1 Trans. App. 334 | NY | 1867
—This is an action upon a policy of insurance, issued "by the defendants to one L. Austin Spaulding, on July 12,1836, in the sum of §3,000, upon a stone flouring mill and machinery therein. On June 30, 1857, upon payment by Spaulding, the policy was renewed for one year from July 12, 1857, to July 12, 1833. On August 25,1857, Spaulding assigned the policy and all his interest therein to U. II. Wolfe, and on October 5, 1857, Wolfe assigned the policy and all his interest therein to the plaintiff. The property covered by the policy was totally consumed by fire on November 15, 1857. The policy contained this clause : “The interest of the assured in this policy is not assignable, unless consent of this corporation, manifested in writing; and in case of any transfer or termination of the interest of the insured, either by sale or otherwise, without such consent, this policy shall from thenceforth be void and of no effect.”
Upon the back of said policy were printed two blank consents, as follows : “The St. Nicholas Insurance Company of the city of New York hereby consent that the interest of-in the within policy be assigned to-subject nevertheless to the conditions therein contained. -, Secretary.”
The said consents were filled up and signed previous to the execution of said assignments, on August 25, and October 5,1857, so as to read as follows: “ The St. Nicholas Insurance Company of the city of New York hereby consent that the interest of L. A. Spaulding in the within policy be assigned to U. II. Wolfe, subject nevertheless to the conditions therein contained. II. A. Beewsteií, Agent.”
The second consent was in all respects similar, except that the name of U. II. Wolfe appeared in place of L. A. Spaulding, and that of Joseph Stringham in place of U..
The plaintiff sought to establish such authority upon the grounds:
1. That Brewster had, on September 5, 1857, notified the defendants that Spaulding’s interest in the policy had been assigned to Wolfe, and that the company had by silence ratified the same.
2. That Brewster, as agent of the defendants, had authority to grant the assent of the company to those assignments.
The first position v/as sought to be established by the testimony of Brewster.
[We omit here that part of the opinion which discusses the first of these two grounds, and which is- occupied with the credibility of certain testimony, rvithout bearing on the principles of law.]
It is now contended, however, that Brewster, as agent of the defendants, had authority to grant the assent of the company to these assignments. It is very apparent from the testimony and the correspondence between Brewster and the company what his powers were.
1. lie had authority to receive applications for insurance, and make them binding upon the company for the
2. He had power to receive the premiums on renewals of policies, and transmit the same to the company, and if accepted "by them, on the receipt "by him of the renewed certificate, signed "by the officers of the company, to deliver the same to the assured.
His duties seem to have been confined almost exclusively, if not entirely, to these two matters. I do not attach any importance to the statement made by Brewster, that his impression is that he executed other permissions to assign policies; he says, “ It is an impression; I cannot state positively if such were executed, and I cannot say that they were”—for the reason already suggested, and for the additional one, that the statement is very vague and Indefinite. If he had been in the practice of granting such consents, he could easily have ascertained the fact and mentioned the instances. The isolated case referred to in defendants’ letter of February 33, 3.850, wherein they state, “We have also noted the assignment of 8705, as requested,” is too indefinite and uncertain to show that the agent had a general authority to give similar consents in other cases.
But the language of the policy, and the blank consent printed on the back thereof, unmistakably indicate the steps to be taken by a policy holder, when a consent to an assignment was desired, and the officer or agent only authorized to give the consent to assignments. As already observed, the policy carried on its face notice to all holders, that the interest of the assured was not assignable, unless by consent of the corporation manifested in writing, and the printed blanks on the back of the policy were like notice of the form of such convent, and the officer alone authorised to give it, and manir», it the assent of the company. It was full notice to all th it it must be done by its secretary, and the erasure "by Brewster of the word “secretary,” and writing in place thereof the word “agent,” was an admonition to the parties that the authority to give the'consent was in the secretary only.
The person who procured said consents testified, that on both occasions of procuring the same, “ I saw said Policy Register, and that Brewster entered in said Policy Register, the fact of such permission and assignment, and its date,” and that said person saw on these occasions each of said entries made. There was no evidence offered that the defendants, or any of their officers ever saw said book, or had any knowledge of its contents ; and it affirmatively appeared that all the knowledge they or any of them had in relation to said book, was derived from a letter written by said Brewster to the secretary of the defendants, under date of “ Rochester, August 6, 1855,” in which he says : “We find it to be very necessary, as we advance in our business for you, that we should have a Policy Register for our own use. The companies we represent have generally preferred the purchase of a book here, and we charge it to them, though some prefer to send us books. Those we have cost us $3.50, and are expressly got up for
The counsel for the plaintiff then turned to page 40 of said book, where- the policy in suit is registered, and pointed out therein, against the description of the subject of insurance, the following entries in red ink :
“Assigned August 27, 1857, to U. H. Wolfe.
“ October 8, 1857, to Joseph Stringham, Buffalo.”
Defendants’ counsel objected to the reading of either of said entries in evidence from said book, and the referee sustained the objection, and excluded the evidence, and the plaintiff’s counsel then and there duly excepted to such decision. It certainly cannot be successfully maintained, that the circumstance that the defendants paid or consented to pay for the cost of this register for Brewster’s own use, changed in any respect relations then existing between Brewster and the defendants. It is not suggested that the defendants, or any of their officers, ever saw the said register, or were at any time made acquainted with its contents, or the lettering upon it, or the particular purposes to which it was applied. It did not constitute Brewster the clerk of the defendants, or bind them by the entries he or his clerks made therein. Those entries were irrelevant to prove the fact that Brewster was the agent of the defendants to give their consents. That must be established by evidence cMunde his acts or declarations.
Neither the declarations of a man, nor Ms acts, can be given in evidence to prove that he is the agent of another, or the extent of his powers (Scott v. Crane, 1 Conn., 255 ; Plumsted v. Rudebagh, 1 Yeates, 502, 505; James v. Stookey, 1 Wash. C. Ct., 330).
Brewster testified that his agency for the defendants commenced upon the receipt of the letter from the secre
The certificates so forwarded were in this form ;
“ St. Nicholas Insurance Company, No. 23, office corner of 8th Avenue and 14th St., New York. This certifies that I, II. A. Brewster, agent for the city of Rochester, have received of---dollars, being-months’ premium on -- insurance as per application No. —, dated the-day of-, IS—•, to be forwarded to their office as above for their action. It being understood and agreed between the parties that the said St. Nicholas Insurance Co. are not liable for this certificate beyond ten days from the date of the application referred to, unless the risk is accepted and a policy made and delivered for the whole term of-months, and in case the risk is not aceejited the premium is to be returned.
(Signed) War. Winslow, President.
War. S. Slocum, Secretary.
“ Dated this-day of-, 185—.
Agent.”
Brewster testified that he received these certificates as
It is then apparent that the powers of Brewster as agent were restricted to the receipt and forwarding to defendants of applications for insurance, and authority to make a policy for only ten days; and the certificates which were exhibited to the customers generally, contained information of the character and extent of the powers of the agent. The declarations and acts of Brewster within the scope of his agency, if they had been admitted, would not be of any materiality. The declarations and representations of the agent, when not expressly authorized by the principal, must, in order to bind him, be within the scope of his agency (New York Life Ins. & Trust Co. v. Beebe, 7 N. Y. [3 Seld.), 364; Olding v. Smith, 11 Eng. L. & Eq., 424; Very v. Levy, 13 How. U. S., 345).
In the .case in 3 Sold, {supra), Sehermerhorn, the agent, swore that he was the agent of the respondents in procuring a loan for them from the appellants, and it was contended, on the part of the appellants, that respondents were concluded by his dots and representations, the same as if they were their own, upon the principle which pervades all cases of agency—that the principal is bound by all acts of his agent within the scope of his agency, which he holds him out to the world to possess, and that where the acts of the agent will bind the principal, there his representations, declarations and admissions respecting.
Not only was the power to give the consents in question not within the scope of that agency, but the policy itself, and the blank consents indorsed thereon, gave notice to all holders of such policies that an agent of the company had no such power.
In view of all these considerations, the referee properly excluded the books kept by Brewster, and the entries therein. They were illegitimate to enlarge, alter, or modify his power as agent.
The judgment of the supreme court affirming the judgment upon the report of the referee was correct, and should be affirmed, with costs.
—The question litigated in this action is, whether H. A. Brewster was the agent of the defendants, and as such authorized to give their consent to the assignments of the policy, through which the plaintiff claims it.
The referee nonsuited the plaintiff, on the ground that
It is very clear, I think, that Brewster-had, in fact, no such authority. But it is insisted by the plaintiff’s counsel that the company dealt with Brewster in such a manner that he was justified in holding himself out to the public as its general agent; that he did represent himself to the plaintiff as such agent, and, therefore, that the company is bound by his acts in signing the consent to the assignments. It is not contended that the plaintiff was induced to accept the consent of Brewster as that of the company, by any act of the company implying or recognizing the authority of Brewster to give it, which came to the knowledge of the plaintiff, but that the acts of the company justified Brewster in assuming authority to give the consent, and therefore they are bound by it.
This is but stating, in another form, that Brewster was, in fact, the agent of the company, which proposition, as already intimated, I do not regard as sustained by the evidence.
Neither do I see anything in the evidence warranting the statement that the defendants bad an office in Rochester, in charge of which Brewster v/as acting as clerk. The fact that he was authorized by the company, at his request, to purchase at their expense a policy register, in which to keep an account of the business which he should do for the company, comes far short of establishing the fact claimed for it.
I think the nonsuit was properly upheld by the general term, and its judgment should be affirmed.
All the judges concurred in affirming the judgment.