4 Lans. 433 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1871
By the Court
This was an action for an alleged insurance on cotton at Appalachicola, Florida. On the trial at the Albany Circuit, the judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff with leave to defendant to make a case and exceptions, and directed that they he heard in the first instance at the General Term.
In November, 1865, O. F. McCoy was appointed agent of the defendant at Augusta, Georgia, under a power of attorney, which is as follows: “ Be it known that 0. F. McCoy,
The risk in question was entered by McCoy on his register, as he testifies, between the 21st and 23d of January, and was dated back to the 15th, as he had heard that the cotton had left Howard’s Landing and had probably arrived at Appalachicola by the 15th.' The entry in his register was as follows : “ No 62 (his number), 21,817 (the company’s number), assured W. D. Ellis for one month from January 16th 1866, on cotton at Appalachieola, on the 15th of February.” No policy was made out till the summer after the fire, and the plaintiff testifies it was not delivered to him till February 8th, 1867. McCoy made monthly returns of the entries on his register to the defendant. Upon his report of transactions for January, 1866, which is dated February 9th, 1866,
The defendant’s counsel insists that McCoy had no authority to insure by paroi, and his act was void and inoperative as to the company.
By the first clause thereof he is appointed the defendant’s agent at Augusta. The next clause defines the agency, and the agent’s authority, as follows : “ As agent, he is authorized and empowered to receive proposals for insurance against loss or damage by fire, and to malte insurance by policies of the said Albany City Fire Insurance Company, to be countersigned by said G. F. McCoy.” This is all the authority given in reference to the malting of insurance, The subsequent parts of the instrument give the agent authority “ to renew insurances so made; to assent to assignments and transfers, and to do all lawful acts and business pertaining to said agency (so defined) which may from time to time be given him in charge by said company.” This last clause cannot be deemed to enlarge the powers already specifically given; for it is limited by them, and also by the subsequent action of the company as to what acts and business” shall “ be given him in charge.”
There is clearly nothing in the letter of attorney making McCoy a general agent, with power to bind the company by insurances made by him, in any other. way than by policies of the company countersigned by him.
The next inquiry is, had the plaintiff the right to infer, as against the defendant, from the circumstances of the case, that the agent had authority to make the contract which he did make with him ?.
And this is a question by no means free from doubt, under the authorities cited by the plaintiff's counsel.
McCoy was in the insurance, business as ,an agent "for several companies; and when the defendant commissioned him as its agent, it held him out to the public as an agent authorized to insure property in the Albany City Fire Insurance Company against loss or damages by fire. Th.e public were authorized, I think, to infer that they, might contract with him in the ordinary mode of obtaining insurance. It was .said by JSTelsox, Ch. J., in delivering the opinion of the court
Upon the whole, I am inclined to the opinion that the agreement made by the agent with the plaintiff, the premium having been paid before the loss, was binding upon the defendant.
The objection, made by the defendant’s counsel, that the description of the property claimed to have been insured was not correctly reported to the company, cannot, in the absence of proof of the fraud and collusion set up in the answer between McCoy and the plaintiff, be used against the plaintiff in this suit. The report was made by the defendant’s agent, who alone is responsible to defendant for it. The same is true of any fraud practiced upon defendant by the agent in his report, leading defendant to understand that the cotton was in a wooden building, when, in fact, it was on the wharf at a distance from the steamboat. This was the agent’s fault, in which, so far as appears, the plaintiff had no complicity in regard to the description of the property insured. I think it was sufficiently definite for identification. In the contract between McCoy and the plaintiff, it appears, from McCoys entries, that it was well identified. It was the plaintiff’s cotton which had been in a wooden building on the Chatahoochie river, and had been removed to Appalachicola. There could have been no difficulty in identifying it from the description as entered by the agent.
It is objected that the evidence shows other insurances on the same property not notified to the company in the report of the risk. These were all made by the same agent who made the insurance in question. He, therefore, knew of them at the time this risk was taken, which was notice to the company. In regard to the amount recovered, it is considerably less than the proof on the trial warranted, being only what was claimed in the proofs of loss and interest.
The defendant’s counsel, upon the trial, excepted to the exclusion by the judge of an answer to the counsel’s question to Rice, the secretary of the company, whether he would
I do not think there is any evidence in the case of such collusion, and clearly the evidence sought for by this question would not have proved it. There was no error in its exclusion.
The judge, also, excluded the answer of this witness to the question whether he supposed the alleged insurance was made by policy, to which defendant’s counsel excepted. If the question of ratification of the act of the agent were in the case, this might have been a proper subject of inquiry, but in the view which we take of the case, it is entirely immaterial, and was properly excluded.
The same may be said in regard to the exclusion by the judge of proof that there was no practice of the company authorizing an agent, under such an appointment, to make a verbal insurance. Also, in regard to the refusal of the judge to allow the defendant to prove that the company never recognized any contract of insurance made by an agent except in the form of the printed policies.
Upon a careful review of the whole case, I am inclined to the opinion that no error was committed at the circuit, and that a new trial should be denied, and judgment rendered upon the verdict, with costs.
Motion denied.