Stoner v. First American Fire Insurance

263 N.W. 46, 220 Iowa 984
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 1935
DocketNo. 43108.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 263 N.W. 46 (Stoner v. First American Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoner v. First American Fire Insurance, 263 N.W. 46, 220 Iowa 984 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

This case is brought to collect on a policy of fire insurance by J. H. Stoner, who claims as the owner of the property insured, and J. D. Raitt, who claims under a mortgage on the property insured.

It has been before this court twice before this, same title, the first time being reported in 215 Iowa 665, 246 N. W. 615, and the next time being reported in 218 Iowa 720, 253 N. W. 821.

The facts upon which it is based are that prior to April 25, 1931, one James M. Fadden was the -holder of the legal title to lots 43 and a part of 44 in the town of Prescott, Iowa. On that date he transferred the property by deed to J. H. Stoner, one of the plaintiffs herein, whose copartner, J. D. Raitt, held a $1,500 mortgage on the property. The insurance originated as follows: Raitt applied to R. F. Sullivan of Afton, Iowa, for insurance upon the building on the property. Sullivan, agent of the defendant, forwarded an application prepared by him for such insurance to the Chicago office of the appellant insurance company. The insurance company sent the policy insuring Fad-den against loss on the building to the amount of $4,500 to Sullivan, signed by the officers of the insurance company, and Sullivan countersigned it of date March 19, 1931. It was then mailed to Raitt.

Subsequently, Raitt took the policy to Sullivan to have an indorsement made to protect his interest under the mortgage. The policy was left with Sullivan, who sent it to the insurance company. The insurance company attached a “loss payable” clause, printed on a sheet of paper, to the policy, and returned it to Sullivan, who signed the “loss payable” clause and sent the policy to Raitt-. The signature of no officer of the company was affixed to the clause at the time it was sent to Sullivan, and *986 at the time it was returned to Raitt it contained the signature of Sullivan, of date April 30, 1931.

The question has been raised by the appellant as to the right of Sullivan to bind the company by so signing the “loss payable” clause. We think there is nothing in that question for the reason that Sullivan sent the policy to the company, accompanied by a letter, in evidence in the case, saying: ‘ ‘ Please attach a mortgage clause for $1500 in favor of J. D. Raitt, of Omaha, Nebraska, to the herewith enclosed policy, and oblige R. F. Sullivan, Agent.” The company defendant sent back to Sullivan the policy with the “loss payable” clause attached, but unsigned. In view of the contents of the letter, we think the attachment of this clause to the policy by the company, and sending it with the clause so attached to Sullivan, was a direction and an authority by the company for Sullivan to sign and deliver the same.

In all the transactions up to the time of the fire, Raitt, in procuring the insurance, and in all of the things, without question, represented Stoner. In other words, he was acting to protect the interest of himself in the mortgage, and the interest of Stoner as the owner of the legal title after Stoner became such owner. Whatever he did was because he was acting with Stoner’s consent and in Stoner’s place, and was binding on Stoner. Besides, Stoner testified on this trial in reference to these matters that Raitt, his copartner, handled the deal for him in all particulars in his purchase of the Prescott property.

Subsequent to the attachment of the “loss payable” clause Raitt told Sullivan of the transfer of the property from Fadden to Stoner, and had at the time with him the policy with the signature of Fadden to the “assignment of interest” clause on the policy. The blank spaces left for the insertion of the names of the interested parties had not been filled in. Raitt asked Sullivan to take care of the policy to protect Stoner’s interest in the policy. Sullivan, in the presence of Raitt, filled in the ‘ ‘ assignment of interest” clause, and signed the consent of assignment, which was printed on the policy, and handed the policy to Raitt, and says he told Raitt before that it should be sent to Chicago. All this was done on the 18th day of May, 1931. Sullivan never notified the insurance company of this situation. June 1, 1931, the insured building was .totally destroyed by fire. Formal proof of loss was never furnished to the insurance company. *987 This is immaterial tinder the present issues in the case, for under the issues as they stand now the defendant waived the formal proof of loss. The insured property was encumbered by another mortgage prior to Raitt’s, which was in the process of being foreclosed.

In the first case, reported in 215 Iowa, at page 665, 246 N. W. 615, it was held that plaintiff, as assignee, before loss of a policy of fire insurance, has the burden, in the case of loss and action on the policy, to show that the insurer consented to’ the assignment. If the consent is in the form of a writing signed by a purported agent of the insurer the assignee must show, if the agent was a soliciting agent, the agent’s authority. Of course, the insurer may negative such showing of authority.

In the second case in this court, reported in 218 Iowa 720, 253 N. W. 821, there was introduced in evidence as bearing upon the authority of Sullivan, the request of the defendant to the commissioner of insurance of the state of Iowa, for a license for R. F. Sullivan, of Afton, as its agent. The body of the request, was as follows: ‘ ‘ Farmers of Cedar Rapids Department of the First American Fire Insurance Company of New York, State of New York, hereby certifies that the above named, a resident of Iowa, is a qualified and reliable individual of good character and has been appointed agent for the transaction of its authorized business of Insurance in the State of Iowa until the first day of April, 1931.” The court held that certain exhibits were admissible for the purpose of showing Sullivan was the company’s agent. The trial court instructed the jurors they might take the exhibits into consideration in determining Sullivan’s scope of power. This court then said, 218 Iowa 720, on page 724, 253 N. W. 821, 823, on appeal:

“We have reached the conclusion that the exhibits were admissible only for the purpose of establishing that Sullivan was an agent of the company and that they were neither relevant nor material to the question of Sullivan’s power as agent. The requests are made upon forms provided by the commissioner of insurance, and were used to procure a license for Sullivan in compliance with the law. To have any relevancy to the question of Sullivan’s power, the request must be construed to be a statement by the company that Sullivan had been appointed agent for the transaction of any and all of its author *988 izecl business in the State of Iowa. We think the language used and the circumstances under which it was used preclude such construction. In this situation, it would be little short of a perversion of the law to admit the exhibits in evidence as bearing upon the question of the scope of the agent’s power, or to permit the jury to consider the exhibits in passing upon that question. ’ ’

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCornack v. Pickrell
2 N.W.2d 57 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1942)
Wilson v. Findley
275 N.W. 47 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 N.W. 46, 220 Iowa 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoner-v-first-american-fire-insurance-iowa-1935.