Smith v. North British & Mercantile Insurance

263 S.W. 1031, 214 Mo. App. 539, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 29
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 2, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 263 S.W. 1031 (Smith v. North British & Mercantile Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. North British & Mercantile Insurance, 263 S.W. 1031, 214 Mo. App. 539, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 29 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

*544 BRADLEY, J.

This is an action on an insurance policy covering household goods. On trial before the court and a jury plaintiff recovered and defendant appealed.

The petition is in the usual form. The answer is a general denial, and a plea of non est factum. Defendant assigns error (1) on the refusal of its demurrer at the *545 close of the case; (2) on the instructions, and (3) on the admission of evidence.

C. E. Dover, Joe Moore and M. G. Gresham were insurance agents in Sikeston, Scott county, Mo. In order to save expenses they employed one Clarence Scott as a clerk, and Scott kept the records and did the clerical work for the three agents. Each agent represented different companies, and each one in the beginning signed policies in blank and turned them over to Scott. Scott transacted the insurance business of the three agents, and accounted to each according to the amount of business wiitten in the companies of the respective agents. Finally Scott got to writing the names of the agents on the policies, and did not depend on having a policy already signed. These agents had a common office, and Scott was in charge of it. Moore and Gresham were lawyers, and Dover had other business. Insurance was kind of a side line with each of them. Dover’s insurance books and records were moved to the office theretofore used by Moore and Gresham, and the three thereafter used this office as an insurance office.

The defendant company was one of Dover’s companies. Plaintiff went to this common office for insurance on his household goods. He had a talk with Moore about the insurance. Moore directed Scott to write the policy, and Scott wrote it in the defendant company, signing Dover’s name thereto. Plaintiff delivered his check to Moore to cover the premium, but it does not appear to whom the check was payable. The policy was not delivered, but was left in the office as was frequently done. The policy was written on December 27, 1918.. Scott entered it oh the office records kept by Dover for defendant company, and also reported it to defendant on the day written, and Dover was charged- with the premium. In the monthly report and remittance following the writing of the policy, Dover remitted to cover this premium. Dover’s agency for defendant expired February 4, .1919, and going through his insurance records after the expiration of his agency he found the policy sued on. At the time Dover found the policy among his records Moore was dead, and Scott was not in charge of *546 the insurance office. Dover says that he noticed that the policy covered household goods in Lilbourn, New Madrid county, and that his agency was for Sikeston in Scott county, and that he had not solicited this policy, and knew nothing of it until he found it as stated. Without consulting anyone, or advising plaintiff, Dover marked the policy “spoiled,” and sent it in to defendant, and asked that the amount he had sent in on this policy be returned to him. March 10, 1919, defendant received the policy, marked it cancelled, made the other necessary entries showing cancellation, and remitted to Dover the return premium, but did not notify plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s household goods were destroyed by fire June 22, 1921, and the C. E. Dover Insurance Agency on the next day, June 23rd, notified defendant of the loss, giving the correct number of the policy, and the date of its expiration, and requested blanks for proof of loss. Howard E. Morrison was in charge of Dover’s insurance office when this notice of loss was given, and Morrison prepared the notice and signed it “ C. E. Dover Insurance Agency.” Dover’s agency was not at that time representing defendant, and had not since February 4, 1919. It does not appear just how Morrison got his information about the policy, but presumably from the records in Dover’s.office. Defendant refused to pay, and this suit followed.

Defendant’s chief contention in support of its de-murrer is that the policy was void ab initio, because it was not countersigned by Dover. The policy provided that it would not be valid “unless countersigned by the duly authorized agent of the company at Sikeston, Mo.” Defendant’s learned counsel urged that countersigning the policy was an act that Dover could not delegate, citing McClure v. Mississippi Valley Ins. Co., 4 Mo. App. 148. In the McClure Case it appears that one Wicker-sham represented the defendant insurance company at Jacksonport, Ark. Wickersham formed a partnership with Kerr, and the partnership was to carry on the business of insurance. In Wickersham’s absence Kerr wrote a policy and countersigned it as follows: “ J. W. Wicker sham, agent, per Will W. Kerr.” The policy in that *547 case provided, as does the policy at har, that it would not be valid until countersigned by a duly authorized agent. Knowledge of the partnership arrangement between Wickersham and Kerr was not brought home to defendant; Kerr made no report of the policy to the company, but did report the issue thereof to Wickersham. It was held that Wickersham could not delegate to Kerr the authority to countersign in the manner there attempted. Also it was held that the manner attempted in countersigning was sufficient to put the insured on guard. The controlling principle running through the McClure Case is that the act of insuring property requires the exercise of judgment and discretion, and it is the exercise of such that the court said could not be delegated, and not the physical act of writing a name. The court said: “The question is not merely as to the signing and delivery of the policy. Those acts in themselves may be unimportant; but they are essential when they imply the previous exercise of judgment.”

Plaintiff in the cause at bar seeks to distinguish his case from the McClure Case. It is contended that Dover by his action and lack of action ratified the act of Scott in countersigning the policy in the manner stated. The cause at bar does differ from the McClure Case in these particulars: Scott signed Dover’s name, and did not show that the signing was done by an agent; the policy was left in Dover’s office, which was shown to be not an infrequent occurrence; there was nothing which should or would have put plaintiff on guard; and there was no claim that the authorized agent ratified the act of the sub-agent in the McClure Case as in the instant case.

In Lingenfelter v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 19 Mo. App. 252, it appeal's that the company was represented at Mary-ville, Mo., by one Hubert. At that time the company had no local agent at Burlington Junction, a nearby town. Hubert requested one Burdick to represent him at Burlington Junction in securing insurance in the Phoenix, and sent to Burdick blank applications, etc. January 30, 1882, Burdick solicited plaintiff, and plaintiff signed an application and paid the premium. The application stated that the insurance should run for one year, begin *548 ning at noon January 30tli. The application was signed “W. H. Hubert, agent.” Burdick mailed the application to Hubert, but before Hubert had written up a policy the property was destroyed. The company there contended that it was not bound. . In disposing of the point the court said: “There is no question of the general agency and power of Hubert.

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Bluebook (online)
263 S.W. 1031, 214 Mo. App. 539, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-north-british-mercantile-insurance-moctapp-1924.