Stone v. Franklin Fire Insurance Co. of Boston

12 N.E. 45, 105 N.Y. 543, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 25, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 750
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 12 N.E. 45 (Stone v. Franklin Fire Insurance Co. of Boston) 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
Stone v. Franklin Fire Insurance Co. of Boston, 12 N.E. 45, 105 N.Y. 543, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 25, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 750 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Earl, J.

On or about the 18th day of February, 1881, the defendant issued a policy insuring certain property of the *546 Standard Tinware Company of the city of New York, to the amount of $1,500, for one year from the 16th day of February,. 1881. The policy contained this clause; “ To protect itself against such increase or change of the risk as may not, under the above conditions, render this policy void, the company reserves to itself the right at any time and for any cause to-return the assured the unexpired premium pro rata, which shall have the effect to cancel and annul this policy” And also the following clause; “ It is a part of this contract that, any person, other than the assured, who may have procured this insurance to be taken by this company, through its-regularly appointed agents, shall be deemed to be the agent of the assured named in this policy, and not of this company under any circumstances whatever, or in any transaction relating to this insurance.” The insurance was procured through an insurance broker named Frank from. Langford & Co., who-were agents of the defendant. The premium was never paid. But by the course of business between Langford & Co , and Frank, they allowed Frank to take insurance and pay when it-suited Ms convenience. On the twenty-sixth day of February, Langford & Co. sent to Frank this notice : “ Dear sir — The Franklin Insurance Company of Boston desire to cancel their policy No. 9190, covering property of Standard Tinware Company, Ños. 394 and 396 First avenue, New York. The same will be held binding until the twenty-eighth instant, twelve o’clock, noon. After said date the company will not be-liable for any loss under said policy. Yours respectfully.” This notice came to Frank’s hands about nine o’clock in the morning of the twenty-eighth, and in the evening of the same day the property insured was damaged by fire to the extent of $4,600. Six other insurance companies had policies upon the same property. On the 16th day of June, 1881, the Standard Tinware Company assigned its claim against the defendant upon its policy to the plaintiff, and in February 1882, he commenced this action. He claims that the policy was in force at the time of the fire, while the defendant claims that it-was effectually canceled before the fire.

*547 The plaintiff contends that the cancellation was ineffectual because at the time of the notice of cancellation a pro rata share of the premium was not returned. But the premium had never, in fact, been paid. If it could in any. sense be treated as paid, it was so paid by the credit given to the broker Frank. The defendant had never actually received anything, and, therefore, it had nothing to return. If the premium could be paid by the credit, so it could be restored by the cancellation of that credit, and after the defendant gave the notice canceling the policy, its charge against Frank or the Tinware Company was thereby canceled. If it could thereafter enforce payment of the premium ágainst anyone, ‘fit would have been only a pro rata share thereof for the time intervening between the sixteenth and the twenty-eighth days of February, at noon, when the cancellation took effect. It was the agreement between the parties to the insurance that the insurance company should have the right to cancel the policy, and it was certainly not contemplated that it should make a present to the insured, in case the premium had not been paid, as a condition of its right to cancel. We do not think, therefore, that the contention is sound that the cancellation was ineffectual on account of the non-return of the pro rata portion of the premium.

It is further claimed on behalf of the plaintiff that Frank had no authority to receive this notice of cancellation, and that notice to him was not notice to the insured. We are of opinion that, upon the undisputed evidence, Frank was so far the agent of the Tinware Company that notice to him was notice to that company. He had been the agent of the Tinware Company for about two years, through whom it procured insurance upon its property from various companies, in all, to the amount of $10,000. It does not appear that he received any particular instructions as to the companies from which he was to receive insurance or as to the rates of premium or the amount to be insured by any particular company. It is inferable that all these matters were •left to his discretion. After the fire, Scheider, the president *548 and general manager of the Tinware Company, did not know how much insurance the company had, nor what policies it held until he called upon Frank the morning after the fire and obtained the information from him. The defendant’s policy, and probably all the other policies remained in the possession of Frank until after the fire. Frank, when he received the notice of cancellation, retained the same and in no way objected that he was unauthorized to receive the notice, and when Scheider called upon him the next morning after the fire, he informed him of the receipt of the notice, and he in no way questioned Frank’s authority to receive it. On the afternoon of the same day, Langford, one of defendant’s agents, called upon Scheider, informed him that the policy was canceled, and thereupon Scheider surrendered it to him, without objection, as a canceled policy. On the day after the fire, formal notice of the loss, and in about two weeks after the fire formal proofs of loss were served upon all the other companies, but not upon the defendant. In the- proofs of loss thus served the insurances in the other six companies were specified, and the loss was apportioned among them in proportion to the amounts respectively insured by them, and one of the companies specified in the proofs paid to the Tinware Company its share of the loss as thus determined. In those proofs the defendant was not named among the insurance companies having policies upon the property. No claim of liability against the defendant on its policy was made until about three months after the fire, and no proofs of loss were served upon the defendant until about three months and a half after the fire. From all these facts, including the stipulation in the policy above set out, it is clear that Frank was understood by the parties to be the general agent of the Tinware Company to procure and deal with this insurance. During more than three months after the fire his authority to that extent seems to have been conceded by the Tinware Company and was not questioned by anyone. If upon this evidence the jury had found that Frank was not authorized to receive the notice, their verdict would have been so far *549 contrary to the evidence that it would have been the duty of the trial judge to set it aside.

It is true that Scheider testified that Frank was simply the broker whom he authorized to get so much insurance and that he did not consider him his agent, and that Frank testified that he had nothing to do “but to place the business” (meaning, probably, to perfect the insurance) as Scheider ordered him to do. But these were mere expressions of opinion by the witness while testifying, which in no way impaired the force and significance of the other evidence or changed its legal effect.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.E. 45, 105 N.Y. 543, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 25, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-franklin-fire-insurance-co-of-boston-ny-1887.