7 S.D. 187 | S.D. | 1895
This is an action on a fire insurance policy. At the close of the evidence the court directed a verdict for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals. The fire and the loss are not disputed. The principal, and, we think, really the only debatable question in the cáse is whether Collins, Green & Co., whose relation to the transaction will be more fully noticed hereafter, were the'agents of the plaintiff or of the defendant. Plaintiff was a manufacturer of cigars, and his factory, which was the subject of the insurance, was located in the Burton Block, in the city of Chicago. Soon after plaintiff’s location in said block,-one Kobert L. Shute, an insurance solicitor in the employ of G. M. Harvey & Co., general insurance agents, called upon plaintiff, find solicited insurance from him upon his stock of cigars, etc. Defendant told him he would take about $3,000 of insurance, and a statement or memorandum was then made out, showing property to be insured, and how the insurance was to be distributed. Harvey & Co. declined to take any insurance on property in that block for any company represented by them. Afterwards Shute took two policies to plaintiff, who refused them, because they were “mutual policies.” At that time plaintiff gave him a written order or request for the ■insurance which he wanted, but the paper is not in evidence. When Harvey & Co. declined to take the risk, Shute turned the order of plaintiff for insurance over to Collins, Green & Co., and requested them to get it. He also gave them the statement referred to as to the property to be insured. They undertook to get the insurance.Up to that time they were not, and never had been, agents of the defendant company, and had no relations of any kind with it. Upon receipt by the company of the written application, hereinafter more particularly described, the policy sued upon was written by the company at its home office, forwarded to Collins,. Green & Co. by defendant company, with a letter, saying: “If this policy
Allen v. Insurance Co., 123 N. Y. 6, 25 N. E. 309, presented facts much like those of this case, and upon the question of whose agent the intermediate party procuring the insurance was the court said: “So far as it appears, Noble had no relations whatever with the defendent, other than that he forwarded this paper writing,- which contained statements of the amount of insurance proposed for and of the privileges desired. He certainly appears to-have been nothing more than an insurance broker, soliciting insurance business; and when, upon the acceptance of the risk, he received back a policy of the company for the plaintiff, his sole office was simply to deliver it for the company, and to collect the premium. That is certainly not enough to constitute him an agent of the company, with authority to bind it retroactively or presently in transactions relating to the insurance. Circumstances are wholly wanting from which we may presume the authority of an agent. Then, too, the policy contained the provisions that the company
An important and differential fact between this case and the South Bend Toy Manuf’g Co. v. Dakota Fire & Marine Ins. Co. supra, upon which appellant relies, is that in the latter case the authority of Bunk & Co., who were strangers to the insurance company; to make the insurance, was traced directly to Ben Phelan, who was the general agent of the insurance company. If Harvey & Co. had been the agents of the defendant company in this case, and had turned the statement referred to over to Collins, Green & Co., with a request to procure this insurance, the case would have been, in that respect, similar to the case cited; but, as it is, the very fact is lacking upon which that case was made to turn. The same suggestion is pertinent in the case of Insurance Co. v. Ives, 56 Ill. 402. The application, though made by one not an expressly authorized $g.ent of the company, was made by and
• The acceptance of this risk and the contract of insurance were based upon the statement sent defendant by Collins, Green & Co. Acting upon this information, it issued the policy. The statement informed the defendant company that “all companies represented in Chicago have full lines on building or some tenant,” and that the building was “fully equipped with sprinklers.” It is conceded that neither of these statements was true, but that risks in and upon the Burton Block were practically uninsurable in companies doing business in Chicago. Bowden, superintendent of surveys for the Underwriter’s Association, testified, “The majority of the insurance companies doing business in the city of Chicago had refused to write risks upon that block.” Bobinson, an inspector of automatic sprinklers in the Chicago Underwriter’s Association, testified that these sprinklers would reduce the risk, as recognized by insurance companies generally, 25 per cent., and that there were no sprinklers in this building at the time of the insurance, nor at the time of the firp, nor had there ever been any. Appellant com