie filled out an application, and then stated that the policy to be based upon it would be binding from the time of the telephone call to Mrs. Buggie in the morning. On the following day, Buggie forwarded the application to the underwriting department of the defendant insurer.

Some 15 to 30 minutes before Buggie and Ruitto had set out from their respective homes, the Dodge, while being operated by Ruitto’s son in the course of delivering milk, was involved in an automobile collision in Middletown. In spite of a spirited claim to the contrary, I am confident that the first knowledge of this accident reached Ruitto only after he had returned to his home about 10 p.m. Buggie learned of it when reading his newspaper the next morning and received additional information when Ruitto orally reported its occurrence later on the •same day.

On January 10, 1936, Buggie received from the underwriting department of the company a liability policy for the Dodge, which by its terms purported to cover the truck for one year from 12:01 a.m. on December 30, 1935. This was in accordance with the application. Buggie examined the policy, countersigned and then delivered it to Ruitto, who put it away for safe keeping without having read it.

The plaintiff had been injured in the accident above referred to, and, on December 8, 1936, after bringing suit against Ruitto and his son, obtained a judgment for $1,548.50 against both. That action was defended by attorneys for the insurer under a non-waiver agreement. Thereafter an appeal was taken under a similar reservation of rights to the Supreme Court of Errors, which affirmed the judgment against Ruitto and his son. Grillo vs. Bonauito, 123 Conn. 226.

The present litigation involves the right of this plaintiff, as a judgment creditor of Ruitto, to recover under the policy in view of section 4231 of the General Statutes, Revision of 1930, and of certain defenses raised by the answer. By an order of court, based upon a motion of the insurer, Ruitto and his son were cited in and have appeared as parties defendant. This course was pursued after the defendant insurer had filed a cross-complaint seeking reformation of the policy.

To make reference to an elementary rule of law, it is obvious *472 that the minds of the parties did not meet until after the accident occurred. No contract came into being until after that event. By its terms, however, it was to function retroactively and from this fact arises the problem as to whether liability insurance can antedate in its coverage the time of its issuance so as to insure against events that have already occurred.

At first blush, it may seem anomalous that a policy of insurance could cover such a situation. Nevertheless, precedents in analogous cases in the field of marine and fire insurance furnish guiding authority for the instant case. It is a familiar principle of marine insurance that a policy on a vessel which has previously been totally lost, but of which the owner has no knowledge at the time of procuring the insurance, is valid. Arkansas Ins. Co. vs. Bostick & Ryan, 27 Ark. 539; Paddock vs.Franklin Ins. Co., 11 Pick. (Mass.) 227. This is, in effect, a stipulation for indemnity against past as well as future losses. Hooper vs. Robinson, 98 U.S. 528, 25 L. ed. 219. Nor is it essential that the phrase “lost or not lost” appear in the policy. “The phrase ‘lost or not lost’ is not necessary to make a policy retroactive. It is sufficient if it appear by the description of the risk and the subject-matter of the contract that the policy was intended to cover a previous loss. Contracts of the kind are as valid as those intended to cover a subsequent loss, if it appears that the insured as well as the underwriter was ignorant of the loss at the time the contract was made.” Insurance Co. vs. Folsom, 18 Wall. 237, 251, 21 L. ed. 827, 833; Hughes vs. Mercantile Mutual Ins. Co., 44 How. Prac. (N.Y.) 351. The vital question is one of good faith.

These same principles have been applied to fire insurance. Security Fire Ins. Co. of N. Y. vs. Kentucky Marine and Fire Ins. Co., 7 Bush (Ky.) 81, 3 Am. Rep. 301; Wales vs. N. Y. Bowery Fire Ins. Co., 37 Minn. 106, 33 N.W. 322; Commercial Ins. vs. Hallock, 27 N.J.L. 645; El Dia Ins. Co. vs. Sinclair, 228 Fed. 833 (certiorari denied, 241 U.S. 661).

Nor is it ultra vires for an insurance company to issue a policy to act retroactively, unless it knows that the property presumed .to be covered is nonexistent. Henshaw vs. Insurance Co., 30 Misc. 405, 73 N.Y.S. 1. Parties to a contract have an inherent right to assume obligations antedating their agreement if they so elect, if there is good faith and if the contract is supported by consideration. Continental Casualty Co. vs. Industrial Commission, 61 Utah 16, 210 Pac. 127.

There is no sound or appealing reason to require the placing *473 of liability insurance, in the respect under discussion, in a category different from that occupied by marine and fire policies. Accordingly, on the authority of the cited precedents, it is determined that the defendant insurer’s policy was retroactive in nature and provided coverage during the period expressly stated.

By way of parenthesis at this point, it should be observed that whether Buggie exceeded his authority in binding the risk from the beginning of the day is of no moment. This action is not based upon the oral binder made during the evening of December 30th. The action is upon the policy issued by the home office after it had knowledge, through a familiar rule of law, that an accident had occurred during the period covered by the binder, because, as will be recalled, on December 31st Buggie obtained full information about it. Under the conditions and limitations outlined in McKay vs. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 118 Conn. 538, his knowledge was imputed to his principal.

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Hooper v. Robinson
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Henshaw v. Insurance Co. of New York
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Harris v. Phœnix Insurance
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Beauchamp v. Retail Merchants Ass'n
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North River Insurance v. Lewis
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Security Fire Ins. v. Kentucky Marine & Fire Ins.
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Baker v. Ohio Farmers' Insurance
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Wales v. New York Bowery Fire Insurance
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Collum v. National Fire Insurance
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Bluebook (online)
6 Conn. Super. Ct. 468, 6 Conn. Supp. 468, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mastergeorge-v-utica-mutual-insurance-connsuperct-1938.