Sun Ins. Office, Limited v. Thomas

90 S.W.2d 675, 262 Ky. 516, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 791
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 3, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 675 (Sun Ins. Office, Limited v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Ins. Office, Limited v. Thomas, 90 S.W.2d 675, 262 Ky. 516, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 791 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees

Reversing.

The appellee, John G. Thomas, recovered a judgment for $2,000 against the Sun Insurance Office, Limited, on an insurance contract, and the company has appealed.

The appellee owned a lumberyard in Owenton, Ky,, and just prior to May 3, 1933, the building, machinery, and materials thereon were insured for the sum of $26,750. He had been engaged in the lumber business since 1923, and had carried insurance on the building and its contents and the lumber on the lot in amounts ranging from $20,000 to, $10,000, the amount of the insurance changing as the value and amount of materials on hand decreased or increased.

On May 3, 1932, the Great American Insurance Company through its local agent, Harry Duvall, issued to appellee its policy for $2,000. This policy covered only personal property and expired on May 3, 1933. Before its expiration, Harry Duvall ceased to act as the local agent for the company, and the agency was transferred to J. B. Wilson. On the day the policy •expired, Wilson informed appellee that he was tten representing the Great American Insurance Compimy and requested that he be permitted to issue a policy for $2,000 for the year beginning May 3, 1933. Appellee accepted a policy in the Great American Insurance Company issued by J. B. Wilson, its new a vent. The policy was for the same amount and covered ihe same property as the expired .policy. On May 6, 1933, three days after the policy .was issued, the insured *518 building and its contents were destroyed by fire. Tbe insurance policies on tbe property bad been issued by four local agents. On tbe morning after tbe fire, appellee requested J. B. Wilson to make a list of tbe, policies in force, and pursuant to that request Wilson visited all of tbe agencies tbrougb wbicb policies bad been issued and found that tbe insurance in force amounted to $28,750. This included a policy for $2,000 of tbe Sun Insurance Office, Limited, issued on May 3, 3933, by Harry Duvall, its agent. Tbe policy bad not been delivered to appellee, but was in a safe in Duvall’s office. A few days after tbe fire, appellant’s state agent went to Owenton and obtained possession of tbe policy from Duvall. The company denied liability on the ground that tbe policy was issued by its agent and kept in bis office without tbe knowledge of John G. Thomas, and without any request by tbe latter liiat tbe agent procure a policy continuing tbe insurance expiring on May 3, 1933. This action was then instituted by Thomas to recover tbe face value of tbe policy, and tbe case having been submitted to tbe court without tbe intervention of a jury, judgment was entered for tbe plaintiff in tbe sum of $2,000.

Tbe plaintiff alleged in bis petition that the defendant issued to him tbe policy in consideration of tbe sum of $21, tbe annual premium, wbicb be paid to tbe local agent. At tbe trial tbe plaintiff admitted that be bad not specifically requested Duvall to issue tbe policy in question, and did not know it bad been issued until inquiries were made of tbe local agent on tbe day after tbe fire. He bad not paid tbe premium wr.en tbe fire occurred, but paid it to the agent several weeks later. He based bis right to recover solely on instructions be claimed be bad given Duvall that tbe latter should keep in force all insurance carried by him for tbe plaintiff unless notified to decrease or increase it. He testified that when be accepted the policy for $2,000 in tbe Great American Insurance Company, issued by J. B. Wilson, its agent, on May 3, 1933, it was with the intention to increase bis ¡insurance to that extent, and that he expected Duvall, who bad issued tbe expiring policy a year previously, to follow bis instructions and issue a policy for the same amount in some company represented by him.

Tbe principal question presented on this appeal is whether or not there is sufficient evidence tending to *519 show that such an understanding existed between appellee and Duvall to sustain the chancellor’s finding.

Appellant argues that no more than a mere custom of the insurance agent to renew appellee’s expiring policies is shown, and that this alone is not sufficient to fasten liability upon it in the absence of a request by the appellee that the policy be issued or acceptance by him of the policy before the fire occurred. The evidence, however, shows more than a mere custom on the part of the agent to renew expiring policies which he had issued to the appellee. Mr. Thomas testified that he had frequently instructed Duvall to keep in force the policies which had been issued by him, and to maintan his insurance at the amount represented by these policies until he was specifically instructed, to alter the amount. Duvall testified that appellee had instructed him to keep in force all policies issued by him, and that his books showed that a policy issued by him in the Great American Insurance Company expired on May 3, 1933, and since he no longer represented that company he, on that day, issued the policy in question for the same amount as the expiring policy and on the same property.

It is argued that plaintiff at no time instructed Duvall to keep in force any specific amount of insurance, but at most merely directed him to continue the insurance carried by him at the time the instruction was given, and the burden being on plaintiff to show that the amount in force through Duvall at the time of the fire was less than the amount when the instruction was given, unless the policy in question is included, the plaintiff must fail, since there is no evidence on this point. We do not so understand the evidence. The testimony of the plaintiff on this point is clear. He testified that he increased or decreased the amount of insurance from time to time accordingly as the value of materials on hand changed, but under the agreement with Duvall the latter was “to keep my insurance whatever the amount, to keep that in force unless I gave him instructions to cancel or increase.” Duvall testified to the same effect. Thus the amount to be kept in force by the agent was the amount carried by him from time to time, and upon the expirhtion of any policy which had been issued by him it was his duty to issue a new policy for the same amount up *520 on the same property. The selection of the insurer was left to the agent. The agreement did not require him to issue the new policy in the same company which issued the expiring policy, hut it merely contemplated that the policy would he issued by some company represented by him. The failure of" the agent to deliver the policy to Mr. Thomas before the fire, and the nonpayment of the premium before that time, did not render the policy ineffective. Duvall had issued two policies on the same property to Mr. Thomas in other companies, and these policies had not been delivered at the time of the fire. The evidence shows that it was the custom of Duvall and Thomas to make a settlement once or twice a year when the premiums on policies issued by Duvall since the last settlement were paid and the policies were delivered.

In Girard F. & M. Ins. Co. v. Anglo-American Mill Co., 220 Ky. 173, 294 S. W. 1035, 1038, the court in discussing a similar question said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 675, 262 Ky. 516, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-ins-office-limited-v-thomas-kyctapphigh-1935.