104 Ga. 772 | Ga. | 1898
Ramspeck brought suit against Pattillo for breach of contract, the petition alleging: Defendant was agent of a certain insurance company, and had been, as such, insuring in said company plaintiff’s property regularly during a period of from ten to twenty years, renewing all policies at their expiration with new policies in the same company, unless otherwise instructed by plaintiff, and sending bills for the premiums thereof to the plaintiff from time to time as suited defendant’s convenience, which bills plaintiff had always paid, and which new and renewal policies plaintiff had always accepted. Some five years before the filing of the petition, this custom took the form of a more explicit agreement between plaintiff and defendant, whereby plaintiff promised to continue to insure his property with defendant, in preference to any other company or agent; and defendant bound himself to renew and rewrite all policies of plaintiff in said company as aforesaid, and to keep plaintiff’s property, once placed with defendant, covered with insurance, plaintiff to pay all bills presented to him for premiums; and whereby it was agreed that none of plaintiff’s property should become uninsured by mere expiration of the policy. The consideration for this agreement was, the mutual promises made by the parties; the convenience, profit, and increased business coming to Pattillo by reason of the agreement; the lessened labor of soliciting the insurance; the certainty of payment of premiums; the knowledge of the condition, title, and insurance of the property insured, and the consequent lessening of the risk; and the large sums of money paid not only for insurance but in consideration of the agreement, plaintiff having paid large sums in conformity to the agreement. Further, plaintiff refrained from seeking insurance elsewhere. Plaintiff was owner of certain land with a building thereon, regularly insured in defendant’s company for $900, the policy to expire on January 23, 1893. Shortly before that time defendant requested plaintiff to renew the policy, stating that there had been an increase in the rate; and plaintiff agreed and instructed defendant to continue'the insurance but in the amount of $750 and for a term of three years. All of this was agreed to, and memoranda made. Plaintiff thus became bound for the pre
The allegations of the petition, when reduced to- their last analysis, mean that a contract was entered into by Pattillo, as agent of the insurance company, and Ramspeck, whereby Pattillo, for a valuable consideration, agreed to keep Ramspeck’s property insured in companies represented by Pattillo, and that Pattillo negligently failed to keep insured one house which was. destroyed by fire to the damage of Ramspeck. This was clearly a double agency on the part of Pattillo, imposing upon
Judgment affirmed.