Strangio v. Consolidated Indemnity & Ins. Co.

66 F.2d 330, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2639
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 24, 1933
Docket7013
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 330 (Strangio v. Consolidated Indemnity & Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strangio v. Consolidated Indemnity & Ins. Co., 66 F.2d 330, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2639 (9th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree canceling a policy of public liability insurance issued by the appellee upon an automobile owned by the appellants Fred and Tom Strangio.

The application for the policy of insurance was made by Tom Strangio to Emile L. Matthias, in Stockton, Cal., where they resided, on the morning of Saturday, October 18, 1930. At that time Strangio asked Matthias to procure public liability insurance on three certain automobiles, including the Sludebaker automobile here involved. Matthias was then a clerk for the Southern Pacific Company, and for four or five years previously “had been sending applications to the Netherlands [Insurance Company] for insurance.” The Netherlands had its office in San Francisco. Matthias was not licensed to act as an insurance agent in October, 1930; his license, according to his testimony, having expired in Juno of that year. A deputy insurance commissioner testified that Matthias “was not licensed as a broker during 1930 and 1931 and was not licensed for the complainant [the appellee] corporation during 1930 and 1931.” Matthias had previously placed insurance on the car in question, through the Netherlands Company, the same having expired in the spring or early summer of 1930.

Matthias mailed a “daily report” covering the insurance requested by Strangio to the Netherlands Company on the following morning, Sunday, October 19. This report requested that the date of the policy be fixed to commence as of noon, October 18, 1930. An application sent in by the Netherlands on one of the appellee’s forms contained the same stipulation.

About 2 :30 o’clock on the afternoon of Sunday, October' 19, 1930, the Studebaker car for which the insurance was requested, while being driven in Stockton by John Strangio, with the consent of Tom Strangio, collided with a machine operated by James C. Bensehoter, injuring Bensehoter and darnag *332 ing his car, and injuring Harold Leslie, a passenger in Bensehoter’s ear.

Bensehoter • and Leslie recovered judgments against the Strangios in the state court for the injuries received in the accident. Their judgments remaining unsatisfied, they were granted leave to intervene in this suit, and have joined the Strangios in this appeal.

Matthias was notified of the collision with Benschoter’s car on the same afternoon, about 3:30 o’clock, Sunday, October 19, by Tom Strangio. On the morning of October 21, 1930, Matthias mailed a letter to the Netherlands Insurance Company reporting the accident, and the letter was received at the Netherlands office on October 22.

Meantime, on the morning of Monday, October 20, the Netherlands Company received the application for insurance on the Strangio ears from Matthias. Since the Netherlands Company did not write public liability insurance, it telephoned to the appellee and requested the latter to issue the policies of insurance. Appellee did so on October 21, specifying a period beginning at 12: 01 a. m., October 18, as requested in the application.

Upon learning that the car covered had been involved in an accident on October 19, the appellee gave notice of cancellation of the policy of insurance thereon, and commenced and successfully prosecuted a suit in equity to rescind and cancel the insurance.

The appellee’s complaint alleged that the appellants Strangio concealed the fact of the accident from the appellee, and that “had said defendants communicated said facts to complainant at any time before the issuance of said policy, the complainant would not have issued said policy.”

The answer denied the complaint’s allegar tions of “fraud, deceit and concealment.”

The lower court entered a decree declaring the policy to have been “procured by fraud and concealment,” and adjudging it to be null and void.

It appears that the Netherlands Company did not write public liability insurance, but the appellee company did, and there was an agreement between the two companies that public liability insurance applications received by the Netherlands Company would, if acceptable to the appellee, be turned over to, and written by, the appellee. With reference to this agreement, Mr. Gorham, the superintendent of the Netherlands Company, testified that in April or May of 1930 he had a conversation with Mr. Deasy, the manager of the appellee company; that “the purpose of the conversation was to place the public liability insurance which my company cannot write, and which was given to us by our agents or brokers. I asked Mr. Deasy if the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company would be open for such business as we might offer them. I told him that the business was public liability insurance where the assured would want public liability, property damage, fire, theft and collision insurance on automobiles. I said we would write the fire, theft and collision and that the property damage and liability would be placed with them, if acceptable, and that we would phone them as it came to our office. He agreed to the proposition. I did not ask him to act as broker for his company or agent for the company. I just asked him if he would take the business we offered. We agreed my company would get the regular broker’s commission.

“Afterwards the manager of my company approved of the arrangement and policies were placed with the Netherlands Insurance Company under this arrangement, they paying us a commission on the premium. We always phoned this business to the Consolidated Indemnity and Insurance Company and they would send us the policy if acceptable to them, after which we would mail it to our broker or agent. * * * I do not "recall that the Consolidated ever rejected any such insurance that we applied to them for over the telephone, but they did reject them later.”

Mr. Deasy, of the appellee company, testified : “We talked about the matter — talked about it from the standpoint of underwriting and from the standpoint of remuneration— what it would pay the Netherlands Insurance Company as brokers on such business, and I indicated to Mr. Gorham that I was interested in such business but that it must be underwritten and entirely controlled by our own office and that we would have to have the full direction and control of our underwriters. Mr. Gorham said that that was acceptable to his company and that he was only interested in the service which my company could give his company. We then spoke of the brokerage remuneration to be paid them and when that was agreed to the arrangement went into effect. In the course of this conversation I told Mr. Gorham that it was impossible to allow the Netherlands Insurance Company to issue cover notes in our behalf. After this conversation the arrangement went into effect. The Netherlands Insurance Company offered us insurance from time to time and *333 we generally accepted it, though some was rejected after investigation.”

Appellants contend that the Netherlands Company was a,n agent of the appellee company, with power to bind it, and that the knowledge of Matthias, the agent of the Netherlands Company, was the knowledge of the Netherlands Company, a,nd therefore the knowledge of the appellee company; hence Matthias having knowledge of the accident prior to the issuance of the policy, his knowledge was the knowledge of the appellee, and there was therefore no concealment.

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Bluebook (online)
66 F.2d 330, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strangio-v-consolidated-indemnity-ins-co-ca9-1933.