Young v. Newark Fire Insurance

22 A. 32, 59 Conn. 41, 1890 Conn. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 22 A. 32 (Young v. Newark Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Newark Fire Insurance, 22 A. 32, 59 Conn. 41, 1890 Conn. LEXIS 3 (Colo. 1890).

Opinion

Fenn, J.

This is an action brought to recover upon a fire insurance policy on a stock of merchandise. The complaint alleged the plaintiffs’ ownership ; the execution of the policy by the defendant in consideration of a premium paid; a fire; the filing of proof of loss; and that the defendant had failed to pay. The answer is as follows :—

“ The defendant admits all the allegations contained in the plaintiffs’ complaint.
“First Defense. On the ninth day of March, 1888, the plaintiffs applied to an agent of the defendant, at Hartford, Connecticut, for insurance on the property described in said [44]*44policy, and said agent thereupon executed and delivered the said policy to the plaintiffs, upon the condition that said policy should not become effective and in force until it was approved by the proper officers of said company at the home office thereof, at Newark, New Jersey, and said policy was received on ‘said condition ; afterwards, on the 13th day of March, 1888, the said officers, at the home office, refused to approve said-issue of said policy, and the said agent of the defendant so notified the plaintiffs, and notified them that said policy was null and void, and demanded the return of the same, which was refused.”

There was a further defense, but it was afterwards abandoned. The plaintiffs’ reply denied the allegation of the first defense, thus forming a single and distinct issue. The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, and from the judgment rendered thereon the defendant appeals.

The defendant on the trial, upon the pleadings, claimed the right to begin, and to open and close the argument. The court overruled this claim, and permitted the plaintiffs to go forward in evidence and argument. Of this the defendant complains, and not without good reason as we think.

The court charged the jury “ that all the allegations of the complaint were admitted by the pleadings, and that the burden of proof was upon the defendant to make out its defense by a preponderance of evidence.” This the defendant admitted and claimed, and it is undoubtedly correct and in plain conformity with the provisions of section 6, part 3, of the Rules under the Practice Act, on page 16 of the volume containing the act, by which it clearly appears that such a defense as the defendant interposed could not have been proved under either a general or special denial of the complaint, but required to be specially alleged. That notwithstanding this the court should have denied the defendant the right claimed appears to us to have been in direct contravention of section 3 of part 3 of the General Rules of Practice, which provides that “the counsel in support of the affirmative of an issue of fact will be entitled to begin the [45]*45trial, and to open and close the argument.” But, although the provisions of General Statutes, § 772, give to such rules the force of statutes, yet, as this court in Scott v. Hull, 8 Conn., 303, and Weed’s Appeal from Probate, 35 Conn., 455, has treated this matter as one resting exclusively in the discretion of the trial court, for which error will not lie, and as a new trial must be granted in this case for other and more important reasons, we prefer not to determine now whether this has ceased to be a pure matter of discretion, or whether, if it remains such, there is not a limit, the transgression of which would justify the interposition of this court. We cannot conceive that, upon a new trial of this issue, the court below will again refuse the defendant a privilege to which we think he is so manifestly entitled.

The policy described in the complaint contained this provision, being paragraph 5, section 1:—“ If any broker, or other person than the assured, have procured this policy, or any renewal thereof, or any indorsement thereon, he shall be deemed to be the agent of the assured, and not of this company, in any transaction relating to the insurance.” The defendant, as the record states, “ offered evidence to prove that one Frazier, a member of the firm of Webster & Co., who were general insurance agents in Hartford, applied to one Dillingham, who was the general agent of the defendant in Connecticut, to procure the policy in question for the plaintiffs, and that it was agreed between Dillingham and Frazier that the policy should not take effect and be a binding policy until the risk was accepted at the home office of the defendant in Newark, New Jersey, and that the policy was delivered upon such condition ; that the defendant company refused to accept the risk, and that notice thereof was given to Webster & Co. within a few days after the date of the policy, and that they were requested to re-deliver the policy to Dillingham, as never having become binding; and the defendant claimed that, by force of that provision in the policy, Webster & Co. and Frazier, in applying to Dillingham to write the policy, were the agents of the plaintiffs, and that any agreement made with them by Dillingham in [46]*46relation to the delivery of the policy, and as to when it should become a valid and binding policy, was binding upon the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs in reply offered evidence to prove that no such agreement was ever made, and that they had no knowledge of any claim that the policy was not valid until long after the fire took place.” The plaintiffs further claimed that, upon the law and facts, Webster & Co. and Frazier were not their agents, but should be considered as agents of the defendant, and in support of this claim the plaintiffs offered the deposition of Frazier, in which the following question and answer, which were objected to by the defendant, were contained:—Question. “ In placing these policies, did you act as agent of George Y. Young & Co., or as the agent of Dillingham or the companies he represented?” Answer. “We acted as the agent of the insurance companies, and George Y. Young & Co. were no wiser as to whether these companies were represented by us or not. They did not know any more about it than you did.”

As it was not claimed that the plaintiffs personally knew of the condition upon which, as it was alleged, the policy was delivered, or that notice that the defendant company declined to accept the risk ever actually reached them, the question whether Frazier was the agent of the plaintiffs or of the defendant became vital. This was a question of law, depending on the facts in the case, and'the answer made by Frazier, so far as it was responsive, undertook to state no facts, but onty the conclusion of the witness. This was clearly inadmissible.

But the most important question concerns the construction and effect of the clause referred to in the policy. Upon this point the defendant requested the court to charge the jury as follows :—

“1. Under paragraph 5, section 1, of the policy, if the jury find that Webster & Co. procured this policy from Dillingham for the plaintiffs, then Webster & Co. were the agents of the plaintiffs and not of the defendant, and their acts and knowledge were the acts and knowledge of the plaintiffs in relation to this policy.
[47]*47“ 2. If the jury find that the policy was delivered to Webster & Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 A. 32, 59 Conn. 41, 1890 Conn. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-newark-fire-insurance-conn-1890.