Insurance Companies v. Raden

87 Ala. 311 | Ala. | 1888

SOMERVILLE, J. —

The bill is filed by the appellee, Mrs. Raden, to restore or reinstate two policies of fire insurance alleged to have been cancelled by fraud, or mistake of fact, and to re-establish these instruments as evidences of the liability of the defendant companies by which they were issued, and to incidentally enforce them by the rendition of moneyed decrees for the amount of the loss by fire, not exceeding the amount of the policies, which were each for the sum of $1,250. The court below granted the full relief prayed in the bill, holding both of the policies to be of binding force.

A demurrer was filed to the bill, but no assignment of error is based on the action of the court in overruling it. Objection to this ruling is expressly waived, and the only' question presented by the record is, whether the insurers — ■ the Niagara Fire Insurance Company, and the HamburgBxemen Insurance Company — one or both, are liable on these policies, under the facts disclosed by the evidence.

The complainant’s property in Bessemer is shown to have been destroyed by fire on the night of July 19th, 1887; and no controversy is raised as to its value, or the amount of the loss. The property was originally insured in the Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance Company, on July 2d, 1887, for $2,500; but this policy was cancelled, and the two policies *313here in controversy were substituted in its place, by consent of the insured, a week or ten days after this cancellation.

The defense to the present suit is, that each of the policies in controversy was cancelled on July 18th, 1887 — the day before the occurrence of the loss. This is alleged to have been effected by giving notice of such cancellation to one Langley, who is claimed to have been the agent of Mrs. Baden, the insured, and to him was paid the return premium. It is not denied that cancellation was effected, if Langley was the agent of the insured for the purpose of receiving the notice and the return premium.' The whole question of cancellation hinges on this one fact.-

One John G. Smith was the agent of the defendant companies at Birmingham, Alabama. He was also agent for the Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance Company, in which the first policy was obtained. Flanagan & Langley were insurance agents at Bessemer, Alabama, their exact relations towards Smith not being made very clear by the testimony. The testimony is very conflicting on the point as to whether they acted as agents of Smith, or of Mrs. Baden, or merely as insurance brokers in procuring the first policy, as to the cancellation of which no controversy exists. Flanagan says they acted for Smith, and Smith asserts they acted for Mrs. Baden. This Mrs. Baden denies. Langley says they acted as insurance brokers, dividing commissions with Smith. It is quite clear to us, that Langley, as he himself testifies, solicited the insurance of Mrs. Baden; that she was induced to make a written application for the first policy, and that it was countersigned by Flanagan & Langley, as agents of the Liverpool, London & Globe Company, and was transmitted by them to Smith, at Birmingham. This document appears in the record as an exhibit to Langley’s deposition, and is more trustworthy than the less certain memory of witnesses.

All of this testimony relates, as we have said, to the first policy, admitted to be cancelled. We do not deem it necessary to discuss this part of the evidence at length, as it does not seem to be of controlling importance. The question is, who procured the issue of the policies here in controversy? Did Langley, or his firm, do so as the agents of Mrs. Baden ? If not, the notice to Langley, and the payment of the return premium to him, did not operate to cancel these policies, or rescind the contract of insurance evidenced by them.

We are satisfied from the testimony that Smith, and not Langley, procured these policies to be issued. There is *314scarcely enough conflict in the evidence to raise any serious controversy on this point. Smith was himself the authorized agent of these defendant companies at Birmingham. Flanagan & Langley had no connection with them. When ordered to cancel the Liverpool, London & Globe policy, he at once volunteered to substitute for the cancelled policy the two policies in controversy, which he transmitted to Mrs. Raden through Flanagan & Langley for delivery; and this seems to be all the latter firm had to do with the matter. Smith, it is true, insists on the fact of this firm’s agency for the insured, and testifies that they were her agents; but the facts stated by him refute the existence of the alleged agency. He says: “After the cancellation [of the Liverpool, London & Globe policy], Mrs. Raden’s property was insured in other companies by me, and the policy in the Liverpool, London & Globe was surrendered by me to Flanagan & Langley. In order to secure her from loss, I insured her property in other companies.” And again, on cross-examination: “When the Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance Company policy was cancelled, I issued the policies in the defendant companies, without the knowledge of Mrs. Raden, or her agents, Flanagan & Langley.”

As to the policy of one of the defendants — the Hamburg-Bremen Insurance Company' — we need say but little. Even if it were admitted that Langley had procured this policy to be issued, or if it be assumed that Smith did so, the agency ceased when the policy was delivered to the insured. We have decided at the present term, that “an agency to procure insurance is ended when the policy is procured, and the policy delivered to the principal; and the agent employed to procure the insurance has no power, after the policy is so delivered, to consent to cancellation.” —Ins. Co. of North America v. Forcheimer & Co., 86 Ala. 541. This doctrine is fully supported by the adjudged cases. Herman v. The Niagara, Fire Ins. Co., 100 N. Y. 411; 1 Wood on Fire Ins. (2d Ed.), 337, § 142. Notice of cancellation to Langley, therefore, with his consent to rescission, was no notice to, or consent by Mrs. Raden.—Grace v. American Cent. Ins. Co., 109 U. S. 278; May on Insurance, (2d Ed.), § 138.

As to the policy of the other defendent — the Niagara Fire Insurance Company-^-a slightly different view must be taken, because of the following provision relating to the cancellation of policies: “This insurance maybe terminated at any *315time, by request of tbe assured, or by tbe company on giving notice to tbat effect to the assured, or to tbe person who may have procured this insurance tobe taken.- On surrender of tbe policy, tbe company shall refund any premium tbat may bave been paid, reserving tbe usual short rates in tbe first case, and prorata rates in tbe other case.”

This policy, as we bave shown, was obtained for Mrs. Baden by Smith, not by Langley. Smith was tbe person who procured it to be taken, within tbe meaning of tbe policy. Now, Smith was tbe agent of tbe company to issue the policy. . He therefore occupied an ambiguous attitude, or a double agency, involving conflicting rights and duties. Tbe provision above cited was not intended to cover a case of this character. It could, not bave been contemplated tbat tbe agent of tbe company should give notice to himself, as agent also of tbe insured, of tbe cancellation, or rescission of tbe contract of insurance, nor tbat be should pay to himself tbe return premium required to be paid under the terms of tbe contract, without which payment there could be no cancellation. If susceptible of this construction, tbe provision would be invalid as in violation of all sound principles of public policy, and we would so declare it. Tbe law will not permit an agent thus to serve two masters with conflicting interests. —Commercial Fire Ins. Co. v. Allen, 80 Ala. 571, and cases cited on p. 576; Piedmont & A. Ins. Co. v. Young, 58 Ala. 476; 2 Wood on Fire Ins. (2d Ed.), 833 et seq., § 409; Kausal v. Minnesota &c. Association, 47 Amer. Rep. 776.

Under these principles, Mrs. Baden bad no notice of tbe cancellation until tbe loss by fire bad occurred, and tbe liability for such loss bad been fastened on tbe insurers. Nor was tbe return premium paid back to her before such loss, the payment to Langley being no payment to her.

We come next to the question of ratification. It is contended that Mrs. Baden ratified tbe alleged cancellation, in two ways: first, by accepting two other policies of insurance • — one in tbe Mobile Fire Insurance Company, and tbe other in tbe St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company — which were substituted by Smith for tbe policies in controversy, covering tbe same property, and for like amounts; and, secondly, by having brought suit on these substituted policies, before filing tbe present bill. And it is said tbat all this was done by Mrs. Baden with a full knowledge of tbe facts of tbe case on her part.

*316These policies were not delivered to Mrs. Raden until after her property was destroyed by fire, and her right to indemnity for the loss had accrued, although they had been taken out by Smith, without her knowledge, before the fire. Smith, again, in this matter acted as agent for Mrs. Raden. He was an insurance agent, shown to be intelligent, and presumably an expert in matters pertaining to this subject. She was a foreigner by birih, and evidently ignorant as to her legal rights, unless fully instructed as to them. Under this state of facts, Smith owed her peculiar duties before she can be declared by a court of equity to have voluntarily abandoned her claim under these policies against the defendants. He should not only have disclosed to her all the facts bearing on the case, known to him, but it should be shown to the court that she knew the transaction to be impeachable ■ — that is, that she knew she had a legal right to refuse to accept the new policies, and to claim indemnity under those in controversy. — Voliz v. Voliz, 75 Ala. 567. The inference is fair, that Smith was aware of the fact that Mrs. Raden had a valid claim against the defendant companies, and it is clear that she was ignorant of this legal right. This misapprehension he should have rectified, and his failure to do so is a sufficient ground for equitable relief. — 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. §847.

It is not shown, moreover, that Mrs. Raden knew, at the time of her alleged ratification, that Smith had procured the new policies upon the representation that no other insurance existed on the property — based, no doubt, on the idea that the policies in the defendant companies had been caxxcelled, which, as we have seexx, was xxot true. Whether this would, or would not vitiate the new policies in the Mobile and St. Paul companies, we do not decide. We say only that the fact in question was one material in its bearings, and that a ratification made ixx ignorance of it, caxx xxot be held to be binding.

The suits at law brought on these policies by Mrs. Raden’s attorneys are clearly shown to have beexx instituted under a mistake of fact. Sxnith led these attorneys to believe that Langley was the agent of their client, and that the xxotice of cancellation given, axxd the return premium paid to him, effected a rescission of the policies in the defendant companies — the Niagara Eire and the Hamburg-Bremen Insurance Companies. These suits can not, for this reason, operate as a ratification by Mrs. Raden of the acceptance of the new *317policies, and as an intentional abandonment of her vested rights under the policies in existence when the loss occurred.

Our judgment is, that the chancellor did not err in holding the policies here in controversy to be binding on the insurers, and that his decree granting the relief prayed is free from error, and must be affirmed.