91 Pa. Super. 422 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1926
Argued December 13, 1926. The plaintiff applied to one Bradley, an insurance broker, to obtain for him a policy insuring him against loss by fire to an automobile and its equipment. Bradley applied to Wilkinson Co., Inc., for the policy. Wilkinson Co., also insurance brokers, applied to Sigourney Mellor Co., insurance brokers, and the last named firm applied to the agents of the defendant company for the policy of insurance desired. The policy was issued by the company on March 6, *424 1922, and, by the agent of the defendant insurance company, was delivered to Sigourney Mellor Co., who in turn delivered it to Wilkinson Co., Inc., who in turn delivered it to Bradley, and the latter delivered it to the plaintiff who paid to him the premium called for by the policy. Bradley did not pay the premium which he had received from the insured to Wilkinson Co., nor did Wilkinson Co. pay Mellor Co., nor did Mellor Co. pay the amount of the premium to the agent of the defendant company. It appeared in evidence that the agent of the defendant company had an account with Sigourney Mellor Co. and extended credit to those brokers for the premiums on policies placed in their hands for delivery; that Mellor Co., and the other brokers through whose hands the policy passed for delivery to the insured had mutual accounts with each other, respectively, and extended to each other credit for the premium on the policy as it passed through their hands. The automobile was destroyed by fire on December 30, 1922, and the plaintiff promptly forwarded proofs of loss to defendant company, whereupon the defendant company, by its general adjuster, wrote a letter to the plaintiff, returning the proofs of loss, and denying liability upon the policy, upon the express ground that the policy had been cancelled in April, 1922. The plaintiff thereupon brought this action on the policy and recovered a verdict and judgment in the court below, from which we have this appeal.
The first six assignments of error refer to rulings of the court upon the admission of evidence and are without merit. Some of the evidence admitted, under the exceptions upon which these assignments are based, was totally immaterial and ought to have been rejected; it had no bearing on the rights of the parties. But judgments are not to be reversed merely because of error in the reception of evidence which had nothing to do with the case, unless that evidence might reasonably *425 be held to have prejudiced the cause of an appellant. We have carefully considered all this evidence and are convinced that it could not possibly have prejudiced the cause of the defendant, and the assignments of error are dismissed. There were but two questions really involved in this case. (1) Did the payment of the premium by the insured to Bradley, the broker into whose hands the policy had come, give vitality to the contract and constitute an obligation binding upon the defendant company? (2) Was the policy cancelled by the company, in April, 1922, in a manner which relieved it of liability?
The appellant contends that the payment of the premium to Bradley was not the equivalent of payment to the insurer, and in support of this proposition cites the case of Pottsville Fire Ins. Co. v. Minnequa Springs Imp. Co.,
Was the policy lawfully cancelled? Following the standard form of policy, required by the Act of May 17, 1921, P.L. 682, the provision as to cancellation contained in this contract was as follows: "This policy may be cancelled at any time by the company by giving to the assured a five days written notice of cancellation, with or without a tender of the excess of paid premium above the pro rata premium for the expired term, which excess if not tendered shall be refunded on demand. Notice of cancellation shall state that excess premium (if not tendered) will be refunded on demand." The law requires that when a policy is to be cancelled, the conditions on which the right is exercised must be strictly complied with, *427
unless the insured waives this requirement. To successfully terminate the relation of insured and insurer, the company must give written notice of such cancellation to the insured, that the relation will terminate at the end of five days from the receipt of such notice. The defendant company, on April 5, 1922, mailed to the plaintiff a letter, which was received by the latter, giving notice of an intention to cancel the policy, the material part of which is as follows: "Please note that at the expiration of five days as provided by the conditions of the policy, this Company will not be liable for any loss or damage to automobile insured hereunder. Please return document to our office in stamped return envelope, and oblige." This notice did not effect the cancellation of the policy for the reason that the policy required that "the notice must state that the excess premium (if not tendered) will be refunded on demand": Pomerantz v. Mutual Fire Ins. Co.,
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed. *429