Pardon v. Wasvary

249 Ill. App. 327, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 66
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 1, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 249 Ill. App. 327 (Pardon v. Wasvary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pardon v. Wasvary, 249 Ill. App. 327, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 66 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolfe

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought in the circuit court of Franklin county by Anna Wasvary, who filed her bill against her former husband, Joseph Wasvary, and The American Insurance Company of the City of Newark, New Jersey. After the bill was filed Anna Wasvary died, and her daughter, Yoland Pardon, as the administratrix of the last will and testament of Anna Wasvary, deceased, and also individually (she being the sole legatee and devisee under the said will), was substituted as complainant in the lower court, and appears in this court as the plaintiff in error.

During her lifetime, Anna Wasvary and her husband, Joseph Wasvary, were the owners as tenants in common of a 9-acre tract of land located in or near Sesser, Illinois, and on which was situated their dwelling house and a barn, or shed.

• Before the filing of the bill Anna Wasvary had applied for a divorce from her husband. A hearing was had on the bill August 6,1923 and the court announced that a divorce would be granted, but a decree was not signed until December 1, 1923.

Several years before the divorce was granted the said insurance company had issued, through its farm department, and had delivered to Joseph and Anna. Wasvary, its insurance policy agreeing to indemnify them against loss by fire to the extent of $1,700 on the dwelling house a-nd barn and $500 on their household effects while located in the house. On August 19, 1923, the building and the household goods then in the house were damaged by fire.

The bill is for the partition of the lands and prays that the money due under the said policy by reason of the destruction of the property insured to the value of $2,000 may be decreed to stand in the place and stead of the property destroyed and paid into the court as a fund to be distributed by the court according to the respective rights and interests of the parties therein as the same should be found and determined by the court. A copy of the insurance policy is attached to the bill and made a part thereof. One of the provisions of the policy is, in substance, as follows : In case of loss the insured shall within 15 days give the company, at its office at Eockford, Illinois, written notice thereof; shall within 60 days from date of loss render to its office aforesaid a particular account of said loss, signed and sworn to by the assured, stating the date and circumstances of the same, the exact nature of the title and interest of the assured, and of all others in the property; shall furnish the company with an itemized statement of personal property, and the plans and specifications, and an itemized estimate of the building by some reliable and competent builder, and furnish a certificate of two disinterested neighbors and of the nearest magistrate, certifying their belief that the statements are true, and that the assured has, without fraud, sustained the amount of loss set forth in said proofs, otherwise said company shall not be liable.

The bill alleges as follows: That said insurance company waived written notice of fire to be given it at Eockford, Illinois; waived rendering it at said office a particular account of the loss signed and sworn to by assured, stating the date and circumstances of the fire, the exact title and interest of assured and all others, by whom and for what purpose same was occupied at time of loss and all incumbrances on said property; waived filing itemized statement of personal property destroyed, and plans and specifications and itemized estimate by a reliable and competent builder, of the building destroyed, with the certificate of two disinterested neighbors and the nearest magistrate certifying their belief that such statements were true and the loss without fraud.

The answer of the defendant insurance company denied each of said allegations contained in said bill. The answer of the defendants Joseph Wasvary admitted all the material allegations of the bill. Upon a hearing on the bill in open court before the chancellor, the bill was dismissed for want of equity as to the defendant insurance company. Unless the evidence establishes the above allegations of appellant’s bill she failed to make out a case and therefore other points in controversy between parties and now urged in this court need not be considered by this court.

Bearing on the question -of the waiver of the proofs of loss, the contention of the parties is whether or not the evidence shows that one W. C. Sulcer was clothed with the apparent authority to waive such proofs of loss for and on behalf of the insurance company. It is not contended by appellant that W. C. Sulcer was by any written or express power of appointment empowered to waive the proofs of loss. It will, therefore, be necessary to consider the evidence to determine if the defendant insurance company held out W. C. Sulcer to the public as its agent, possessing apparent power to waive the provisions of the policy requiring the furnishing of such proofs of loss. The question in this kind of a case being not what power did the agent in fact possess, but what power did the company hold him out to the public as possessing. Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Schlink, 175 Ill. 284,

To show the' express powers and authority with which Sulcer was invested by the insurance company there was introduced in evidence a certificate of his appointment given by the insurance company. So much of this certificate as needs be referred to in this opinion is as follows: “This is to certify that W. C. Sulcer has been appointed and duly constituted agent of the American Insurance Company of Newark, New Jersey, and authorized to receive and transmit to the company written applications for insurance against loss or damage by fire, etc., together "with the notes or cash for premiums and for no other purpose whatever, subject to the rules and regulations of said company and such instructions as may be given from time to time by its officers.” The extent of Sulcer’s agency being an issue in this case, we think that the certificate was proper and competent evidence. The appellee having shown by her evidence some facts tending to show the agency of Sulcer, it was incumbent on the insurance company to introduce such evidence as was in its exclusive possession proving, or tending to prove, the extent of Sulcer’s agency. McGuire v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 7 App. Div. 575, 40 N. Y. Supp. 300; Cupo v. Royal Ins. Co., 101 Conn. 586, 126 Atl. 844.

Appellant contends that the defendant insurance company by its acts and dealings with Sulcer invested him with, and held him out to the public as possessing, more authority as its agent than what is contained in such certificate. This is denied by the insurance company. The existence and contents of the certificate were not shown to the insured, the appellant or those representing them until the time of the trial.

Joseph Wasvary testified that Sulcer came to his home and asked him to insure his house and Wasvary signed an application for the insurance, gave to Sulcer in payment of the premium an old unexpired policy of the defendant insurance company and some money. Within a week thereafter he received a policy by mail from the office of the insurance company at Rockford, Illinois. August Pardon testified that he knew Sulcer who solicited and wrote application blanks, gave the policy and received the money.

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Bluebook (online)
249 Ill. App. 327, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pardon-v-wasvary-illappct-1928.