203 Ky. 715 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Appellant Brown instituted this action against the Home Insurance Company of New York to recover $1,000.00 on a parol contract of fire insurance made, as it is alleged in the petition, on January 1, 1920, whereby the insurance company undertook to insure Brown’s residence and the contents, for a term of five years against loss by fire, in consideration of an annual premium of $10.80. The insurance company denied it entered into such a contract and therefore denied liability.-
“But, to entitle one to the specific performance of a verbal agreement to insure, or to issue a policy, he must prove an oral contract possessing all the essentials of a written contract of insurance, namely, the subject matter, the risk insured against, the amount of insurance, the rate or premium, the duration of the risk and the identity of the parties. . . . And it must also appear that the agent had the authority to bind the company sought to be held to the payment of the risk.” Hartford Fire Insurance Company v. Trimble, 117 Ky. 583; Springfield Fire Insurance Company v. Snowden, 173 Ky. 661; Georgia Casualty Co. v. Bond-Foley Lumber Company, 187 Ky. 511.
Before such a contract will be enforced in our courts every essential element usually found in such contracts must be established. In this case it was shown by the evidence of appellant Brown and his wife, who may be regarded as his agent for the purpose of giving testimony, that appellant Brown applied to the agent of the insurance company on the 31st of December, 1919, for a policy of fire insurance upon his house and furnishings, saying he wanted all the insurance he could get. The agent promised to visit the home of Brown and inspect the premises and the property to be insured within the next week but did not fix a day certain. Brown returned to his home and told his wife that he had applied for insurance and that the agent would be at their home within
.The case is fairly well made out for appellant except that it is not shown by any witness that Brown authorized his wife as his agent or otherwise to enter into a contract with the insurance company for a policy of fire insurance or to obligate him to pay to the insurance company any premium therefor. She. says, however, that the agent said the policy would be dated January 1st, and that the property was insured from the time the agents were there, although they gave her no receipt or binder. The property was destroyed by fire January 17th.
Such a contract -must be mutual in order to be binding. We are sure from the evidence the appellant was no.t bound by anything that happened at his home on the day the insurance agents visited it, to pay a premium or to accept a policy of insurance, and he not being bound, the company was not bound. There was no mutuality in the contract proven and the trial court did not err in peremptorily directing the jury to find and return a verdict for the defendant company.
Judgment affirmed.’