Mutual Fire Insurance v. Eicholtz

40 A. 706, 88 Md. 92, 1898 Md. LEXIS 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 28, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 A. 706 (Mutual Fire Insurance v. Eicholtz) 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
Mutual Fire Insurance v. Eicholtz, 40 A. 706, 88 Md. 92, 1898 Md. LEXIS 170 (Md. 1898).

Opinion

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 27th July, 1894, the plaintiff, Anderson Eicholtz, received from the defendant, the Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Baltimore County, a policy of insurance on his mill property located in Frederick County. According to the terms of this policy the property therein mentioned was insured from the 27th July, 1894, to the 1st of March, 1902. The consideration for this policy was the delivery by the insured to the company of his note for $240, together with an agreement on his [94]*94part to pay in advance the annual interest thereon before the 1st March at 12 o’clock M. in each and every year, and in default thereof the policy was not to be binding on the company “ until the said interest be well and truly paid.” There are many other provisions and conditions in the policy, but with the exception of the provisions in relation- to cancellation, we need not consider them in this case.

It appears that the premium note of $240 mentioned in the policy was delivered to the company and the plaintiff paid the interest thereon from the date thereof to March 1, 1895, in accordance with the provisions of the policy and the by-laws of the company, and he received from it a receipt for the amount thus paid “ to insure his property ” — the amount of insurance being $1,200. But the plaintiff failed to comply.with the provision of the policy which required him to pay the interest on his premium note in advance on the 1st March, 1895.- He testifies that he did not hear from the company, and he allowed the interest on his premium note to run on until about March, 1896, when he went to see William Biggs, who was an agent of the company, for the purpose of paying his insurance. But not having his policy with him and failing to obtain satisfactory information from William Biggs, he departed without having effected any final arrangement or adjustment with him. Subsequently, however, he sought an interview with James S. Biggs, who was an agent, as well as a director of the insurance company. The policy was delivered by the plaintiff to the last-named Mr. Biggs, who retained it for several days or a week, and then received from the plaintiff the sum of six dollars in payment of the premium to insure the property mentioned in the policy from 1st of Aug., 1896, to the 1 st of January, 1897, that is to say, for five months, the Legislature having amended the charter of the company so as to make interest or premium payable .1st January instead of 1st of.March. The premium thus paid by the plaintiff to the agent, James S. Biggs, the latter remitted to the company September 5th together with several other premiums paid by other persons, the [95]*95name of the plaintiff being distinctly set forth in the statement accompanying the remittance, as the person who had paid the sum of six dollars on account of insurance. After the payment of this premium, the plaintiff heard nothing further from the insurance company. The latter kept the plaintiff’s money and never inquired of its agent why he had received it or on what account, until he informed it that the plaintiff’s property had been destroyed by fire, and that it was insured by said defendant company.

The mill property of the plaintiff was destroyed by fire November 6th, 1896, but the defendant refused to pay the plaintiff’s loss, and he brought suit on the policy in the Superior Court of Baltimore City. The case was tried before the Court without a jury. The verdict was for the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.

A number of questions were discussed, but we think th'e case is free from difficulty and that the judgment should be affirmed. Without stopping to consider the general question as to the power of the defendant’s agents to bind it, it is sufficient to say that the plaintiff paid the sum of six dollars for insurance of his property to James S. Biggs, who it is conceded was both an agent and director of the defendant. He paid this sum of money to his principal as a premium paid by the plaintiff and so informed it by a written statement to that effect. The defendant must be held to have received this money for and on account of the plaintiff’s policy, inasmuch as he wTas never informed to the contrary. It appears, as we have said, that subsequent to the date of the policy the company was authorized by an amendment of its charter to require all premiums or interest on premium notes, to be paid on the first of January instead of first of March, and, therefore, when the. plaintiff made the adjustment with Mr. J. S. Biggs, which wre have just mentioned, the latter, as testified to by the plaintiff, told him that the payment of six dollars renewed the policy — that there would be “ a short assessment ” and that it would run until the first of the following January. This agent and director informed the [96]*96plaintiff that by the payment of the sum mentioned the policy would be renewed, and although he contradicts the plaintiff’s testimony in this respect, the plaintiff produced the following receipt which fully confirms his statement:

“ Policy No. 18174.
Mut. Fire Ins. Co. of Baltimore Co.Office 304 Lexington St., &c.
August 6th, 1896.
Received of Mr. Anderson Eicholtz six dollars, being interest on premium note of - — • from August 1st,
1896, to Jan. 1st, 1897.
J. S. Biggs, Secretary.”

It is true that the defendant subsequently attempted to repudiate this payment of premium made to it by its agent, ■ director and secretary, and after the ñre offered to return the money to the plaintiff, but he refused to accept it. Under these circumstances we think it too clear for controversy that the defendant ought not to be allowed to escape liability by any supposed want of authority of its agent to accept from the plaintiff.less than the whole amount due, nor by the fact that it had, ■without notice to the plaintiff, written the word “ can-celled ” on a copy of his policy kept in its office. Whether the agent had authority or not to accept the premium, in point of fact he did accept it and the defendant received it from him. Having failed to notify the plaintiff of its refusal to receive the premium as paid, it will not now be allowed to repudiate the act of its agent. To do so would be to sanction the perpetration of a fraud, though we do not wish to be understood as intimating that in this case the officers of the defendant company intended to deceive the plaintiff. Having paid his money into the hands of the company, or into the hands of one of its agents, who paid it to the company, he was justified, under all the circumstances, in assuming that it was received for the purpose for which he paid it, and that, therefore, his property was fully insured. To the company must be imputed knowledge [97]*97that the plaintiff’s money was in its hands, and it was bound to know why it was paid, and if it did not intend to insure the plaintiff’s property, he was entitled to prompt notice, so that he might seek protection elsewhere. In the case of the Maryland Fire Insurance Company v. Gusdorf, 43 Md. 514, it is said that the doctrine of equitable estoppel in pais

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Bluebook (online)
40 A. 706, 88 Md. 92, 1898 Md. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-fire-insurance-v-eicholtz-md-1898.