Republic Ins. Co. v. Moss

235 S.W. 700, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1192
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 12, 1921
DocketNo. 8581. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 235 S.W. 700 (Republic Ins. Co. v. Moss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Republic Ins. Co. v. Moss, 235 S.W. 700, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1192 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment whereby appellee recovered upon the finding of a jury that a parol agreement existed between appellee and appellant’s agent previous to May 5, 1919, that the former’s insurance would be kept in force another year after said date, upon which a written policy of insurance expired.

[1] In February, 1912, the Commonwealth Fire Insurance Company was engaged in the fire insurance business in Texas. J. F. Austin was then, and continuously thereafter, its agent at Frankston, Tex., until May 2, 1919, when it was dissolved as a result of its consolidation with two other companies; the three merging into and becoming Republic. Insurance Company, under the provisions of chapter 57, Acts 38th Legislature. After the dissolution of the Commonwealth Fire Insurance Company, Austin became the agent at Frankston of Republic Insurance Company. The Republic Insurance Company was created on the date the Commonwealth *701 Fire Insurance Company was dissolved, and there seems to have been a transfer of Austin’s agency from the latter to the former without any interruption of continuity. Austin was also the agent of other insurance companies during the period from 1912 until the asserted cause of action arose in February, 1920. During the same period he was also engaged in, or in some way connected with, the banting business in Frankston, and it seems that the insurance business was conducted in the same building the bank occupied.

In 1912 appellee constructed a residence in Frankston and made a contract with Austin to insure it against loss by fire. Appellee on that occasion went to Austin’s office and told Austin he was ready for insurance; that he never wanted to be without it; and instructed Austin that when the first policy expired to rewrite it. Austin assented to what ap-pellee said and gave him to understand that the property would be insured and kept insured. The conversation expressed the only transaction ever had between appellee and Austin for fire insurance on the building. No subsequent agreement for insurance was ever made.

As a result of the understanding then arrived at, a policy on the building and furniture was written. This policy was issued by the Commonwealth Fire Insurance Company. The policy expired at the end of a year from its date and appears not to have been renewed upon its expiration. Subsequently a policy dated March 2, 1914, and expiring March 2,1915, was issued by Austin as agent of the same company. Upon its termination this policy was renewed, or at least a policy was issued on March 2, 1915, expiring March 2, 1916. At the expiration of this policy there was no renewal. A policy seemed to have been issued May 5, 1918, which expired May 5, 1919. This was not renewed. No other policy was written thereafter, and the property was destroyed by fire on February 19, 1920. All the policies which had been written and issued upon it by Austin ■ were policies in Commonwealth Fire Insurance Company.

No policy was ever delivered to appellee. No specific payment of a premium was ever made by him independent of periodical general business settlements with Austin. Ap-pellee was a practicing physician. He was Austin’s physician. He relied altogether upon Austin to issue policies and keep alive the insurance. He expected Austin to keep the policies in his safe and look after renewals, forwarding his own funds to the company in payment of premiums and receiving from appellee reimbursement at irregular intervals when general settlements of accounts were made between them. These settlements were sometimes separated by the space of a two-year period of time, it seems. Some of the settlements would show a balance in favor, of Austin and others would disclose a balance in appellee’s favor. Accounts were squared accordingly.

Appellee paid no attention to the payment of premiums at regular intervals, because, as he testified, he expected Austin to pay the premiums to the company and credit him for them. He did not expect the company to credit him, and there was no understanding that it would. No premium was ever paid or tendered to the company for insurance beyond May 5, 1919, the date the last policy expired.

Each year appellee made inquiry of Austin about whether or not he was keeping up the insurance, and thus called Austin’s attention to it because he was afraid he would forget it.

Appellee gave the following testimony:

“During 1918 and 1919 I had similar conversations with Mr. Austin to what I had eyery year; just go and inquire if he was keeping up my insurance; that I wanted him to rewrite it when the time came for him to rewrite it. Tlio day the public school burned in Frankston as we walked away I remarked to him that it reminded me of my own insurance and was it in force, and, as I remember, his answer was that he supposed so, or he thought so, or something to that effect; this schoolhouse conversation occurred, I think, in November, in the fall of last year (19191); I don’t believe I had any other conversation with him since then in respect to his keeping up this insurance since November, 1919.
“In January or February, I am pretty sure it was January, we, had a conversation in regard to it every year in the early part of the year, and in January or February of this year, in fact, if anything, it was that I expected it rewritten and asked him to rewrite it, as he had been doing. In the January, 1919, conversationl remember distinctly that I called to see him with reference to a life insurance policy that was about to lapse and asked him about his carrying it for me; he asked me the amount; I didn’t remember the amount and he asked me to look it up and he would decide whether he would carry it for me, or something to that effect, and I remember remarking to him that I might not carry it; might drop it; that I had other insurance; might not need that; “but my fire insurance, I want that kept up;” he said, “Sure,” or something to that effect,
“That policy expired 5th of May, 1919, and my property did not burn until the 19th of February, 1920, about nine months later; this is the last policy I know of the Commonwealth that I had; after talking with Mr. Austin he told me that he neglected to issue it; I don’t claim there was any other issued, but I claim there should have been. I talked with Mr. Austin in November, 1919, when the fire occurred at Frankston that burned up the school building; that was six months after that policy had expired; the school building burned and made me think of it; I thought of it every year about the first of the year; I would think of it when something burned; as we came away from the schoolhouse fire, I said, in substance, that ‘When we have a fire, I am reminded of my own insurance, and is my insurance in force?’ ‘You are keeping it up; I suppose you rewrote it?’ *702 or something to that effect; and ‘It is still in force.’ ‘Is it or not?’ And my recollection is that his answer was something like this, T think so;’ and it seems to me he said he would look into it; not certain about that, but pretty sure that he agreed to see that it was, but won’t say that; I don’t know that is true. I did not pursue the matter further the- next day and did not pay any further attention to it.
“As to any specific agreement with Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 S.W. 700, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-ins-co-v-moss-texapp-1921.