Sussex County Mutual Insurance v. Woodruff

26 N.J.L. 541
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 N.J.L. 541 (Sussex County Mutual Insurance v. Woodruff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sussex County Mutual Insurance v. Woodruff, 26 N.J.L. 541 (N.J. 1857).

Opinions

[543]*543The opinion of the court was delivered by

The Chancellor.

This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court. It brings up for our review a large number of exceptions, which were taken during the progress of the trial before a jury at the Circuit. Many of these exceptions wore not relied upon on the argument here. I shall notice only such of them particularly as were most prominently presented for our consideration by counsel.

The action is one of covenant, brought upon a lost policy of insurance. It was necessary, in order to enable the plaintiff to maintain his action, to prove, first, the execution and delivery of the policy; and, second, that the policy was lost; then it would be competent for him to prove the contents of the policy, or to give a copy of it in evidence.

After having produced several witnesses for the purpose of proving these preliminary matters, the plaintiff offered in evidence a copy of the alleged lost policy of insurance, “ to which the defendants, by their counsel, objected, on the ground that there was not sufficient proof of search for and of the loss of the original policy of insurance, if one was issued, to justify the reception of a copy; but the court, held and decided the proof of such loss was sufficient, and allowed the said draft to be offered in evidence to the jury, to which decision and ruling of the court the defendants prayed a bill of exceptions.”

It will be perceived that this exception brings up the single question, whether there was sufficient evidence of the loss of the policy. We must assume that the evidence satisfactorily established the execution and delivery of the policy; because the objection to the admission of the copy was not on the ground of the want of sufficient proof of the original. The objection was confined to a want of proof of the loss of the original. The secretary had testified that he had no reason to doubt that the policy was issued and sent. He said he did not deliver it to the plaintiff personally; and how he sent it he was unable to state.

[544]*544The plaintiff was then himself sworn, and testified that the policy had never come into his hands; that he had never received it; that he had searched for it among his papers, and that he had no such paper in his custody or under his control. This evidénce was, I think, sufficient to establish the loss of the policy; and that the judge was therefore right in his decision upon that point. The object of the proof is merely to establish a reasonable presumption of the loss of the instrument, and it is a preliminary inquiry addressed to the discretion of the iudge. 1 Greenl., § 558.

In connection with this exception may be properly considered an exception taken to the charge of the judge to the jury relating to the execution • and delivery of the policy.

Whitfield Johnson had testified that the plaintiff, together with his counsel, had called at the office of the witness, after the fire, to inquire for the policy; that witness had informed them that he supposed the policy had been issued and sent. He further testified that he had no particular reason to doubt that the policy was made out and issued.

E. W. Whelpley, Esq., the counsel who accompanied the plaintiff to Mr. Johnson, testified that he went with the plaintiff for the purpose of ascertaining where the policy was, in order to determine what form of action to institute. He testified that-Mr. Johnson said to them, several times, that he had either sent the policy to the plaintiff by mail or by private hand; he thought by mail. There was much other evidence to the same purport.

The judge charged the jury as follows: “If you believe, from the weight of the testimony, that Mr. Johnson, the acknowledged and acting agent of the company, so answered Mr. Whelpley and Dr. Woodruff as fairly to lead them to believe that a policy had been executed and sent out of the office for Dr. Woodruff, such declaration is conclusive against the company upon the question of [545]*545the execution and legal delivery of the instrument. They cannot, on this trial, repudiate the representations of Mr. Johnson, if made as contended for by the plaintiff.”

In support of the exception to this part of the charge, it was insisted that the defendants below were not bound by the declarations made tó Mr. Woodruff and his counsel in reference to the issuing of the policy.

Mr. Johnson was the secretary of the company. It was his duty to receive the premium notes, to attend to the making out and execution of the policies of insurance, and to deliver the policies, when perfected, to the insured. He was the authorized agent to whom it was proper for the defendant in error to apply for his policy. To him application was made, and at the time of the application, it was the duty of Mr. Johnson, as the agent of (he company, to perform the act, for his principal, of delivering the policy to the defendant in error. That act, at that time, would have bound the principal. His declarations respecting the subject matter were admissible as evidence against his principal, and binding, so far as they referred to the act which he was authorized to perform. They come within the well-settled rule, “where the acts of the agent will bind the principal, there his representations, declarations, and admissions respecting the subject matter will also bind him, if made at the same time, and constituting part of the res gestee.” 1 Greenleaf, § 112; Story on Agency, § 134 — 137. The court was therefore right in charging the jury that the company was bound by the representations made by Mr. Johnson to the defendant in error and his counsel respecting the execution and delivery of the policy. I think he was right in instructing the jury, that such representations were conclusive against the company, and estopped them from denying their truth. Chapman v. Searle, administrator, 3 Pick. 38 ; Harding v. Carter, cited in Chapman v. Searle, administrator, and in Park on Ins. (7th ed.) 4 ; First Baptist Church in Brooklyn v. Brooklyn Fire Ins. Co., 18 Barb. 79.

[546]*546The declarations of the agent, when admitted iu evidence,. are the declarations of the principal. They are binding upon him to the same extent. They are conclusive as to the fact admitted, if the admission of the same fact by the principal would - have been conclusive against him. It is admitted that it was competent for the plaintiff to prove, by the declarations of Mr. Johnson, that the policy was issued and executed. Upon the faith of those declarations, the plaintiff brought his suit. Can it be that it was competent for the defendants to prove that the declarations of their agent were untrue, or were made by mistake, and thus, by the misconduct or carelessness of their own agent, appertaining to a duty which devolved upon him, deprive the plaintiff of the benefit of his suit, turn him out of-court, and subject him to the costs of a suit which was induced by the acts of their own agent? If the declarations of a principal are his own, (and upon that principle alone are they admissible at law) then to permit these defendants to repudiate those declarations, is permitting them to take advantage of their own wrong. It; is permitting them to commit a fraud. If no policy was in fact issued, the defendants ought to bear the responsibility and suffer the consequences of the deception, or mistake, of their agent.

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Bluebook (online)
26 N.J.L. 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sussex-county-mutual-insurance-v-woodruff-nj-1857.