29 N.Y.S. 334 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
On the 1st day of March, 1893, the defendant, a foreign corporation, issued by its agent an insurance policy to the plaintiff, in consideration of a cash premium of $13.75, at that time paid by the plaintiff to the agent of the defendant, to indemnify the plaintiff in the sum of $1,000 on stock and $100 on store against loss and damage by fire. The person who took this risk acted as agent for the defendant, and had been so acting for several years previous thereto, was furnished with policies in blank by the defendant, signed by the officers of the defendant, and to the knowledge of the
The main contention on the part of the defendant on this appeal is that the policy on which this action was brought was not a valid policy issued by the defendant; that the person who assumed to act as agent for the defendant, and by whom this policy was filled up, countersigned, and delivered, was not, at the time of making this policy, the lawful agent of the company, and had no power or authority to issue such policy, and bind the company thereby, and that the policy was therefore void. The first ground of that contention was that the defendant had, on the 20th day of September, 1892, suspended and revoked all the powers of the agent who filled out and delivered the policy in suit, and had conferred all the powers possessed by him on another agent; and that on the 20th of March, 1893, the successor of such first-mentioned agent went to the store of the plaintiff, and notified him of the suspension of such agency, and demanded a renewal of the policy, which the defendant refused; but it does not appear that the agent making that demand returned or agreed to return the premium or unearned premium paid by the plaintiff on this policy. As the defendant, at the time of the alleged revocation of the power of the former, gave no public notice of the same, and in no way informed the plaintiff of such revocation, and left with the agent the policies signed by the company, and, thus leaving in him the indicia of authority, the revocation did not bind the plaintiff, in the absence of any proof that it was known to him at the time of the receipt of the policy, he was not bound by it. The agent had acted as the general agent of the defendant upon the subject of issuing of policies, and his acts had been adopted by the company; and, so long as the company left this class of policies with him, and thus enabled him to continue to deal with the public upon the strength of his previous agency and the use of its policies, no secret revocation of his power could absolve the defendant from liability to third persons dealing upon the strength of such apparent authority without any knowledge of the revocation of such authority. Post v. Insurance Co., 43 Barb. 361; Ellis v. Insurance Co., 50 N. Y. 407; Ruggles v. Insurance Co., 114 N. Y. 415, 21 N. E. 1000; Arff v. Insurance Co., 125 N. Y. 57, 25 N. E. 1073. But it is insisted by the learned counsel for the defendant that this policy is void under the provisions of section 137 of chapter 690 of the Laws of 1892. Section 31 of this chapter prohibits the agent of a foreign insurance company from transacting any business in this state until he has filed in the office of the clerk of the county where he resides a certified copy of the authority of the superintendent of insurance authorizing him to do insurance business, which certificate is also required to be filed in the office
It is urged that, as the enactment of chapter 690 operated to •suspend the agencies unless the authority was renewed as required By that chapter, this relation ipso facto was dissolved, and that the plaintiff was charged with notice of that fact, as it was effected By a public statute, and all persons are bound and presumed to know the law; and as to this class of cases the ordinary rule governing principal and agent is no longer applicable to agents of foreign insurance incorporations. But it will be observed that this law imposes a duty upon the companies and their agents, for the protection of the public, and should not be so construed that it may Become an instrument of fraud and oppression to those for whose protection it was intended. It presupposes that companies and their agents may assume to act without having qualified themselves By paying the excise duties imposed for the*privilege of doing business in this state, and for such violation of law imposes heavy penalties. But it nowhere in terms gives the company any immunity •or enables it to escape the obligations of its contract through such violations. By assuming to insure the plaintiff’s property it deprived him of availing himself of other insurances, and it should not, when a loss occurs, be permitted to allege its own violation of law as an excuse for refusing to fulfill its contract. But it is urged that the company in its policy reserved the right to cancel the policy. Such provision, to be valid, must be upon the condition of a restoration of the unearned premium, where the assured has practiced no fraud in obtaining the policy. In its application to the plaintiff to cancel this policy it adopts it as its own, but fails to give the requisite notice of its intention, as required in the policy itself, and I see nothing in the conduct of the plaintiff at the time of the proposed cancellation of the policy which can be construed into a waiver of the required notice. I have examined the exceptions taken by the defendant to the various rulings of the trial judge, and •see no ground in them for a reversal of this judgment. Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.