Crawford v. Transatlantic Fire Insurance Co.

125 Cal. 609 | Cal. | 1899

BRITT, C.

Action on a policy of fire insurance, which in terms purports to be the contract of defendant, and to insure a certain stable building, the property of plaintiff Crawford, to the amount of one thousand dollars, for the period of one year, commencing at noon of May 2, 1897. The defense is that the instrument was not executed by defendant, and never took effect as its contract. For the purposes of the trial the parties stipulated that from April 1, 1897, to May 15, 1897, one Roberts and one Barrett “were and each of them was the agent of the defendant, and authorized to execute said policy, if it was executed.” It appeared in evidence for plaintiffs that said Roberts was a traveling agent for defendant, and said Barrett was its local agent at the town of San Luis Obispo, where said building was situated; that as the result of some oral negotiations'between Crawford and both of said agents on April 30, 1897, Roberts on that day prepared and signed said policy and left it with Barrett, Crawford having agreed to accept the same and pay the premium thereon; on the following day, May 1st, Barrett sought Crawford for the purpose of delivering the policy, but failing to find him, Barrett kept the document over May 2d, which was a Sunday, and while it was so in his possession, on Sunday night, the building was destroyed by fire; on May 3d, after the fire, Barrett delivered the policy to a certain bank, to be held by the bank as Crawford’s agent. A few days later Crawford offered to pay the premium on the pol*611icy to said agents, but they declined to receive it. On behalf of defendant, there was evidence tending to show that Crawford refused the proposal of said agents to insure the building and to issue said policy, and that the same was prepared without his consent, Barrett expecting to induce him to accept it; and that the delivery to the bank after the fire was (it seems) but provisional, pending other arrangements. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs.

The main question for determination was whether all the acts of said agents, taken together, amounted to an execution of the policy, so that it became obligatory on the defendant. If the policy—as the evidence for plaintiffs tended to show—was the memorial of a contract which in its essentials had been agreed upon by parol before the fire, and which the parties intended should take effect according to its terms on the 2d of May at noon, then certainly the subsequent delivery was sufficient to make the defendant liable on the instrument; its liability thereon probably attached even without actual delivery to the insured or his agent. (Lightbody v. North American Ins. Co., 23 Wend. 18; Davenport v. Peoria etc. Ins. Co., 17 Iowa, 176; Franklin Insurance Co. v. Colt, 20 Wall. 560; Yonge v. Equitable etc. Soc., 30 Fed. Rep. 902.) If, however—as the evidence for defendant tended to show—there had been before the fire no agreement that defendant should insure the building and issue its policy accordingly, such an agreement as would have made Crawford liable for the premium, then it is equally plain that delivery of the policy after the building had been destroyed, to the knowledge of the parties, could not impart to the instrument any effect whatever. (Civ. Code, secs. 2527, 2528; Clark v. Insurance Co., 89 Me. 26; People v. Dimick, 107 N. Y. 13.)

It was, therefore, important evidence for the plaintiffs if they could show that defendant considered or admitted at any time that the contract was complete and the risk had attached. For this purpose all the acts and declarations of either Boberts or Barrett which might characterize or explain their intent while they were engaged in the business with Crawford and until the delivery of the policy to the bank, were part of the res gestas, and hence admissible evidence against the defendant. Of this nature, for instance, was the testimony of the plaintiff Bush, *612who was named in the policy as payee of the insurance in case of loss, that Barrett said to him at the time he handed the policy to the hank, “You are a thousand dollars better off than you thought; here is a policy for a thousand dollars just put on your stable.” Testimony such as this was plainly competent.

But the plaintiffs went further; the court allowed them, over the objection of defendant, to prove as part of their case in chief a declaration made by said Roberts at a time subsequent to the delivery of the policy and when he was not acting for defendant in any business connected therewith, that he “had received a dispatch from his company to adjust a loss on Crawford’s stable, and that he had found out since .... that his policy didn’t cover.” Evidence was also admitted, over like objection, of a statement made by Barrett, on the morning following the fire, that “he had issued a policy for a thousand dollars on that building to Mr. Crawford a few days before.” By these rulings and one or two others of similar character the plaintiffs were allowed to place before the jury evidence of admissions by defendant’s agents made, not as part of the transaction looking to the execution of the policy, nor while discharging any duty of their agency pertaining to their treaty with Crawford, but as mere narration or illustration of their pa'st conduct. Such evidence was only hearsay and was incompetent. (Beasley v. San Jose Fruit Packing Co., 92 Cal. 388; Dean v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 62 N. Y. 642; Insurance Co. v. Mahone, 31 Wall. 152; Walker v. Farmers’ etc. Ins. Co., 51 Iowa, 682.) It was material to the issue pending, and for the error in its admission the judgment and order denying a new trial should be reversed.

Gray, C., and Cooper, C., concurred.

Eor the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.

Harrison, J., Van Dyke, J., Garoutte, J.

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