Merchants' & Manufacturers' Inter-Insurance Alliance v. Hansen

258 S.W. 257
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 1924
DocketNo. 8949. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 257 (Merchants' & Manufacturers' Inter-Insurance Alliance v. Hansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants' & Manufacturers' Inter-Insurance Alliance v. Hansen, 258 S.W. 257 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

In a suit in the district court of Dallas county, appellee, C. Hansen, recovered a judgment on an insurance policy issued by appellants, the Merchants’ & Manufacturers’ Inter-Insurance Alliance and the Merchants’ & Manufacturers’ Lloyd’s Exchange, in the sum of $859.07, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from date of judgment, from which judgment appellants have duly perfected their appeal to this court.

The facts' on which this suit is- based are as follows:

Appellee had just purchased a five-passenger Oakland touring automobile when W. J. Patterson, the agent in Dallas of appellants, on or about the 9th of August, 1919, called Mrs. C. Hansen, the wife of appellee, over the telephone and solicited insurance on the car. She informed the said agent that they desired insurance on the car and wanted a “full coverage” policy. Such a policy means, and was understood by the parties to mean, a policy that insures against risks of fire, theft, collision, property damage, and indemnity on owner’s liability. These negotiations resulted in the issuance by appellants to appellee of the original policy on ap-pellee’s car, which,. however, contained a rider excluding from the risks assumed those of theft and fire. The testimony is clear that appellee and his wife, who acted as his agent in the matter of procuring the insurance, demanded from the said agent a “full coverage” policy and relied upon him to secure for them such policy; they were ignorant of insurance matters, and, when assured that they were having a “full coverage” policy, accepted the policy as written without examining it and placed it in a secure place at home. The said agent explains that in the conversation with Mrs. Hansen it developed that the Oakland Company, the seller of the car, had a mortgage on it to secure an unpaid balance, and that he knew at the time that the seller of the car, following an unvarying custom, had taken out a policy against fire and theft, and that, by reason thereof, he could not write a policy covering those two items; that, however, by reason of this policy against,fire and theft taken out by the Oakland Company, appel-lee, with the policy he was writing, would have full coverage and that in all probability he did assure Mrs. Hansen that she would *259 have full coverage insurance, meaning that this was the result of the policy issued by appellants and the policy secured by the Oakland Company. He did not explain to ‘ appellee or his wife that that was the result -of the two policies issued on the car, and .let them erroneously believe that full coverage on the car resulted ffom the policy he secured. There was a written application for this original insurance that excluded the risks of fire and theft, but this application was not prepared by, appellee or his wife, and they never saw it. It was written out by the said agent in his office in the absence of both appellee and his wife and on information which he secured from Mrs. Hansen and what he knew of the said custom of the Oakland Company, and the name of ap-pellee was signed to the application by the said ¿gent. This insurance was in the sum of $1,000 and ran for one year from August 9, 1919, to August 9, 1920. Appellee knew that the Oakland Company had taken out a policy of insurance. He and his wife assumed that the policy issued in its favor was only for its benefit to secure it in the deferred payments, and did not know that by reason of this insurance a policy could not be taken out by appellee to cover, for his benefit, these risks against fire and theft.

Before this original policy issued by appellants had expired, the mortgage on the car had been fully paid off and the insurance policy which theretofore had been held by tlie Oakland Company was sent to ap-pellee. It was not read, but placed in the same receptacle in which the policy appel-lee had secured had been placed. At the expiration of this original policy issued by appellants there was no other insurance on appellee’s automobile, the policy secured by the Oakland Company having previously expired. The premium on the original policy at the time it was issued, and for the risks it iffeured, was $80, which sum was at once paid by check made payable to Patterson, the said agent. The premium for a full coverage policy at this time was $87.50, but this fact was. unknown to appellee or his wife. At the time this policy was issued, appellee was informed by the said agent that he would be entitled to a $20 discount on the renewal policy.

Just before the expiration of this policy, appellants prepared and sent to the agent Patterson a renewal covering only the same items of risk which the original policy covered. As in the original policy, the exclusion of fire and theft was effected by a rider attached to the policy. When the agent received this renewal policy in Dallas, he called Mrs. Hansen over the telephone and told her that the policy had expired and asked if she wanted a renewal. To this request he received an affirmative answer, provided it was a “full coverage” policy and just like the former one. She, however, insisted on knowing whether the renewal was-a “full coverage” policy. The agent, she says, assured her it was, and the renewal policy was sent to appellee, received by his wife and placed, unopened, with the expired policy for safe-keeping. On this renewal policy, appellee and his wife relied upon the agent to have written for them the character of policy they desired, and fully believed that he had done so.

On or about December 1, 1920, this car was stolen, and, while in the hands of the thief, caught fire and was completely burned. The agent Patterson was at once notified of this fire, and, after a telephone conversation with Mrs. Hansen, in company with appellants’ adjuster went out to the house and examined the policy then in existence, together with the two expired policies, with the result that Mrs. Hansen was later informed that the policy did not cover damage by either theft or fire, and that appellants would not pay anything on the loss. This was the first knowled'ge appellee1 and his wife had of this deficiency in the policy.

Appellants’ agent, Patterson, was required by his contract to keep a book in which he should record all business transacted by him, and make a weekly report of such business to the home office at Galveston. This duty was performed by him and the book recorded the renewal policy and described it as a “full coverage” policy. The agent explains that this record was made for the reason that the premium charged for the renewal was the amount charged at the date of its issuance for a “full coverage” policy. There is no other evidence in the record as to what this rate was on August 9, 1920. The agent Patterson wrote a letter to appellee at the time of appellants’ denial of liability, informing them that appellants' would not pay them anything because their policy did not include fire and theft, and stated that “this is most regrettable error on both your part and mine in not examining closely the coverages under the policy.”

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-manufacturers-inter-insurance-alliance-v-hansen-texapp-1924.