47 Ind. App. 602 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1911
— Appellant brought this action against the Illinois National Fire Insurance Company of Springfield, Illinois, and the Manufacturers Mutual Fire Insurance Company, upon a policy of insurance issued under the following circumstances. The Manufacturers Mutual Fire Insurance Company was engaged in the general fire insurance business in the State of Indiana, and having occasion to reinsure a part of the risk assumed by it, such reinsurance was placed with the Illinois National Fire Insurance Company of Springfield, Illinois. The Manufacturers Mutual Fire Insurance Company insured appellant against loss or damage by fire in the sum of $2,000, and reinsured said $2,000 with said Illinois company, and received from that company the policy of insurance upon which this action is brought. Appellant suffered loss by fire, which was adjusted at more than $2,000, and to satisfy the claim of appellant against the Manufacturers Mutual Fire Insurance Company, it assigned to appellant the policy issued to it by the Illinois National Fire Insurance Company. Said Illinois National Fire Insurance Company was never regularly admitted to do business in Indiana, not having complied with the law relating to foreign insurance companies. The summons in this case was served upon Anton J. Yan Diense, president of A. J. Yan Diense & Co., the sheriff’s return showing that no officer or director of appellee Illinois National Fire Insurance Company was found, and that said Yan Diense was the only representative of said appellee found within his bailiwick. The Illinois National Fire Insurance Company, herein designated as appellee, entered a special appearance, and filed its motion
A hearing was had on the motion to quash, and neither party objected to this method of procedure. In support of the motion, said appellee offered the affidavits of Anton J. Van Diense and the secretary of said appellee company, which affidavits fully supported the facts set out in the motion. Anton J. Van Diense was also examined as a witness.
The finding of the court, as shown by the record, is as follows: “And on plaintiff’s admission in open court that if Anton J. Van Diense, the person upon whom said writ was served, is not, and was not at the time of said service, an agent of defendant Illinois National' Fire Insurance Company of Springfield, Illinois, then said defendant company had no agent, and now has no agent in the State. The court now orders that plaintiff’s complaint herein be dismissed, and that defendants have judgment against the plaintiff for their costs laid out and expended.” Judgment was entered accordingly.
Error is predicated upon the action of the court in sustaining the motion to quash the sheriff’s return to the summons.
By the act of March 11, 1901 (Acts 1901 p. 375, §4798 Burns 1908), it is provided that every insurance company chartered or incorporated in any other state and doing business in the State of Indiana, shall be subject to the process of the courts of this State in any action founded upon any claim or demand of any character whatever, held or asserted against said company by any citizen of this State, and process against said company shall be served in the manner provided by existing laws.
The admitted fact that Van Diense did not solicit insurance for appellee in this State cannot affect the question of agency. Mere solicitation in itself amounts to nothing. The important elements to be considered in the determination of the question of agency in this case are the execution of the contracts by appellee and returning them to Van Diense for delivery to the insured, the delivery of the policies, the collection of the premiums, the deduction of the agent’s commission, and the remittance of the balance and retention thereof by appellee. What more could a regularly authorized agent do? In accepting the business proffered by Van Diense, giving him authority to deliver the policies, collect the premiums, and by paying him for his services, appellee must be considered as making his act
In the case of Stevens v. Rasin Fertilizer Co., supra, a case not unlike this one, the court of appeals of Maryland said: “He [the broker] was intrusted with the possession of the policies for the purpose of delivering them to the defendant, provided it would pay the cash premiums; and he was also intrusted with the collection and transmission of the money. For these services he was paid by the insurance company, and therein he was its agent. He was paid by being allowed to retain a commission out of the premiums received from the defendant. Undoubtedly, he delivered the policies for and in behalf of the insurance company. He would not have delivered them, if the premiums had not been paid, or adequately secured. Undoubtedly
In the case of Continental Ins. Co. v. Ruckman, supra, the supreme court of Illinois said: “The general assembly ="• * - bad an undoubted right to make such companies responsible, not only for the acts of those who are in fact their agents, but of those who assume to act as their agents and in fact aid them in the transaction of their insurance business.”
The supreme court of Massachusetts, in the case of Reyer v. Odd Fellows, etc., Accident Assn., supra, construed the Indiana law in a case where a judgment was obtained in Indiana by service upon a local secretary of a lodge, who was not recognized by the association as an agent. Being unable to collect in this State, the holder of the judgment sought to enforce it in Massachusetts, the defendant being a Massachusetts corporation. Notices to members of assessments were sent out in which one Reynolds was referred to as the local secretary, although the by-laws of the Association did not recognize the existence of such an officer. Reynolds did, in fact, transmit money to the association, deducting his commissions from the assessments collected by him, and transacted some other business for said association. The court held that Reynolds was the agent of the association, and that service of process on him was service on the company, within the meaning of the Indiana laws.
As we have seen, the evidence shows that at the time of the hearing below, Van Diense had sent applications for insurance to appellee, both before and after service of process in this action. These applications were accepted by appellee, policies were written and sent to Van Diense for delivery. These policies were by him delivered, the premiums collected and his commissions retained, with the knowledge and approval of appellee. Our conclusion is that these acts constituted Van Diense the agent of appellee, within the meaning of the laws of this State defining agency, and that service of summons upon him as such agent, gave the Superior Court of Marion County jurisdiction of appellee.
The judgment is therefore reversed, with instructions to the court below to overrule the motion of appellee to quash the sheriff’s return to the summons, and to reinstate the action of appellant as an action pending in the Superior Court of Marion County.