Stacy v. Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society

1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 441, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 192
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedApril 25, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 441 (Stacy v. Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stacy v. Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society, 1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 441, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 192 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

The parties in this ease stand in this court the same as in the court below, the plaintiff in error having been t'he plaintiff below. [442]*442The action was brought on a fire insurance policy to recover five hundred and seventy-two dollars and thirty cents ($572.30) for •the loss by fire of a building which was insured by the defendant in error.

The court below directed a verdict in favor of the defendant upon the ground that no written notice of the loss had been given to to the company as required by the policy, and no formal written proofs of loss made to the company as required, and that there was no' evidence tending to show that the company had waived these requirements, and at the close of the plaintiffs testimony, a verdict was directed in favor of the defendant, and judgment entered upon it'. Proceedings in error were commenced in this court to reverse that judgment.

The policy contains a condition requiring immediate written notice of the loss to be given to the company and formal written proofs of loss to be made to the company within sixty days after the date of the loss. It is not claimed that any written notice was given to the company or that any written proofs of loss were made; the case turns on the question as to whether these requirements were waived by the company.

It is claimed that the company through its agent denied any liability on the policy; denied generally any liability upon the policy after the fire, not basing its denial and refusal to pay upon the failure to give notice and present written proofs of loss. The law is well settled that if this were true, that such a denial of liability were made, that would amount to a waiver of the requirement of written notice or proof of loss¿ if the denial of liability was made within such time as the proof of loss was required to be made; the authorities are all one way on that question. It would be idle to make proof of loss after the company had notified the assured that it would not pay; and it is claimed here that the company did deny liability and that therefore this requirement was waived. The plaintiff claims that this denial of liability was communicated.to him by E. A. Barton, the agent of the company in Bowling Green, this county, he being the agent of the company at the time and representing it here. The head office -of the company and its headquarters are in Norwich, England. The evidence of the plaintiff fends to show that shortly after the fire, Barton told him that the [443]*443company denied 'ail liability on the policy, and, in substance, that it would not pay. This, Barton, who was called by the plaintiff, denied, but the evidence of the' plaintiff is in the record.

• It is contended by the defendant in error that a local agent such as Barton was has no authority to make such a declaration on behalf of the company; that his authority is limited to the issuing of a policy, the insuring of the property, collecting the premiums and giving notice of his acts in that respect to the company, but that after a loss occurs his authority is terminated and ceases, and that the matters that follow then are in the hands of, and under the authority of, other persons and other agents, 'and therefore it is claimed that a denial of liability made by the agent would not bind the company, and would not amount tcf 'a waiver of notice and proofs of loss.

The circumstances .of the insurance and the fire, and what occurred as far 'as the contract is concerned, may be briefly stated. The insured’ acted entirely through her husband as her agent; he made application to Mr. Barton to .insure the property, aaxd according to his testimony, Mr. Bárton assured him he would endeavor to place the property in some of the companies he was representing, and stated to him that he represented the Norwich Union Company and others, and thought he could place -it with the Norwich company, and Stacy requested him to do so if he could. After that, this policy was written by Mr. Barton. He had in his possession policies signed by the proper officers of the company and it was only necessary for him to fill them in .and countersign them. The policy was not delivered to Stacy. Stacy testified he was not certain what company Barton would insure the property in, 'but when the policy was written, it was to be turned over to him. The policy was written under date of February 9, 1901, and while it was still in the office of Mr. Barton, not having been .delivered, on the evening of February 15, 1901, he (Barton) received 'a -telegram from an authorized agent of the company at New York, signed “The Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society,” to cancel this policy, the company reserving the right to cancel any policy issued by its agent upon his notifying them of the risk he has taken, though he has authority to issue the policy, and the company would be bound by it until it was in fact canceled, and under the statute of this state it would continue in [444]*444force five days after notice of cancellation was given to the insured.

Barton received this notice about five o’clock in the afternoon of February 15, some six days after the policy was written; he gave no cuotice to Mr. Stacy of the cancellation, and that night, about midnight, the property was destroyed. Barton saw Mr. Stacy the next day and notified him that the company had canceled the policy and he had returned it to the company. The policy was never delivered to Mr. Stacy and he never saw it, or any part of it, and had no actual notice until after the loss of its contents or any of the conditions, restrictions or requirement's contained therein. Barton told Stacy that he would notify the company of the loss. He had already sent in the policy and it was not necessary to telegraph the company as the loss was a total one.. Barton first talked with Stacy by telephone the morning after the fire, and Barton asked if there was some one he could interrogate in regard to the loss, and Stacy recommended him to some reputable citizen in the village, and Barton did investigate the loss to some extent before he saw Stacy. A few days or a week after that, Stacy called on Barton again, and according to Stacy’s testimony, Barton told him he was afraid there was going to be trouble, that the company denied all liability on the policy, 'and some few times after that, Stacy saw Barton in regard to the matter and nothing was ever paid upon the policy. Barton testified he had some communication with Mr. Sowards, the general agent or general adjuster of the company, at Cincinnati; he was unable to tell just when this was, but he said that Sowards had written him a letter or told him that the company would not pay; he said this was three or four weeks after the loss, and afterwards he said it might be by letter, and at some place in his testimony he said it was sixty days after, and finally it was shown that Barton was unable to state when Sowards had made this statement to him that' the company would not pay. After the sixty days had expired, within which time proofs of loss might be made, Barton received a letter from Sowards in which he said:

“No proof of loss having been received within the time allowed there will, of course, be no possibility of our paying the loss unless it proves that you have by your communications with Mr. Stacy or Mr. Sutton so involved us as to make yourself liable to us for any claim which can be successfully prosecuted.”

[445]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 441, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stacy-v-norwich-union-fire-insurance-society-ohiocirct-1903.