53 Minn. 220 | Minn. | 1893
This was an action on a fire insurance policy. The defense was that, at the time the policy was issued, the property insured was covered by a mortgage, — a fact which, by the conditions of the policy, rendered it void. The reply was that the defendant accepted the risk with knowledge of the mortgage, and thereby waived the condition of the policy. It appeared that plaintiffs procured the insurance through one Case, who knew of the mortgage; hence the real issue was whether Case was defendant’s agent im soliciting the insurance and procuring the applications for it, so that his knowledge of the mortgage would be that of the defendant; and the only question here is whether the trial court should have left that question to the jury, instead of directing, as he did, a verdict for defendant.
The evidence was as follows: Case came to the plaintiffs in Duluth, and solicited insurance on their property, saying that he represented several companies, among which he named defendant. •That plaintiffs verbally authorized him to secure and place insurance on the property to the amount of several thousand dollars, leaving it to his judgment in what companies to place it. . Subsequently Case delivered to plaintiffs, among other policies in other companies, the policy in suit, signed by N. R. Thompson. & Co., of Minneapolis, as agents for the defendant, and collected the premium, which was subsequently received by defendant. That in placing this insurance the plaintiffs had no transaction with any one but Case. That this is the only policy they ever had with the defendant. That the name of Case does not appear on the policy, as agent or otherwise. There is no evidence that Case ever acted, or assumed to act, for the defendant in any other transaction. Neither is there anything to show, except so far as be
Such a broker might be deemed the agent of the company for the purposes of delivering the policy and collecting the premium, but nothing more. It is true that Case might have been the agent of the defendant, but the evidence, as far as it goes,-is quite, or even more, consistent with the hypothesis that he was a mere broker; and it was incumbent on plaintiffs, on whom was the burden of proving the agency, to go further than this. We think circumstances were wholly wanting from which the jury would have been warranted in finding the fact of agency. The case of Kausal v. Minnesota Farmers’ Mut. Fire Ins. Ass’n, 31 Minn. 17, (16 N. W. Rep. 430,) relied on by plaintiffs, is not in point. In that case an agency to procure applications for insurance was an admitted or established fact, and the question was. as to the extent of the authority, implied or apparent, of such an agent.
Order affirmed.
(Opinion published 54 N. W. Rep. 1117.)
Application for rcargument denied May 23, 1893.