Pelican Assurance Co. v. Schildknecht

108 S.W. 312, 128 Ky. 351, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 11, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 108 S.W. 312 (Pelican Assurance Co. v. Schildknecht) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pelican Assurance Co. v. Schildknecht, 108 S.W. 312, 128 Ky. 351, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 62 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming.

Conrad Schildknecht is a contractor and builder in Louisville, Ky. R. 0. Breuer & Co. are general agents of appellant, the Pelican Assurance Company of New York, doing an insurance business in Louisville, Ky. On the 28th of August, 1905, appellee notified Breuer & Co. by telephone that he desired to have them insure three frame dwelling houses on Dupue street, in Louisville, which he was erecting. Some one in the ooffice of Breuer & Co. answered this telephone call, and stated to appellee that as the houses were not numbered, and the lots upon which they were being erected were not numbered, they would have to send a representative put to locate them. This arrangement was satisfactory to appellee. About 5 o ’clock on the afternoon of the day following Mr. Julius Bolling, representing Breuer & Co., went out and viewed the houses. At the time he reached these buildings appellee and his brother were both there, and appellee and Bolling agreed that the houses were to be valued at $600 each, and insured for that amount for 40 days for $2 each. On the night of the same day, at about [355]*35510 o ’clock, two of these houses were burned'. Appellee alleges that Bolling agreed that the houses should become insured from that time, to-wit, about 5 o’clock in the evening of the 20th oí August, in the appellant company, the Pelican Assurance Company of New York. After the houses were burned, the appellant company, through its agent, Breuer & Co., denied that the buildings had been insured, and refused to pay for same. Thereupon appellee sued appellant for $1,200, the value of the two houses which were burned, and, upon final hearing, was awarded judgment for the full amount sued for.

Upon this appeal two questions are presented for our consideration: First Did appellee and Bolling agree that the two buildings should be insured in the appellant company? Second. Did Bolling have the authority to make the contract of insurance if they did so agree?

. On the first question appellee and his brother both testify positively that it was agreed between appellee and Bolling that the buildings in question should be insured in appellant company. This Bolling denies. After the buildings had been inspected by Bolling and the conversation above referred to had taken place, appellee and Bolling repaired to the liquor emporium of one Henry Lammers, and while there, according to the testimony of Mrs. Lammers, Mr. Bolling said that appellee’s buildings were insured all right from that day. It seems that bn his way out to inspect the buildings and locate the property Bolling had stopped in Lammers ’ place of business, and had a conversation relative to this insurance with him. Bolling admits being present and talking to Lammers, but denies that he said that appellee’s property was insured from that date. The weight of the evidence shows that [356]*356Bolling agreed to insure the’ houses in question from the 29th of August, 1905. ' The record shows that Breuer & Co.’ were the general agents for several insurance companies; and the witness Bolling testifies that, when receiving applications for insurance, it was his custom and duty to send them to the agency, and that Mr. Breuer - determined in what company they should he written, and that he is positive that on the ddy in question he made no statement whatever as to what company'appellee’s houses should he insured in. As'opposed to this testimony of Bolling, both appellee and his brother testify that the contract as' entered into on the 29th of August was for the buildings to be insured in the appellant company. ■ As above' set out, the application was fór 'insuráncé covering threé buildings, but'two Of them burned/and later'the'third house, which did not burn, was insured through thé'BreUér agency in appellant company. The unoontradicted evidence shows that Mr. Bolling had receipted for Breuer & Co.'for still other policies in appellant company issued to' appellee on' Other' buildings.' Now, while it is true that Bolling denies'that'he'had any authority ‘to contract for the insurance, or to' designaté the' company in which it was'to be placed, Or that he did so; nevertheless the preponderance of the evi: dencO Und "the circumstances surrounding the transaction'between Bolling and appellee show that he did mate the’ contract as alleged by appellee, that he had therétofdre insured buildings for appellee through the BreUer agency in appellant company, and on the-very day that'he'went out t'o'inspect'the buildings in'question-he had ‘ receipted to appellee for another policy in'the Same company. The'preini'uni'for this insurance was not paid in 'cash' on thé 29th' of AugUst, at the'time the ágréémént'relative .thereto ^as máde and [357]*357entered into, but it is shown that appellee had an open insurance account with Breuer & Co., and that statements were rendered by these general agents at stated intervals to their customers, one of whom was appellee. No question is seriously made in this case that the premiums were not paid in cash, but were' to be charged to his' account as was- their custom in the conduct of their business. ' .

The evidence supports the' contention of appellee that on the 29th of August he entered into-a parol contract with the agent Bolling, by the terms of which it was agreed that the three buildings above referred to should be insured from that time for a pexiod of 40 days in the appellant company for a- premium of $2 each; that appellee had a running account with the Breuer agency, with whom he settled his insurance premium accounts from time to time, as called upon to do so. In the case of Baldwin v. Phoenix Insurance Company, 107 Ky. 356, 54 S. W. 13, 92 Am. St. Rep. 362, it was shown that'it had been the custom of the agent of the insurance company to issue the policies of insurance' to customers and charge them with the premiums, and, at his pleasure, present and collect these premium accounts, and the court held that one who had so dealt with the agent -had a right to rely upon this method of doing business, and, in the absence of a notice to the- contrary, presume' that it would be followed by the company with reference to other contracts of insurance; and, continuing; the court said: “We think this method of transacting business was, in effect, giving a credit to the appellant for the premium and he had the right to understand'that he was getting credit therefor, and that he was entitled to pay it upon demand only. ” In' that case, as in others; this Court has held that where the insured had a running account [358]*358with the agent of the company, as is shown in the case at bar, the insurance was not invalidated because the premiums were not paid in cash. In the case of Security Fire Insurance Company of New York v. Kentucky Marine & Fire Insurance Company, 7 Bush 81, 3 Am. Rep. 301, this court in a carefully considered opinion recognized the validity of a parol contract of insurance. The correctness of this proposition is not disputed by appellant, but it seeks to avoid the effect thereof by alleging that the agent, Bolling, did not have authority to make the contract of insurance, and this brings us to the second question under consideration.

The record shows that R. 0. Breuer was the general agent of appellant company. Although his agency was styled and known as Breuer & Co., he was, in fact, the sole owner of the agency.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 S.W. 312, 128 Ky. 351, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pelican-assurance-co-v-schildknecht-kyctapp-1908.