20 Del. 325 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1903
charging the jury i
Gentlemen of the jury:—This is an action brought by William K. Mauck, for the use of Abraham L. Helmick, against the Merchants and Manufacturers Fire Insurance Company, a cor
It is conceded that the preliminary proof of loss in evidence before you, dated December 4, 1901, was received by the defendant company within the time required by the policy.
The only objection made to its sufficiency is that it does not conform to the requirement of the policy that the preliminary proof of loss shall state “ the interest of the insured and all others in the property,” in this, that it does not state the interest of Abraham L. Helmick under a certain deed of assignment executed by the
Whatever may have passed to the said Helmick under the said deed, it is clear that no interest so passed to him in the'insured property which had been destroyed before the execution of said deed, and said recited provision of the policy has no application to the interest which by said deed the said Helmick may have acquired in said policy, or in the debt which may be due thereunder from the defendant company to the plaintiff.
The defendant company insists that the policy was void until the payment of the premium; that said premium was never paid; that such payment could have been made only to the defendant company, or its duly authorized agent; that no such payment could have been made to an agent, unless such agent was so authorized by the defendant company in writing, and unless such agent countersigned the policy sued upon; and that C. A. Vananden & Co., who countersigned this policy as agents, were the only agents authorized to receive such premium.
In support of this contention the defendant relies upon the following provisions of the policy: “ In any matter relating to this insurance, no person, unless duly authorized in writing and who shall have countersigned this policy, shall be deemed the agent of this company; and the assured agrees with this company, by the acceptance hereofj that this company shall not be bound by the acts of any other person. Any other person shall be deemed to be the agent of the insured, and the payment of the premium to any such person shall be at the sole risk of the insured and shall not be deemed a payment to the company, and by the acceptance hereof the assured agrees that this company shall not be liable for any loss or damage by fire or other risk or casualty herein mentioned, until the assured shall have paid the premium hereinbefore mentioned in full to the company or its duly authorized agent, whose name is subscribed hereto; and until such premium is so paid this policy shall remain wholly void and. of no effect.”
Payment of the premium was necessary to give validity to the policy unless such payment was duly waived.
If you find from the evidence that the defendant company, after the delivery of the policy to the plaintiff and until the fire, failed to repudiate the contract of insurance as invalid for nonpayment of the premium, you may infer that the defendant company, or its agents, C. A. Vananden & Co., had in fact received the premium, or waived the payment of the same, unless there be satisfactory proof to the contrary.
If the premium was paid to one who by the terms of the policy was not authorized to receive it, and the defendant company; or its duly authorized agent, afterwards received such payment, it would be a sufficient payment, without regard to the method or channel through which such payment reached the company or its authorized agent.
If the company, or its duly authorized agent, never in fact received such payment, and the company after the delivery of the policy and before the fire, without objection or qualification, treated the policy as a contract binding upon it, this would be equivalent to an adoption or ratification of the contract of insurance and would be sufficient.
If a company makes a policy, complete in form, and sends it out for delivery to the insured, and after such delivery and before a loss by fire, treats the policy as a valid and binding contract, these are facts from which may be inferred, in the absence of satisfactory proof to the contrary, the payment of the premium to the
This statement of the law upon this point is fully sustained by the case of Weisman et al. vs. Fire Insurance Company, 3 Pennewill, 224, tried in this Court about two years ago. As a general rule, the payment of a debt by a note, if accepted as such, is a good payment.
In Joyce on Insurance, Vol. 1, Sec. 73, it is said :
“ Where a policy is delivered to an agent with authority to deliver it to the insured and receive the premium, and the agent delivers the policy and accepts a note for the premium, and discounts it on his own account, but does not pay the amount to the principal, the company is liable, although the policy provides that such agent shall be deemed the agent of the insured, and that the insurer shall not be liable until he actually receives the premium.”
You are the sole judges of the evidence, and if in the statement of it by the Court for the purpose of presenting to you the issues to be determined by you, there is any error or omission, you should not rely upon such statement, but be governed solely by the evidence as it was delivered to you in the course of the trial.
If you find a verdict for the plaintiff, it should be for the value of the property destroyed, not exceeding $900 for the first class of property described in the policy, and $100 for the second class of property so described, and not exceeding $1,000 for the whole, with interest thereon from a date ninety days áfter the delivery of the preliminary proofs of loss to the defendant compay.
Verdict for plaintiff for $1,069.62.