99 So. 828 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1924
The complaint as amended was in two counts, claiming in the first count the value of an authomobile insured by defendant *639 against loss from fire, and in the second count for the penalty of 25 per cent. under the statute, by reason of defendant's membership in the S.E. Tariff Association. The complaint was demurred to, and demurrer was overruled, but as to this there is no assignment of error.
Answering the complaint defendant filed 12 pleas, to all of which demurrers were filed, except as to the plea of general issue. The court sustained demurrers to pleas 3, 6, 7, and 11, and this action of the court is first assigned as error. Pleas 3, 6, and 7, being similar, may be considered together, and as to these pleas it is sufficient to say that the matters of defense alleged therein were available to the defendant under other pleas to which demurrers were overruled.
The complaint alleged a contract of insurance binding on the defendant. The payment or agreement to pay the premium by the insured is a condition precedent to, or at least concurrent with, the assuming of any liability by an insurance company. The making of a policy of insurance on presentation thereof is simply evidence of a willingness to enter into a contract of insurance on the payment of the premium, and not of a contract of insurance. Hence, as is said by Mr. Cooley in his Briefs on the Law of Ins. vol. 1, p. 462:
"It may be stated as a general proposition that the payment of an advance premium is necessary to the consummation of an insurance contract, unless some other provision is made therefore."
See Roberts v. Ætna L. Ins. Co., 101 111. App. 313; Mauck v. M. M. Fire Ins. Co., 4 Pen. (Del.) 325, 54 A. 952; St. Ill Louis Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. Kennedy, 6 Bush 450; Com. v. Wetherbee,
After the loss had occurred as claimed in the complaint, if the defendant, with knowledge that the policy issued by the Atlas Insurance Company, Limited, of London, had been issued as alleged in defendant's plea 8 and on the same property described in the policy sued on, and with such knowledge entered into an adjustment with the plaintiff of the loss under this policy, and caused the plaintiff to incur trouble and expense, and did there and then recognize the policy sued on as being binding and valid, such action on its part would be a waiver of the breach alleged in plea 8 and would be an answer to said plea. The foregoing is in effect the allegations of plaintiff's replication 5, to which demurrer was overruled. In this ruling the trial court did not err. Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Allen,
Plaintiffs replication 11 was an immaterial replication, being only a denial of a fact pleaded by the defendant. Plea 8, which was allowed to the defendant by the court, alleges:
"At the time the loss occurred there was other insurance covering such loss which would have attached if this insurance had not been effected, to wit," etc.
The replication simply denies this, and amounts to the general issue on that plea.
After all is said, the plaintiff's right to recover turns upon the authority of Miss Craig, a clerk in the office of the Jasper Insurance Company, to bind the defendant by a waiver of the forfeiture clauses in the policy of insurance, it being admittedly a fact that these forfeitures existed unless with knowledge they were waived, and it further appears from this record that this waiver could not become effective in the absence of authority on the part of Miss Craig to bind the company. It is further without dispute that Miss Craig was never directly employed by defendant, and had no connection therewith, except as an employé of the Jasper Insurance Company. The Jasper Insurance Company was a corporation doing an agency insurance business in Jasper, Ala., and its vicinity, and was the general agent of defendant in that vicinity for the purpose of making contracts of insurance of the kind here involved. If, therefore, notice of the forfeitures came to the Jasper Insurance Company, such notice would be imputable to this defendant. The Jasper Insurance Company transacted its business through R.A. Cain, its president. For this purpose, and to aid him, he employed Miss Craig as a clerk in respect to the business of the agency. In that capacity she was to do mere clerical work; she had authority to fill out insurance policies, and sometimes she issued policies, signing Cain's name thereto with a stamp, and to do other things usual for an office clerk, but the defendant knew of none of these things. She did not have authority to make contracts of insurance without the approval of Cain. This she never did. From the facts as presented we are bound to conclude that "Miss Craig was in no sense the agent of defendant, nor authorized to bind it in any degree, nor was it affected by the alleged notice to her of the forfeitures." Waldman v. N. B. M. Ins. Co.,
The fact that Miss Craig was the employé of the Jasper Insurance Company who took the application for the insurance and her close association with Cain, its president, might furnish grounds for surmises, but does not rise to the dignity of evidence upon which to base a legal inference.
The appellee files no brief. For the error pointed out the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.