128 Ky. 351 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Conrad Schildknecht is a contractor and builder in Louisville, Ky. R. 0. Breuer & Co. are general agents of appellant, the Pelican Assurance Company of New York, doing an insurance business in Louisville, Ky. On the 28th of August, 1905, appellee notified Breuer & Co. by telephone that he desired to have them insure three frame dwelling houses on Dupue street, in Louisville, which he was erecting. Some one in the ooffice of Breuer & Co. answered this telephone call, and stated to appellee that as the houses were not numbered, and the lots upon which they were being erected were not numbered, they would have to send a representative put to locate them. This arrangement was satisfactory to appellee. About 5 o ’clock on the afternoon of the day following Mr. Julius Bolling, representing Breuer & Co., went out and viewed the houses. At the time he reached these buildings appellee and his brother were both there, and appellee and Bolling agreed that the houses were to be valued at $600 each, and insured for that amount for 40 days for $2 each. On the night of the same day, at about
Upon this appeal two questions are presented for our consideration: First Did appellee and Bolling agree that the two buildings should be insured in the appellant company? Second. Did Bolling have the authority to make the contract of insurance if they did so agree?
. On the first question appellee and his brother both testify positively that it was agreed between appellee and Bolling that the buildings in question should be insured in appellant company. This Bolling denies. After the buildings had been inspected by Bolling and the conversation above referred to had taken place, appellee and Bolling repaired to the liquor emporium of one Henry Lammers, and while there, according to the testimony of Mrs. Lammers, Mr. Bolling said that appellee’s buildings were insured all right from that day. It seems that bn his way out to inspect the buildings and locate the property Bolling had stopped in Lammers ’ place of business, and had a conversation relative to this insurance with him. Bolling admits being present and talking to Lammers, but denies that he said that appellee’s property was insured from that date. The weight of the evidence shows that
The evidence supports the' contention of appellee that on the 29th of August he entered into-a parol contract with the agent Bolling, by the terms of which it was agreed that the three buildings above referred to should be insured from that time for a pexiod of 40 days in the appellant company for a- premium of $2 each; that appellee had a running account with the Breuer agency, with whom he settled his insurance premium accounts from time to time, as called upon to do so. In the case of Baldwin v. Phoenix Insurance Company, 107 Ky. 356, 54 S. W. 13, 92 Am. St. Rep. 362, it was shown that'it had been the custom of the agent of the insurance company to issue the policies of insurance' to customers and charge them with the premiums, and, at his pleasure, present and collect these premium accounts, and the court held that one who had so dealt with the agent -had a right to rely upon this method of doing business, and, in the absence of a notice to the- contrary, presume' that it would be followed by the company with reference to other contracts of insurance; and, continuing; the court said: “We think this method of transacting business was, in effect, giving a credit to the appellant for the premium and he had the right to understand'that he was getting credit therefor, and that he was entitled to pay it upon demand only. ” In' that case, as in others; this Court has held that where the insured had a running account
The record shows that R. 0. Breuer was the general agent of appellant company. Although his agency was styled and known as Breuer & Co., he was, in fact, the sole owner of the agency. He testifies that Bolling had been working for him under a verbal agreement, for some years as a solicitor, and that his duties were limited to soliciting applications for insurance, although he admitted that as such solicitor he was provided with the scale of rates furnished by the Underwriters Association for Louisville, and at times collected and received premiums due the agency. Bolling testifies to practically the same state of facts, as did also the other employes in the office of Breuer & Co. It is not denied that R. 0. Breuer, doing business as Breuer & Co., was the general agent of the appellant company. As such, he had full power and authority to act for the company, and this necessarily carried with it the authority to hire or employ sub-agents. Unquestionably a general agent has authority to bind the company by his acts to the extent ,of modifying or varying the terms and conditions of the contract of insurance, or waiving express conditions of
The rulings of the- Supreme Courts of North Carolina, West Virginia, New York, Oregon, Massachusetts, and many others are in accord with our own in holding the company responsible for the acts of the
The judgment is therefore affirmed.