17 Iowa 276 | Iowa | 1864
Tbe appellant’s counsel assign nine distinct matters as errors of tbe court below, but in tbeir argument they make but four points, and classify tbe assignment of errors thereunder, to wbicb arrangement we will conform as far as practicable.
It is claimed, by appellant’s counsel, that under this clause in the charter, no agreement for insurance can be binding on the company, unless it is in writing, subscribed by the president, and signed and sealed by the secretary; and that, since the agreement in this case was in parol until after the loss, and the plaintiff had no insurable interest at the time the policy was actually signed and delivered, no recovery can be had thereon.
In the case of Kohne v. The Insurance Company of North America, 1 Wash. C. C., 93, the agent applied to the president of the insurance company to effect an insurance on goods on board a ship, and settled with him the terms of the insurance, but left the office before the policy was filled up. It was soon after filled up and executed, and about the same time, the company received intelligence of the capture of the vessel and loss, which was not known to either party when the agreement was made and the policy executed. On a subsequent day, the agent. called to pay the premium and receive the policy, but the company refused to deliver it, objecting that the agreement was inchoate, and having heard of the loss before the delivery of the policy, the company had a right to retract. But Mr. Justice WASHINGTON held that since there was no unfairness nor knowledge of the loss when the terms of insurance were settled, the objection was entitled to no weight, and the contract perfect and binding. In the case, Lightbody v. The North American Insurance Company, 23 Wend., 18, the plaintiff, through his agent, made a contract for insurance of buildings in IJtica, with the defendant’s agent in Troy, late in the evening of the 30th day of March, 1837, and paid the premium and took a receipt. About two o’clock in the morning of the next day, the buildings were consumed by fire. The policy was not made or delivered till the 21st day of April following, and was delivered by the agent after the plaintiff had called upon defendant for payment of the loss, which was refused, denying the authority of their agent to make the contract of insurance, and notifying him that the agent’s authority; as their agent, had been revoked. The court, per Bkonson, J.,
The plaintiff recovered the full amount of his policy and interest. In the case of Perkins v. The Washington Insurance Company, 4 Cow., 645, the plaintiff, on the 5th day of January, 1820, applied to defendant’s agent in Savannah, Georgia, the defendant being a corporation in New York, to insure a stock of goods for five thousand dollars, which the agent agreed to do for a premium of two and a half per cent. The plaintiff paid the premium accordingly, and the fee for survey and policy, and took the agent’s receipt therefor. On the morning of the 11th day of January, an extensive fire broke out in Savannah, and consumed the plaintiff’s goods. The plaintiff gave notice to the agent of the loss, and offered the usual preliminary proofs, and demanded a policj1' of insurance; but the agent stated that he had not forwarded the premium to the company, and had not received a policy, and intimated that the cornpany would not feel bound by what had been done. The proper notice, with the usual proofs, were, in May, 1820, given to the defendant in New York: but
In Carpenter v. Mutual Safety Insurance Company, 4 Sandf. Ch. Rep., 408, the court held that an agreement to insure, evidenced by the receipt for the premium, may be specifically enforced, and that, if a loss happened, payment may be compelled in equity. Indeed, it is laid down as a general rule, by Angelí on Fire and Life Insurance, §§ 33 and 34, that in commercial towns, actions on mere agreements to insure, whether against fire or perils of the sea, are not uncommon; and they are always sustained whenever it appears that the terms of the
In Jackson ex dem. Loan Officers of Rensselaer v. Bull, 1 Johns. Cases, 81, it was held, that a deed executed in pursuance of a previous contract for the same premises, is good by relation from the time of making the contract, so as to render valid every intermediate sale or disposition of the land by the grantees.'
In Jackson ex dem. June v. Raymond, 1 Johns. Cases, 85, the same doctrine is held in a very similar case. In Heath v. Ross, 12 Johns., 140, a patent for land, dated the fourth of December, but which did not pass the great seal until the twenty-eighth of the same month, was held to relate back, as between the parties, so as to vest the title in the patentee from the date, and enable him to maintain trover for timber cut and carried away between those dates.
In Jackson, ex dem. Noah, v. Dickinson et al., 15 Johns., 309, the sheriff made a sale on the first day of March, but did not deliver the deed until the nineteenth of the same month. On the tenth of that month a mortgagee of the same land filed a bill of foreclosure, without making the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale, a party. It was held that the deed related back to the time of the sale, and that the purchaser was not precluded from contesting the validity of the mortgage in an action of ejectment at law, he not being a party to the bill in equity, as his title was acquired previous to the notice of lis pendens in chancery, though not consummated till afterwards. The court say “the subsequent delivery of the deed being mere, matter of, form must have relation back to the time of purchase