76 S.E. 865 | N.C. | 1912
This is an action to recover upon divers policies of insurance, eleven in number, alleged to have been issued by the defendants to the plaintiff on its property, which was destroyed by fire on 5 December, 1910. Five of these policies were alleged to have been issued by (90) the Royal Exchange Assurance Company and its four associates on 26 November, 1910, the said companies being, at the time, represented by C. N. G. Butt Co., an insurance agency at Charlotte, N.C. and their policies have, by consent and for convenience, been called the "Charlotte policies," and will be so styled in the discussion of the case, and other policies, called the "Concord policies," and hereinafter styled as such, were issued by the insurance agency of John K. Patterson Co., at Concord, N.C. E. F. White of Concord was a member of the insurance firm of John K. Patterson Co., and also secretary and treasurer of the Roberta Manufacturing Company, plaintiff in this case. John C. Rankin was its president and S. M. Robinson was a director, and had joint control and management of the plaintiff's affairs with John C. Rankin. At the request of White, policies to the amount of $40,000 were made out by John K. Patterson Co., and afterwards other policies to the amount of $20,000 were similarly made out by *73 them, and all of them handed to White, who placed them in the drawer of the desk which was in the office of Patterson Co. Issues were submitted to the jury and answered as follows:
1. Were the Charlotte policies delivered to plaintiff by the Charlotte companies? Answer: Yes.
2. Were they accepted before the fire by plaintiff? Answer: Yes.
3. Had they been canceled at the time of the fire? Answer: No.
4. Were the Concord policies delivered to plaintiff by the Concord companies? Answer: Yes.
5. Were they accepted by plaintiff before the fire? Answer: Yes.
6. Was E. F. White plaintiff's secretary and treasurer and also agent of the Concord companies when the Concord policies were written? Answer: Yes.
7. Did he so continue up to and after the fire? Answer: Yes.
8. Are the Concord companies estopped from setting up as a defense White's double agency at the time said policies were issued or accepted? Answer: No.
9. Did the Concord companies by their conduct or course of dealing prior to the issuing of these policies authorize their agents to issue these policies to plaintiffs through White, and thereby waive their right to defend on the ground that said policies were invalid because (91) White was agent of both insurer and insured? Answer: Yes.
10. Were the Concord policies in force at the time of the fire? Answer: Yes.
The Concord companies made a motion to strike out the verdict on the fourth, fifth, ninth, and tenth issues.
Plaintiff gave notice of a motion that, if any part of this motion was sustained, it would move to strike out the answers to the sixth, seventh, and eighth issues.
The court sustained the motion of the Concord companies, and struck out the findings of the jury on the fourth, fifth, ninth, and tenth issues, and, on motion of counsel for the Concord companies, dismissed the action, as to them, under the statute. It also overruled plaintiff's motion for judgment against all the defendants, set aside the findings against the Concord companies for insufficiency of evidence to sustain the same, as matter of law and not as matter of discretion, and refused a new trial to the Charlotte companies on their motion. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff against the Charlotte companies for the full amount sued for, and in favor of the Concord companies, dismissing said action as to them, with costs against plaintiff. Plaintiff and the Charlotte companies appealed. *74 After stating the case: The decisive question in this case is, whether the Concord policies were delivered so as to become effectual as insurance contracts. Counsel for the Charlotte companies virtually, or at least tacitly, conceded, as we think very properly, that the Charlotte policies had been accepted by the plaintiff and were in force at the time of the fire which destroyed the insured property. If (92) anything besides this frank admission were needed to show the fact, the letter of Mr. Griffith of the firm of C. N. G. Butt Co. to S. M. Robinson, dated 17 December, 1910, and referring to the carbon copy of a letter from S. M. Robinson to E. F. White, dated 15 December, 1910, would be sufficient of itself to establish conclusively the delivery by C. N. G. Butt Co. and the acceptance by the plaintiff of the Charlotte policies. In his letter, as we have said, Griffith refers to the inclosed carbon copy of Robinson's letter to White, in which Robinson, for himself and Rankin, and acting for the plaintiff, declines to accept the Concord policies, and notifies White to cancel them, "so as to leave the business in the hands of C. N. G. Butt Co., where I find it rightly belongs." With reference to this statement, Griffith, in his letter to Robinson, approves what Robinson had said in his letter to White, in these words: I have read with much interest the carbon copy of letter to Mr. White. I am glad you have taken the position you have and that you will let the insurance remain with us. I return herewith letter as rerequted, [requested,] together with bill. If it is not convenient to pay now, we will take care of same."
With this matter out of the way, we turn our attention to the delivery of the Concord policies. We attach no great importance to the fact that they remained in the actual possession of White, that is, in the drawer of the desk, from the time he got them from Patterson Co. to the day of the fire and afterwards, for if they were intended by the parties to be valid and subsisting contracts of insurance, the manual delivery of them to the plaintiff, or to the party authorized to represent it, was not essential to make them binding upon the companies. "In the absence of any other evidence to show assent of the company to the making of a contract of insurance, delivery of the policy must be shown. But where a policy has been duly executed in compliance with an application on the part of the insured, so that the minds of the parties have fully met as to the terms and conditions of the contract, a manual delivery of the policy to the insured is not essential to render it binding *75
on the company." 19 Cyc., p. 603. If the policy has been put into the hands of the company's agent, to be delivered to the insured, and nothing remains but to make such delivery, without any further action on the part of the insured being necessary except the mere formal act of receiving the policy, then their agent is presumed to hold the policy (93) for the insured and the contract is complete and binding.Insurance Co. v. Colt, 20 Wall., 200 (22 L. E., 4323, Wheeler v. InsuranceCo.,
The fact that White had physical possession of the Concord policies, of course, throws light upon the other question, as to whether they had been issued by the Concord companies and accepted by the plaintiff. Our view of the case also eliminates another question, whether, if the Concord policies had been duly issued and accepted, the dual agency of White, who, in a measure, represented the plaintiff, and also the Concord companies, would have the effect of invalidating the policies. This brings us to consider whether the Concord policies had been delivered and were in force when the fire occurred. Looking at the entire evidence and considering it most favorably for the plaintiff, the indisputable facts of the case lead us irresistibly to the conclusion that there was no such delivery of the policies as the law requires to complete the contract of insurance and impose liability upon the companies.
It is, of course, true that a policy issued by an insurance agent, without the knowledge or consent of either party, is not valid. 19 Cyc., 625; Insurance Co. v. Turnbull,
It can make no difference in the result, what was intended by either party, nor can the contract be changed or modified by what one of the parties may now say he intended. It all depends upon what was said and done at the time. If no contract was made then, it cannot be made now postfacto. "A contract, express or implied, executed or executory, results from the concurrence of minds of two or more persons, and its legal consequences are not dependent upon the impressions or understandings of one alone of the parties to it. It is not what either thinks, but what both agree."Prince v. McRae,
But there is another view of the case equally as fatal to the contention that the Concord policies were in force at the time of the fire. These policies, if ever delivered and in force, were of the standard form, that is, the form prescribed by the statute, Revisal, sec. 4760. The following is one of the provisions of each policy: "This policy shall be canceled, at any time, at the request of the insured, or by the company by giving five days notice of such cancellation." The standard form of policy originated, we believe, in the State of New York, and our form *79
was substantially copied from the one in use there. The Court (98) of appeals of that State has construed the provision of the policy in regard to cancellation, which we have quoted, in the case ofC. P. Iron Co., v. Insurance Co.,
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the judge was right in setting aside the issues as to the Concord companies and giving judgment for the full amount of the loss against the Charlotte companies. This affirms the judgment of the court in both appeals.
Plaintiff's appeal: Affirmed.
Charlotte companies' appeal: Affirmed. *81