Preferred Risk Fire Ins. Co. v. Neet

90 S.W.2d 39, 262 Ky. 257, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 783
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 39 (Preferred Risk Fire Ins. Co. v. Neet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preferred Risk Fire Ins. Co. v. Neet, 90 S.W.2d 39, 262 Ky. 257, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 783 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Affirming.

The petition, through a process of evolution, sought recovery on an oral contract of insurance for $2,500 on tobacco destroyed by fire. The answer presented a traverse, a plea that the agent spoke without authority, and that such a contract is illegal upon several grounds. The court on the law and facts rendered judgment for $1,800, being the proportionate insurance upon the burned tobacco with the application of the three-fourths value provisions customary to insurance of this character.

The appellees were the owners of a crop of tobacco, and the evidence in their behalf was that on the day housing was completed Elliston, an agent, came to the farm soliciting the insurance. They informed him they wanted insurance in the amount of $100 an acre on 25 acres of tobacco until it was removed from *259 the barn. He asked if it would be out of the barn in four months and was told that it would probably not be stripped and taken out in that time and he had “better just keep it insured until I get it out.” The plaintiff’s evidence is that there was a clear, express understanding that the insurance was for as long a time as the tobacco should remain in the barn. In the early part of January Elliston asked if the tobacco was out, and when told it was not he asked: “When will you get rid of it?” He was told “about next February,” and responded, “When you get rid of it, let me know and I will cancel the policy.”

Elliston was introduced by the plaintiffs, and his testimony reveals that he was the agent of three fire insurance companies, but oxdy one of them, the appellant, the Preferred Risk Fire Insurance Company, insured tobacco. He denied appellees’ version of the conversations and contract and stated the agreement was that he would insure the tobacco for only four months. Accordingly, he wrote a policy for $1,250 for the appellant company (of which he was a recorded agent) and procured a like policy under brokerage arrangement from the agent of the Twin City Fire Insurance Company on the same terms. Elliston had carried appellees’ insurance protection for some time, although never on tobacco. Following the usual practice, he held the policies for them. In January he visited the farm for the purpose of collecting the premiums, and he testified that on that occasion he laid the policies before Neet and called attention to the fact that they were expiring on January 17. He denied the statements of the other parties to the effect that he was to be notified when the tobacco was removed in order that he might cancel the insurance. Elliston further testified that in the previous October he had sent a statement of account to the appellees and that it disclosed that the insurance was written for four months and would expire January 17th. This testimony as to the statement of account and as to Ellis-ton having shown the policies to Neet on his January visit was not contradicted.

We should say that the two policies, having been written for four months, expired on January 17, and the fire occurred on January 19.

When the law and facts are submitted to the court *260 for decision without the intervention of a jury, every fact which the evidence conduces to prove and which goes to support the judgment must be assumed to have been found by the court in favor of the successful party, and every fact as to which the evidence is ■conflicting and which would render the judgment erroneous if found in favor of the adverse party must be assumed to have' been found against him. Coleman’s Ex’r v. Meade, 76 Ky. (13 Bush) 358. The decision on appeal must, therefore, proceed upon such ■conclusions. It must be regarded that there was an oral contract of insurance in prsasenti covering the tobacco as long as it remained in the barn, or until its destruction by fire therein. This matter of duration of the contract and how such period is to be regarded will be discussed later.

The appellant challenges the validity of the parol ■contract of insurance as being contrary to the policy of the law of insurance and fundamental principles of the law of agency. It points to the several statutes regulating insurance companies and the manner in which their business must be conducted, particularly those which require the maintenance of a reserve for the protection of the policyholders calculated upon the premium for each risk taken. It argues that since the company has no knowledge of such contract as that claimed to have been made by the appellees, it cannot comply with the law. There is some force in the argument. But with the concession of the universal legal recognition and approval of the uniform practice of making preliminary oral contracts, or temporarily assuming liability pending the issuance of the policy within a reasonable time, it would seem that the argument falls of its own weight. The difference is only in the matter of time. Moreover, section 638 of the Statutes provides that insurance contracts made in violation of the statutes are to be regarded • as binding independently of the statute. To permit escape from liability because of one’s own dereliction or deviation from the law offends abstract justice and general legal principles. The validity of parol insurance agreements, having essential elements of such a contract, is universally sustained unless specifically prohibited by statute. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Co. v. Vance, 74 Okl. 261, 180 P. 693, 15 A. L. R. 981; Cooley’s Briefs, pp. 497, 537, 539; Couch’s Cyc. of Ins. Law, sec. 78.

*261 The company offered to prove its inflexible rule iconfining its agents to making written contracts, or issuing policies, except to permit a brief preliminary agreement until a policy could be prepared. It also •offered to show by a number of insurance men of wide ■experience that such was the general rule of insurance ■companies, and, as well, that it was not a practice pursued by local agents. Indeed, these witnesses as an avowal stated that they had never known of an agent undertaking to make such a contract as this. The court refused to admit this evidence on the trial before the jury (there having been a hung jury on a former trial), and we may assume ignored it when considering the facts himself. The purpose of this evidence was to sustain the position that the rule of apparent agency rests upon a custom of dealing with the public if not directly, with the individual immediately concerned; hence, when the fact of custom is negatived, there could not have been, and cannot be, any' apparent agency.

It is a rule declared by the Supreme Court of the United States years ago, and accepted everywhere, that the powers of a local insurance agent are prima facie coextensive with the business intrusted to his care, and the company must be held responsible to the parties with whom he transacted business for his acts and declarations within the scope of his employment the same as if they proceeded directly from the principal. See Union Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Wilkinson, 13 Wall. 222, 20 L. Ed. 617. This rule and the special reasons for so binding insurance companies, as perhaps distinctive from the general law of agency, is fully considered in Henry Clay Fire Ins. Co. v. Grayson County State Bank, 239 Ky. 239, 39 S. W. (2d) 482.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 39, 262 Ky. 257, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preferred-risk-fire-ins-co-v-neet-kyctapphigh-1935.