93 N.Y. 495 | NY | 1883
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *497 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *499 We are precluded by the findings of the court below from reviewing any questions which have been determined upon conflicting evidence, or upon those inferences which may reasonably be drawn from the facts proved on the trial. Of such a character was the question now raised as to the sufficiency of the notice to the defendant of the loss of the property insured.
The court below have, upon sufficient evidence of the fact, found that proofs of said loss were given to the defendant in accordance with the requirements of the policy, and such finding is conclusive upon us as to the existence of that fact.
The defendant excepted to the exclusion by the court of a question addressed to its secretary as to "what was Jacoby's authority as agent of the company." This question was objected to by the plaintiff and was properly excluded by the court.
The authority of the agent could be properly proved only by the production of the power of attorney issued to him by the company upon his appointment, or by a resolution of the defendant's board of directors, under which agents were *501 employed by them and prescribing their powers and duties. The question called simply for the opinion of the witness as to the extent of the agent's powers, without showing the source of his knowledge on the subject, and this, under elementary rules, was inadmissible.
The defendant also excepted to the exclusion by the court of evidence of incumbrances existing upon the property insured at the time the insurance was applied for. This evidence was claimed to be material upon the ground that the policy provided that if the insured property "shall be incumbered by mortgage, judgment or otherwise, it must be so represented to the company in the application, otherwise the policy shall be void," and the further claim that such incumbrances were not disclosed on the application for insurance filed with the company. At the time this evidence was offered, it appeared affirmatively that the plaintiff had never made or authorized a written application for this insurance, and it did not appear but that in his oral application to the agent he had disclosed the existence of every incumbrance constituting a lien upon the property insured. Under these circumstances we do not think the existence of such incumbrances would have constituted a breach of the conditions in the policy. The fact that the defendant's agent had himself made out and forwarded a written application for such insurance to his principal, without the knowledge or consent of the insured, and that the policy which afterward came into the plaintiff's hands referred to an application generally, without disclosing its contents or character, was not such an adoption and ratification of the act of the agent in drawing up and sending the application to the defendant as bound the plaintiff by the statements therein contained. (Ames v. N.Y. Union Ins. Co.,
It is essential to the validity of an act which is claimed to have been authorized by a subsequent ratification thereof, that the principal should have had full knowledge of the circumstances *502 attending the performance of the act of the assumed agent at the time of such ratification.
In this case the plaintiff might very well have supposed that the clause in the policy, if he read it at all, referred only to the previous parol application for insurance made by himself in which he claimed to have disclosed to the agent all of the incumbrances existing against the property insured.
The facts in this case certainly do not present a question of law by which we can say that the plaintiff intended to ratify the previously unauthorized act of the agent.
Having thus noticed such of the other points raised upon the argument as are of sufficient importance to merit attention, we come to the principal question argued by the appellant.
It is claimed that subsequent to the issue of the policy, such transfers of the title to the property insured had been made by the owners, without the consent of the defendant, that certain clauses in the policy had been violated, and by reason thereof it had become forfeited and avoided. It may be premised that the transfer of the title of property insured under a policy prohibiting such transfer does not operate ipso facto to annul and destroy the policy, but simply confers upon the defendant the right to have it declared void by raising that question at the proper time if it should eventually elect so to do. Thus it was said by Judge EARL in Titus v. Glens Falls Ins. Co. (
The final transfer of this property to the plaintiff occurred in October, 1872, and at that time, through its agent at Seneca Falls, the defendant consented to an assignment of the policy of insurance to the plaintiff, by its then owner, who was not the original party insured. The defendant had immediate notice of this transfer and consent, and made no objection thereto until after the loss occurred, which was a year subsequent to such notice. This act was the act of the company, for the agent was expressly authorized to consent to such transfers, and thus the defendant then dealt with the policy as an existing contract.
We are also of the opinion that the defendant was bound upon receipt of the notice of this assignment to immediately repudiate the act of the agent in giving such consent if it supposed he had acted without authority, or it must be held *504 liable for the power he assumed to possess, upon the ground that it has acquiesced therein and authorized the plaintiff to rely thereon. It had no right to remain silent and suffer the insured to lay by and forego other insurance upon his property and subject him to the hazard of eventual loss upon the assumption, which he was authorized from its silence to indulge, that the act of the agent was approved by it, and that there still remained in him, notwithstanding these various transfers, a valid insurance upon his property.
Upon well-settled principles it cannot be allowed to assume a different position from that ascribed to it, and which from its silence it has authorized another to believe it occupies, to the detriment of such person.
But we are also of the opinion that upon other grounds this objection to the recovery was not available to the defendant. The uncontradicted evidence showed two if not three transfers of the title of the property insured subsequent to the making of the contract of insurance, but it also shows that the first and last of such transfers were accompanied by assignments of the policy in question to the respective grantees under the conveyances, which assignments were authorized by the agent of the company, who had been invested, according to the terms of the policy, with express power to give such consent.
It is claimed by the defendant that the authority conferred upon the agent to consent to an assignment of the policy gave him no power to authorize any transfer of the title to the property insured to its purchaser. This claim is sought to be supported by a clause in the contract reading as follows: "If, without the written consent of the company first had and obtained, the said property shall be sold or assigned" * * * "this policy shall be null and void." A naked and inexcusable violation of this clause in the policy undoubtedly authorizes the insurer to avoid its contract and refuse indemnity to the insured. (Sherwood v.Agricultural Ins. Co.,
The provision in the policy authorizing the agent to consent to its transfer by the insured is equally explicit with the clause forbidding a conveyance of the property without the written consent of the company. These two clauses are to be construed together, and if they are conflicting in their character each must be given some legitimate office to perform, if it is possible to do so; and if they cannot, that clause must be rejected which does not accord with the general object and design of the contract, or would tend to defeat the intention of the parties thereto. We are of the opinion, however, that they are both operative, and are simply intended to provide two methods of procuring the consent of the company to transfers of the interest of the insured in the contract of insurance and the property thereby insured. When the consent of the insurer to the assignment of the policy alone would confer no right upon its assignee, and a similar consent to the transfer of the title of the property insured would be unnecessary, unmeaning and useless unless accompanied by a transfer of the policy, it cannot easily be seen upon what theory it can be claimed that these powers are distinguishable, and that an authority to do one does not carry with it the necessary authority to execute the other. The principle is elementary that whenever a power to do an act for the principal is given by one person to another, that every thing necessary to make the execution of the power effectual to attain the end in view is impliedly conferred. It is inconceivable that the defendant intended to confer upon its agent the power to consent to an assignment of the policy alone, and reserve to itself the power to render such a consent inoperative by retaining the liberty of refusing to consent to a transfer of the title of the property insured. There would seem to be no reasonable object on the part of the insurer in separating powers which are, from the nature of the subject, so indissolubly connected *506
and confer a power upon an agent to execute one and deny to him another which is essential to make the first power effective; and we must hold that the authority to consent to one necessarily implied power to authorize such acts as may be essential to render that consent effectual and operative. We think the principle involved has been frequently decided in this court. It was held in the case of Hooper v. Hudson River F. Ins. Co. (
It is also entirely immaterial that there had been an intermediate conveyance of this property which was not accompanied by an assignment of the policy of insurance, for the reason that the title of the property and the ownership of the policy of insurance by a valid consent of the defendant to its assignment had united in the person of the plaintiff at the time of the loss. (Wolfe v. Security Fire Ins. Co.,
So, too, it is no objection that the transfer of the property had preceded the consent to the assignment of the policy. The subsequent consent to assign has been held to relate back to the previous conveyance, and operate as a consent to such conveyance of the property. (Shearman v. Niagara F. Ins. *507 Co.,
For each of these reasons we think that the claim that the transfer of the property insured was a defense to the action was properly overruled, and that this judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.