Mut. F Ins.. Co. Mont. Co. v. Goldstein

86 A. 35, 119 Md. 83, 1912 Md. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 86 A. 35 (Mut. F Ins.. Co. Mont. Co. v. Goldstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mut. F Ins.. Co. Mont. Co. v. Goldstein, 86 A. 35, 119 Md. 83, 1912 Md. LEXIS 73 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

This is a special case stated under the 47th General Equity Rule for the construction of a contract of insurance between the appellant and the appellee in the following form:

"This certifies that Michael J. Goldstein, in the County of Prince George's, has this 28th day of February, 1911, made application to the Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Montgomery County for insurance upon the property specified in said application, to the amount of $915.00; that he has given his premium note for $534.00, and has paid upon the same $13.92 for interest and survey, and that there is insured upon the property specified in said application $915.00 from this date,and is in force until rejected by the company. Interest to January 1st, 1912, $13.92.

(Signed) SAMUEL R. NEAVE, Agent. Survey Mileage."

The application, in the form prescribed by the appellant for use, was filled out by Neave and signed by Goldstein, and the premium note, also in the form prescribed by the company, was filled out by Neave and signed by Goldstein, and both papers were delivered to Neave, who thereupon signed and delivered to Goldstein the above paper, the payment therein mentioned being made by Goldstein at the same time. Of the $915.00 of insurance, $500 was upon the dwelling house described in the application, which was destroyed by fire on March 9th, 1911, and it is agreed that the amount to be paid by defendant, if held liable at all, is $322.54, with interest from August 1st, 1911. At the time of making the application in this case Goldstein had two other policies of insurance on said dwelling, which was unknown either to Neave or the company, and the sole question the Court below was asked to determine, or which it did determine, was this: "Whether the existence of the said two *Page 85 fire insurance policies * * * at the time of the making of the contract, did or did not vitiate the said contract of fire insurance?" The Court below decided the contract was not thereby vitiated, and the company has appealed from that decree.

It appears from the case stated "that the transaction between the plaintiff and Neave was in the usual course, the method of said company, through its agents, being to receive applications, and to deliver binding slips as aforesaid, each binding slip to be followed by a regular policy if the applicant's application is accepted," and it also appears that Neave transmitted to the company for its acceptance, the application, promissory note and cash paid as above described. No policy was actually issued until April 9th, 1911, when Policy No. 51831, a copy of which is set out in the record, was issued and mailed to the defendant, and the fourth term or condition of said printed policy provided that the same should be void "if the assured now has, or shall hereafter, or concurrently herewith, make or procure any other contract of insurance, whether valid or not, on property covered in whole or in part by this policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement endorsed hereon, or added hereto in writing." The original charter of the company required it to keep a book containing a copy of the charter and of the Constitution and by-laws, and required all persons wishing to become members, to signify their assent thereto in writing at the foot of said copies, and the amended charter of 1890 provided that this assent might be given either in the book above mentioned or in any manner required by any by-law, theretofore or thereafter passed by the company, and by a subsequent by-law, it was provided that the signing of an application for insurance should be a constructive signing of the charter, constitution and by-laws, and have the same effect as a signing in said book.

In the application in this case, numerous questions were required to be answered by the applicant touching the title *Page 86 and condition of the property, and other matters deemed material to the risk, but no inquiry whatever was made as to the existence of other insurance upon the property described. On April 26th, 1911, Mr. Magruder, counsel for Goldstein, notified the company that Goldstein had submitted to him the policy No. 51831, which he had received from the company, and "that said policy was not accepted in lieu of or as a substitute for the receipt signed by Mr. Samuel R. Neave, your agent, on February 28th, 1911, and delivered to Mr. Goldstein on that day."

It can not escape observation at the outset that the paper which in the case stated is called "a binding slip," purports toeffect present temporary insurance, and not merely anagreement for insurance to be effected thereafter. It states that "there is insured upon the property specified in saidapplication $915.00 from this date."

In Cyc., Vol. 19, page 594, it is said "an agent duly authorized to bind his company by contracts for insurance may make valid contracts by parol or by a binding slip or memorandum," and on page 595, "such binding slip or memorandum is evidence of a present contract of insurance between the parties, and the insurance takes effect and is in force from the time of delivery of binding receipt or memorandum to the person contracting for the insurance." The learned judge below very properly states that the ordinary binding slip "is an executory agreement to issue a policy in the form the insurer is accustomed to issue, and furnishes indemnity to the assured, pending action upon his application by the insurer, subject to the terms and conditions contained in such policy," but he observes with equal propriety that "it does not follow, because insurers are accustomed to issue executory contracts, that they cannot make executed contracts for temporary insurance. The quality of the contract can not be determined by its duration;" and, holding, as he did, that the plaintiff's application in this case, together with the certificate issued to him, formed an executed contract for *Page 87 temporary insurance, he followed logically to his conclusion that the conditions of the policy issued and tendered, after the losshad occurred, could not be read into the executed contract. This view, based upon the peremptory language of this particular certificate, is so simple, and so fully in accord with settled legal principles governing the making and construction of contracts, that it does not seem that argument or authority is required for its acceptance. A case in point here however, isSmith Wallace Co. v. Prussian Nat. Ins. Co., 68 N.J.L. 674. A binding slip was issued by an agent whereby the company bound $2000 of insurance upon certain property, the binding slip to be void on delivery of the policy; no rate or amount was mentioned in the binder, but the insured understood the insurer proposed to charge a higher rate than it had charged for the same insurance a year before, and he requested the agent to endeavor to get some concession in the rate, which he consented to do, but before the attempt was made a loss occurred, and no policy was issued on the binder. The insured brought suit for the amount insured, and judgment was entered for the plaintiff from which the company appealed and the judgment was affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
86 A. 35, 119 Md. 83, 1912 Md. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mut-f-ins-co-mont-co-v-goldstein-md-1912.