15 Ind. App. 623 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1896
This case is here for the second
time. Germania Fire Ins. Co. v. Columbia Encaustic Tile Co., 11 Ind. App. 385. The action was on a policy of fire insurance, upon which the appellee recovered a j udgment.
The first error relied upon by appellant’s counsel is the overruling of the demurrer to the second paragraph of the reply. The complaint is in three paragraphs. The first and second declare upon the policy, and the third is on an oral contract, or agreement, to insure. This reply is addressed to the 4th, 6th, and 7th paragraphs of the answer. The 4th paragraph of
The seventh paragraph of answer is much like the sixth, except that the provisions in the policy, which require the person acting as agent to have authority in writing, are copied into it.
The second paragraph of reply admits that Coe was; the legally constituted and appointed agent of appellant, and then it sets up certain alleged habits and1 customs, obtaining in the office of said Coe, touching the action of one Seyfried, a clerk of said Coe, in accepting risks and issuing policies for appellant, with the knowledge and consent of said appellant; and that the policy in suit was so issued by said Coe. Then follows an averment that the appellant, with a full knowledge of all the facts, ratified the act of said
The objection made to this paragraph of reply is: (1) that it is a departure; (2) that “it seeks to interpose an alleged custom and habit in the office of Coe to vary the term§ of a written contract; does not allege that the plaintiff had any knowledge of such pretended custom and habit, or that it relied upon such custom or habit.” (3) “The paragraph purports to answer the sixth and seventh paragraphs upon the point that the agency of Coe is a limited and restricted one, both as to territory and classes of risks; and that' appellee’s risk was extra-hazardous and in the proscribed class, and was a special risk located outside of the city of Indianapolis.”
In support of the proposition that the reply under consideration is a departure, it is insisted that, while it admits the agency, “it seeks tO' avoid the positions of the answers by alleging a custom of Coe’s office, and, therefore, it is such a change of base as to constitute a departure, and brings the appellee within the meshes of the rules laid down by the Supreme Court in a number of cases,” citing Will v. Whitney, 15 Ind. 194; Burtch v. State, ex rel., 17 Ind. 506; McAvoy v. Wright, 25 Ind. 22; Bearss v. Montgomery, 46 Ind. 544.
We are unable to agree with appellant’s learned counsel in the position assumed respecting this pleading. A departure in a pleading is a desertion of the ground which the pleader occupied in his last antecedent pleading, and a resort to another ground. Stephen, PL, 9 Am. ed., p. 410. Under the code, when any paragraph of the answer contains new matter, the plaintiff may reply the general denial; and may also, in separate paragraphs, reply any new matter which supports the complaint and avoids the new
If the reply asserts some right, not counted upon in the complaint, it is a departure. It is a shifting of ground from that occupied in the complaint, and upon which the right to recover is based. Teal v. Langsdale, 78 Ind. 339.
Measured by these definitions, the reply is not. a departure. We do not construe the reply, as appellant’s counsel does, to mean that it seeks to avoid the answers by relying upon a custom in Coe’s office; As we read this pleading, it relies principally upon a ratification, and this is proper to set up in reply. Heady v. Boden, 4 Ind. App. 475. The averments concerning the custom referred to are but preliminary to the allegations as to ratification, and constitute the ground work, or basis upon which the reply of ratification is founded. The complaint declares upon a policy. The answers allege that the appellant never executed it, and that the agent, or person acting as such, who, it is claimed, issued the policy, had no authority to do so. The reply responds that it may be true that the appellant did not, in the first instance, execute the policy through a duly organized agent (showing just wha,t was done in connection with the attempted execution); but, granting that the agent had no authority, and that, therefore, his acts did not amount to an execution of the policy, yet, when the facts were brought home to the appellant, it ratified the same by accepting the premium money and thereby adopted the agent’s acts as its own. This is in the nature of a confession and avoidance of the facts set up in the answers, and as such it is sufficient. An examination of the cases cited by appellant’s counsel convinces us that they do not sustain his position.
We are not unmindful of the fact that one of the
But it is further urged that while the paragraph of reply under consideration purports to meet all the material averments of the 4th, 6th, and 7th paragraphs of answer, it really fails to cover the points made in the 6th and 7th paragraphs as to the limitations and restrictions of the agent’s authority, both as to territory and classes of risks.
We shall not take issue with counsel upon the proposition that a reply which is not good as to all the paragraphs of answer it attempts to meet, will be held insufficient. Fordice v. Scribner, 108 Ind. 85. If we are correct in the view that the gist of the reply is-the averment of ratification, it must be obvious that the objection we are now considering is likewise unavailing. If the appellant in fact ratified the contract contained in the policy, by accepting the premium-money thereon, such ratification completely estops the appellant from questioning the validity of such contract.
Another error assigned is the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial. It is insisted, on behalf of appellant, that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. 1
Under the issues, it devolved upon the appellee to prove either that the policy of insurance in suit was duly issued, or, if not, that the contract therein contained was subsequently ratified, as pleaded in the reply. If it proved either of these propositions, together with the fact that it had a loss under the
The evidence tends to show that McGilliard & Dark were insurance brokers and agents in the city of Indianapolis, who had arranged for insurance for the appellee upon its property at Anderson, and that as the appellee desired an additional amount of insurance, which McGilliard & Dark could not place in any of their companies, they applied to one Henry Coe, the agent of the appellant, in Indianapolis, to write ¡f4,500.00 additional in the appellant company. One Robert Shingler worked in the office of McGilliard & Dark, as clerk and agent, and when the application for this additional insurance reached the office he telephoned to the office of Henry Coe, to ascertain if he would place the insurance.. The call at the telephone was answered by Henry Seyfried, the principal clerk in Coe’s office, who turned from the telephone to ask Coe if he would write the insurance for the appellee, and Coe answered that he could do so, which was communicated to Shingler, who immediately prepared the necessary papers, and sent to Coe’s office an application for |2,000.00, and a policy for that amount, in the appellant company, was made out in the latter office and sent to the office of McGilliard & Dark. Among the papers prepared by Shingler were three “slips,” each containing a description of the property to be insured, one of which was to be attached to the policy, one to be retained by the insuring office, and one to be sent to the home office of the company. These papers were sent to Coe’s office by a messenger at about 10 o’clock in the forenoon, and in the afternoon of the same day the policy was sent over from Coe’s office to the office of McGilliard & Dark. The
“We were unaware of your action, and you are responsible to the assured if you have issued a policy to them without our consent.” It was agreed that the true date of this letter was March 25, instead of March 15.
Coe answered the letter, endeavoring to explain matters, and stating, among other things, that “the risk in question was written either on Saturday afternoon of the 12th, or Monday, the 14th; it was dated on the 8th to correspond with the other policies in the risk.” He also stated: “If you have any prohibited list which included Encaustic Tile Works, I have never seen one.” Coe did not deny the writing and issuing of the policy in this letter, nor did appellant’s secretary deny the company’s liability.
Coe had a written commission from the appellee, authorizing him “to receive applications for insurance, moneys for premiums, and to countersign, issue and renew policies- of insurance signed by the president, attested by the secretary of the German Fire Insurance Company, subject to the rules and regulations of said company, and such instructions as may from time to time to be given by its officers.” It is claimed that a list of prohibited risks was furnished Coe, but this was not attached to the commission, and formed no part of it. The list was not introduced in evidence, but it was shown by letters that among the prohibited risks was the following: “All specials located outside of your city are strictly prohibited.” McGilliard & Dark’s office and Coe’s office had mutual
We are of opinion that the evidence amply warranted a finding that the policy was executed by the appellant, to say nothing of the acts of appellant’s agents, which the appellee relies upon, to- establish a ratification. It is true, that the policy shows that “in any matter relating to this insurance no person, unless duly authorized in writing, shall be deemed the agent of this company.” If it be granted, for the sake of the argument, that this clause- requires the applicant for insurance to ascertain whether or not the person assuming to act as agent is supplied with the proper commission, and what it contains,, it still does not follow that any limitation, such as the appellee was bound to take cognizance of, was placed upon the authority of Henry Coe. An agent .holding
Appellant’s counsel strenuously contends that because of the clause in the commission, that he shall be “subject to the rules and regulations of the company, and such instructions as may from time to time be given him,” applicants for insurance who dealt with Coe, were put upon their inquiry, and it became their duty, at their peril, to know what were' the “rules and regulations of the company,” and what were the “instructions from time to time given him.”
Counsel says:
“There was clearly an object in inserting such provision plainly and in the body of the contract, or it would not have been inserted. The only object that could possibly be attained would be to give notice to the person accepting such contract that it will not be a contract, unless the party pretending to represent the appellant has authority in writing, and, therefore suggests an examination to determine*635 whether there are any restrictions or limitations in such authority. It is a notice for the common protection of the insurer and insured. It is the exact opposition of a secret instruction or order existing between the insurer and its agent, because it is a caution addressed to the person about to accept such contract, and it is respectfully suggested that there could be no surer or fairer way of imparting such caution than by inserting it in the face of the contract about to be entered into. There is no occasion for discussing the question of secret arrangements between principal and agent, for, it is conceded that secret arrangements not communicated to others are not binding upon them.”
The appellant’s learned counsel thus concedes that any secret instructions from the company to Coe, which had not been communicated to appellee, were not binding upon it. But what can the instructions given the agent “from time to time” be but “secret arrangements” between the company and its agent? Surely it cannot be the law that when the assured receives his policy, reads it over and-discovers in .the great mass of finely printed matter the clause referred to, it devolves upon him to demand of the agent that the latter show to him the various letters he may have received from the company “from time to time,” in order to ascertain what his latest instructions are. Such a requirement would entail upon the assured a burden which is sanctioned by neither law nor good conscience. The instructions are- fairly within the term “secret arrangements,” and the assured cannot be bound, by them, unless it be shown that he had been given notice thereof. Kerlin v. Natl. Accident Assn., 8 Ind. App. 628 (652). We fully agree with appellee’s counsel, that Coe would have been equally subject to the rules and regulations of the company, and the instruc
Nor can we say that the policy was invalid because Coe’s name was signed by Seyfried, the chief clerk of his office. The jury was not without evidence from which it had the right to conclude that Seyfried was authorized to sign Coe’s name to policies. There was also evidence from which the jury could determine that the company knew, or should have known, that Seyfried was employed by Coe, and passed upon applications, and signed his name, and was in the habit of acting for him in such matters. The company was, therefore, responsible, not only for the acts of its commissioned agent, within the scope of the authority expressly conferred by the commission, but also for the acts of Seyfried in connection with the business of insurance in which he was engaged. Indiana Ins. Co. v. Hartwell, 123 Ind. 177.
In the case just cited, the Supreme Court quote with approval the following language from the case of Duluth Nat. Bank v. Knoxville Fire Ins. Co., 85 Tenn. 76; “ ‘Not only is the insurer responsible for the acts of its
What has just been said is equally pertinent to the point made by appellant’s counsel, that because the policy was procured through the agency of McGilliard & Dark, insurance brokers, said McGilliard & Dark were the agents of appellee, and were bound to ascertain whether Seyfried had authority in writing to act for it, and that as McGilliard & Dark knew, or had reason to know, that Coe’s name was signed to the policy by Seyfried, the appellee was bound by such knowledge, said McGilliard & Dark being, in law, agents of appellee. The case last above cited holds otherwise.
The appellant’s counsel urges numerous errors in the admission and rejection of testimony. The evidence relating to the duties of Seyfried in Coe’s office, his custom in passing upon applications for insurance, signing Coe’s name to policies and reports, etc., was clearly competent. This was so, we think, independent of the averments in the second paragraph of the reply. It tended to prove the execution of the policy, which was denied under oath. It was a part of the appellee’s original case, and was eminently proper. Nor was it error to admit in evidence the policy in suit, the proof of loss, and the correspondence between Coe and the appellant. The “list of risks” kept in Coe’s office, being a part of his private instructions from the appellant, was properly rejected by the court. Tt could not bind the appellee, in the
The court committed no reversible error in excluding some correspondence offered by appellant, alleged to have occurred between its secretary and Coe, after the fire. The fact that appellant repudiated the risk after the loss would not relieve it from liability. The correspondence was in the nature of a self-serving declaration. It was properly excluded.
There was no irreconcilable conflict between the general verdict and the answers of the jury to the interrogatories, and the court consequently did not err in overruling the appellant’s motion for judgment, notwithstanding the general verdict.
The instructions given by the court, of which the appellant complains, are in full harmony with our view of the law governing this case. If, in some particulars they were not as full as might be desired under the issues, the appellant should have sought to amplify them by instructions proposed by its counsel and submitted to the court with a request' that they be given. When an instruction is correct as far as it goes, the party who desires a more1 complete statement of the law, must ask for it and meet with a refusal before he can complain of the court’s action. Hindman v. Timme, 8 Ind. App. 416.
A number of instructions requested by appellant’s counsel, were refused, and the refusal is properly assigned in the motion for a new trial. The appellee’s counsel makes the point that the record fails to show that these requests were made prior to the beginning of the argument, and in this they are borne out by the record. Error cannot be predicated upon the refusal to give instructions, unless the record discloses affirmatively that they were tendered opportunely,
“One complaining of a ruling,” say the Supreme Court, “must, in order to secure a reversal, affirmatively show that he placed himself in an attitude to rightfully ask that which the court refused him. If this be not done, the presumption of regularity, which always attends the proceedings of the trial court in the absence of(a contrary showing, will require the appellate court to assume that the party did not do that which the law required him to do in order to entitle him to the ruling asked.” Puett v. Beard, 86 Ind. 104, 107.
We have disposed of all the questions presented for our determination, and are of opinion that no reversible error is shown to have been committed.
Judgment affirmed.