Standard Funding Corp. v. Lewitt

678 N.E.2d 874, 89 N.Y.2d 546, 656 N.Y.S.2d 188, 1997 N.Y. LEXIS 301
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 678 N.E.2d 874 (Standard Funding Corp. v. Lewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Funding Corp. v. Lewitt, 678 N.E.2d 874, 89 N.Y.2d 546, 656 N.Y.S.2d 188, 1997 N.Y. LEXIS 301 (N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Levine, J.

Plaintiff Standard Funding Corporation, an insurance premium financing company, entered into a series of financing agreements with Lewitt Agency, Inc. to finance the premiums on insurance polices of defendant Public Service Mutual Insurance Company. Standard Funding had provided Lewitt with its financing agreement forms which Lewitt and the prospective insureds were to complete and sign. Before entering into the first financing agreement with Lewitt, Standard Funding contacted Public Service Mutual whose personnel confirmed that Lewitt was an agent in good standing with the company, licensed to sell all lines of business.

Pursuant to the financing agreements, Standard Funding would finance the bulk of an insured’s initial insurance policy premium in exchange for a security interest in all unearned premiums. The insured would agree to repay Standard Funding on an installment schedule; if the insured defaulted, the financing agreement gave Standard Funding the authority to cancel the insurance policy and assert a right to all unearned premiums due under the policy.

At issue on this appeal are four such agreements that Standard Funding and Lewitt entered into in October and December 1989 to finance premiums ranging from $15,500 to $153,500 for policies purportedly issued by Public Service Mutual. On *549 October 20, 1989, Lewitt tendered two executed financing agreements to Standard Funding. Each form, which was signed by Lewitt and the insured, indicated that Public Service Mutual had issued policies to the insureds and that the insureds had paid approximately 25% of the premiums to the insurance company. Standard Funding accepted the financing agreements, and in accordance with their terms, issued two checks to Lewitt totaling $23,325. Standard Funding then sent Public Service Mutual "Notice of Financing” forms containing copies of the checks issued to Lewitt. In mid-December, Lewitt completed two additional financing agreements for the financing of Public Service Mutual premiums and received two checks from Standard Funding in the total amount of $204,000. Again, Standard Funding sent notice of financing forms with copies of the checks to Public Service Mutual. Public Service Mutual did not respond to any of the notices.

After Standard Funding failed to receive payments from the alleged insureds, it contacted Public Service Mutual who investigated the matter and discovered that these four financing agreements covered fictitious policies and false insureds. No policies were ever issued in connection with these agreements and Public Service Mutual received no premiums for them. Public Service Mutual thereafter terminated Lewitt’s agency contract.

Standard Funding commenced this damages action against Lewitt and Public Service Mutual. The claim against Public Service Mutual was premised on the theory that the insurer was liable for the fraudulent acts of Lewitt acting as its agent. After Lewitt filed for bankruptcy, the claim against Public Service Mutual proceeded to trial. Following a nonjury trial, Supreme Court entered judgment in favor of Standard Funding in the amount of $227,325 plus interest. The Appellate Division affirmed, holding that although the financing agreements between Lewitt and Standard Funding were outside the scope of Lewitt’s actual authority, Standard Funding had reasonably relied upon Lewitt’s authority to issue Public Service Mutual policies and collect premiums in tendering its checks to Lewitt, and thus, Public Service Mutual was liable under the doctrine of apparent authority. Because we conclude that Lewitt had neither actual nor apparent authority to enter into the financing agreements on behalf of Public Service Mutual, we now reverse.

There is no basis to conclude that the agency contract between Lewitt and Public Service Mutual endowed Lewitt with *550 actual authority to procure on behalf of Public Service Mutual the financing of premiums for proposed insureds. The agency agreement granted Lewitt authority to "solicit and accept proposals for insurance covering such risks as the Company may authorize to be insured in the [agent’s] territory * * * subject [to] all the terms, covenants and conditions of this agreement.” Under the terms of its agency agreement, Lewitt was also endowed with "full power and authority to receive, collect and receipt for premiums on insurance tendered by the Agent to and accepted by the Company.” Thus, Lewitt was expressly authorized only to issue insurance policies and to receive and collect premiums; nothing in the agency agreement authorized Lewitt to negotiate or enter into premium financing agreements on behalf of Public Service Mutual.

We reject plaintiffs contention that premium financing is an activity incidental to or reasonably necessary for the performance of those express powers. In the case of First Trust & Deposit Co. v Middlesex Mut. Fire Ins. Co. (284 NY 747, affg 259 App Div 80), on facts strikingly similar to those presented here, we held that an insurance agent’s frauds perpetrated in the context of premium financing were not within the scope of the agent’s actual authority (see also, National Premium Budget Plan Corp. v National Fire Ins. Co., 106 NJ Super 238, 241-242 [App Div], 254 A2d 819, 820, cert denied 54 NJ 515, 257 A2d 113; Cupac, Inc. v Mid-West Ins. Agency, 626 F Supp 559, 562-563; contra, New England Acceptance Corp. v American Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co., 4 Mass App 172, 344 NE2d 208, 212-213, affd 373 Mass 594, 368 NE2d 1385).

In First Trust (supra), a copartnership acted as agent for the defendant insurance company for whom it was authorized to issue insurance policies and collect premiums. As required by law, the insurance company had certified to the State Insurance Department "the good reputation and integrity of the copartnership” as its agent (259 App Div, at 82). Just as Lewitt here, the agency in First Trust tendered a fictitious insurance policy and instrument of indebtedness to an institution engaged in premium financing and vouched for their genuineness. When both the policy and the debt instrument turned out to be fraudulent, plaintiff, as assignee of the financing company, sought recovery from the insurance company on an agency theory.

The Appellate Division rejected plaintiffs argument that the insurance agent had been acting as agent for the defendant insurance company in procuring premium financing for proposed *551 insureds. Instead, the Court held that the debt instrument and warranty "were given in a transaction on behalf of the copartnership as an entity, or on behalf of ostensibly insured, or on behalf of the investment corporation, and not in behalf of the copartnership as agent for the defendant” (id., at 88 [emphasis supplied]). This Court agreed, affirming "on the ground that the fraud of the defendant’s agent was not perpetrated in the course of the agent’s employment” (284 NY, at 748). Likewise here, we hold that Lewitt’s activities in entering into the premium financing agreements with Standard Funding fall outside the scope of activities authorized by its agency agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
678 N.E.2d 874, 89 N.Y.2d 546, 656 N.Y.S.2d 188, 1997 N.Y. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-funding-corp-v-lewitt-ny-1997.