Strait v. Ray North, Inc.

72 N.W.2d 39, 343 Mich. 130
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1955
DocketDocket 40, Calendar 46,513
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 N.W.2d 39 (Strait v. Ray North, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strait v. Ray North, Inc., 72 N.W.2d 39, 343 Mich. 130 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

This is an appeal by defendants Secured Casualty Insurance Company, originally designated as Secured Casualty Insurance Corporation, and Edward Pfalz, doing business as Pfalz and McGraw, from a decree of specific performance holding valid and binding an undelivered policy of insurance for the protection of the plaintiff, Marvin T. Strait, and ordering Secured Casualty Insurance Company to perform each and every provision of said policy.

On May 15, 1952, Bobby F. Easley, 18 years of age, was informed by Mr.. Perkey, salesman for Bay North, Inc., that his company could not sell Easley a new Ford car and arrange to finance same because Easley was not 21 years of age. Easley brought his friend Marvin Strait, 30 years of age, *132 to the Ford agency, at Perkey’s suggestion that he • get someone over 21 to take title to the car. Strait -informed Perkey that he owned a car and was not, therefore, interested in another and that if he took • title the real owner and operator of the car would be Easley; that he was assured by Easley that he would keep up the payments, but that he (Strait) did not want to have anything to do with the transaction unless he was sure that the car was fully covered by insurance. Perkey informed Strait that ■he could and would take care of the insurance, and computed from a book in his possession the insurance charge. Easley paid $713.97 in cash, leaving a balance of $1,650. To this amount was added $182.-24 finance charges and $172.00 for fire and theft, deductible collision, public liability and property damage insurance. Perkey took a statement from Strait in regard to his income, employer, property possessed, references, et cetera, and it is conceded that all questions asked were answered fully and truthfully by Strait. In fact, there is no claim that Strait ever directly or indirectly endeavored to deceive any of the defendants.

Ray North, Inc., was furnished with chattel mortgage forms containing both the names of Wabeek State Bank and Motor Car Contract. Harry Fearl ‘had also supplied North with a rate book so that the corporation could "determine the premium, and include that amount in the total covered by the chattel mortgage. Under this arrangement the purchaser did not make á written application for insurance, and none was made in this case.

Perkey prepared á chattel mortgage providing for 24 monthly payments at $83.51 each and plaintiff Strait signed it. On May 16, 1952, this chattel mortgage was assigned to Motor Car Contract, 'which company -was' owned by defendant Harry Fearl. ■ ...

*133 The paper passed through the clearing house drawn with a draft upon Motor Car Contract. The bank received the paper on May 23, 1952. Fearl went to the bank on that date, and Fearl testified that was the first notice he had ■ that there was a Marvin Strait deal. In completing this transaction, as he had numerous other transactions of a similar nature, Fearl testified :

“This paper comes in through the clearing house drawm on my company the Motor Car Contract.
“Q. And before anything further takes place you issue your check to the Wabeek State Bank for the draft, isn’t that true?
, “A. The transaction is completed that day in the bank whereby the bank writes up that slip tabulating all the mortgages and they give me a complete tape of all the mortgages and I sign the mortgages and give them a check. .
“I issue a check to pay the amount. The full amount to .go on the draft. At that point I own these papers.
“Q. And thereupon you assign them over to the bank and then what happens, does the bank then credit your account with the amount that they pay you to purchase these papers?
“A. To be technical they could credit it before and they have made out the bank deposit slips andi all this procedure is done before I am ever in there to sign it. They complete the operation and I am in there to finish it.”

Fearl was an agent fór and represented the defendant Secured Casualty Insurance Corporation. He was also a duly authorized and licensed finance company doing business as Motor Car Contract. The insurance company relied Upon the information Fearl sent to them in issuing policies.

Appellant Secured Casualty "Insurance Corporation is' a foreign corporation with its main office in Indianapolis, with a branch office in Detroit. This *134 Detroit branch was operated, by the general agents Pfalz and McG-raw, who represented the company through agents rather than dealing directly with the public.

Pearl had a working arrangement with the Wabeek State Bank and numerous automobile dealers, and such working arrangement was known to Pfalz and McG-raw. Pearl testified:

“I explained my method of operation to the representative of Pfalz and McGraw. I took Ed Pfalz over to the Wabeek Bank and introduced him to Mr. Sly vain (in charge of the department financing automobiles). He was aware of the whole deal.”

Pearl also testified:

“When I took Mr. Pfalz over to the Wabeek Bank and had him go over with me and Mr. Slyvain the method by which I got these applications, he didn’t disapprove of it. He was aware of the fact that this information was what I used to pass on to him for the application.”

This working arrangement between Pearl, the Wabeek Bank, and the dealers, not only provided that Pearl would write the insurance on cars that were financed, but that cars would be insured from the moment the dealer placed the customer in possession. Under this arrangement Pearl not only obtained commission on the insurance premium, but also a discount commission on the transaction between the dealer and the bank.

That this so-called general working arrangement between Pearl, the Wabeek Bank, and the dealers, applied to Ray North, Inc., is evidenced by the following testimony of Pearl:

“Q. You have no agreement with Ray North?
“A. I have a working agreement with the Wabeek Bank and their contact man makes the deal with Ray North.
*135 “Q. I asked you if you had any agreement.
“A. I have tallied with Ray North.
“Q. In regard to the type of transactions ?
“A. Let’s say yes but I went to Ray North with the bank representative.
“Q. And you worked out this system of dealings ?
“A. We very likely completed the deal to handle all of those transactions.” .

Fearl testified that when checking over the papers he noticed that while Strait was 30 years of age the premium charged was at an increased rate as provided for in class 2 insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.W.2d 39, 343 Mich. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strait-v-ray-north-inc-mich-1955.