Salzano v. Marine Insurance

173 A.D. 275, 159 N.Y.S. 277, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6553
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 19, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 A.D. 275 (Salzano v. Marine Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salzano v. Marine Insurance, 173 A.D. 275, 159 N.Y.S. 277, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6553 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Foote, J. :

Plaintiff has recovered upon a policy of insurance for damage to her automobile by fire. The policy contained a clause making it void “if the insured has concealed or misrepresented, in writing or otherwise, any material fact or circumstance concerning this insurance or the subject thereof.” One of the defenses was the alleged misrepresentations of plaintiff’s agent as to the year of manufacture and the cost of the car to plaintiff.

A Mr. Kennedy was an insurance broker in Buffalo. He had in his employ as a solicitor one Mooney, who solicited plaintiff, through her agent, to insure her automobile. Defendant is a foreign insurance company with its head office in London, Eng.; Chubb & Son of New York city are its general agents in this country, and a Mr. Walsh is its local agent in Buffalo. Mooney obtained from plaintiff, through her agent, a written application to defendant company for a policy of $1,500. It was stated in the application that the car was made in 1908 and cost plaintiff $2,300. Both of these statements were false. The car was made in 1907 and put into use in June of that year, and it was bought by plaintiff as a second-hand car for $850. She expended some money for repairs, but the total cost to her, including repairs, was less than the sum stated by several hundred dollars.

There have been two trials of the case. On the first trial the jury were instructed that Kennedy and Mooney were brokers and were plaintiff’s agents, and that plaintiff was bound by the statements contained in the written application which Mooney wrote from information given him by plaintiff’s [277]*277agent, but it was left to the jury to say whether the facts so falsely stated in the application were material to the risk. The jury found for the plaintiff that they were not, and this court sustained defendant’s exceptions and directed a new trial, holding that the policy was procured through misrepresentations by plaintiff’s agent of the material facts as to the cost of the car to plaintiff and the year of its manufacture. (Salzano v. Marine Ins. Co., Ltd., 165 App. Div. 949.)

■ On the second trial, now under review, the jury were instructed in effect that the statements in the written application as to the cost of the car to plaintiff and the year of its manufacture were, in fact, false and material; that if these facts were so stated to Mooney by plaintiff’s agent at, the time Mooney wrote them in the application, plaintiff could not recover; that Mooney and his employer, Kennedy, the broker, were defendant’s agents and not agents of plaintiff, and if plaintiff’s agent stated to Mooney correctly the cost of the car to plaintiff and the year of its manufacture, and if Mooney was responsible for writing these facts in the application incorrectly, then plaintiff was not responsible for that and could recover.

It is said that the learned judge who presided at both trials was lead to hold upon the last trial that Kennedy and Mooney were defendant’s agents contrary to his ruling upon the first trial, because section 49 of the Insurance Law required him to so hold. This section (Laws of 1909, chap. 83, being Consol. Laws, chap. 28) is as follows:

“ § 49. Agents. Every agent of any insurance corporation doing business in this State shall, in all advertisements of such agency, publish the location of the corporation, giving the name of the city, town or village in which it has its principal business office, and the State or government under the laws of which it is organized. The term agent ’ in this chapter shall include an acknowledged agent or surveyor or any other person who shall in any manner aid in transacting the insurance business of any insurance corporation not incorporated by the laws of this State, and any broker whose business, in whole or in part, is to negotiate for and place risks, deliver the policies covering the same and collect premiums therefor. ”

[278]*278The question is whether Kennedy and Mooney, acting as brokers for plaintiff to place her insurance, became, by force of this section, agents for the defendant company so that it became chargeable, as matter of law, with the knowledge or notice which they may have had but which they did not communicate to defendant. I do not think such was the legislative intent or that the language used imports such a meaning.

The purpose of the statutory definition of the term “ agent” contained in this section appears to be not to establish the relation of principal and agent as between a foreign insurance company and a person who seeks to place, with it insurance as broker for the insured, but rather to regulate and control the business of foreign insurance companies in this State. The language employed for that purpose is: “The term ‘agent’ in this chapter shall include * * * any broker whose business,” etc. There are many provisions in •“this chapter” (the Insurance Law) which prohibit agents of foreign insurance companies from placing risks in this State until the laws here regulating such business have been complied with, and the intent is that these provisions shall apply equally to brokers and prohibit them from placing insurance where duly constituted agents would be prohibited from so doing. Some of the sections in which the term “ agent ” appears and which, by force of section 49, must be held to include “broker,” are as follows:

By section 38 every agent who receives or collects any money as such is made responsible therefor in a fiduciary capacity.

By section 50 (as amd. by Laws of 1909, chap. 301) no person shaH act as agent for any foreign insurance company or negotiate for risks unless such company has complied with the provisions of the Insurance Law, and if he does, is subject to a penalty.

By section 134

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 A.D. 275, 159 N.Y.S. 277, 1916 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salzano-v-marine-insurance-nyappdiv-1916.