34 Kan. 170 | Kan. | 1885
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On December 23, 1881, the Phenix Insurance Company of Brooklyn issued a policy of insurance by which the plaintiff was insured against loss by fire for a term of three years on a dwelling house together with the furniture therein. The policy contained a stipulation that the written application of the assured should be considered a part of the policy, and a warranty upon his pai’t that the property insured was in the condition he represented it to be, and that if there was any false representation made by the assured with regard to the condition of the property, or any omission to make known any and every fact material to the risk, it would operate to avoid the policy. Before the term of the policy had lapsed, and on March 22,1883, the property insured was
In reply to these allegations the plaintiff admitted the signing of the application, but stated that the application was written out by Robert Forbriger, the agent of the company, to whom the plaintiff had given a correct and truthful account of the condition of the building, including the fact that there was one brick-and-stone chimney in the house, and one stovepipe, properly protected, which passed directly through the roof; and further, that he requested the agent of the company to view the premises before insuring them, which the agent declined to do; that the agent of the company then pronounced the statements made by the plaintiff to be entirely satisfactory, and informed him that the policy would be issued at once. After these statements were made the agent wrote up what he said was an application, in a manner unknown to the plaintiff, as he was unable to read it for himself; but believing that it contained, as the agent represented, the substance of the statements which he had made, he signed the same, and the policy was immediately delivered to him by the agent. He alleges that any and all conditions in the policy conflicting with such statements made to and accepted by said agent, were withheld from and not communicated to him; and further, that the fire originated at an entirely different part of the premises from where the stove-pipe passed through the roof.
The case was tried with a jury, and after the testimony on
“First: Had the plaintiff the right to plead the fraud and misrepresentations in obtaining his signature to the application set up as a warranty?
“Second: If the plaintiff had the right to plead the fraud and misrepresentations, had the court the right to take from the consideration of the jury the duty of weighing the evidence upon controverted facts in relation to the statements and misrepresentations?”
To' avoid the estoppel, it is claimed by the insurance company that Forbriger was the agent of the insured in the procurement of the policy. The ground of this claim is an ambiguous provision, obscurely printed in the policy, which reads as follows:
“It is a part of this contract that any person other than the assured, who may have procured this insurance to be taken by this company, shall be deemed to be the agent of the assured named in the policy, and not of this company under any circumstances whatever, or in any transactions relating to this insurance.”
“Such stipulation cannot convert the agent who procured the application, and made the contract of insurance on behalf of the company, into an agent of the assured, such company being authorized by its charter to appoint agents and define their duties, and the agent in question being charged with the duty of soliciting and taking applications for policies, collecting premiums, etc. It is not destructive of the power of the agent, but an attempt of the company to dissolve the relationship between the company and the agent, and to establish it between the latter and the assured. Even if such agent could, by stipulation, be converted into an agent for the assured, he would still be the agent of the company, for in that capacity he professed to deal with the assured, and he was competent to bind his principal within the legitimate range of his employment.”
In Eilenberger v. Protective Mutual Fire Ins. Co., 89 Pa. St. 464, the supreme court of Pennsylvania, referring to a similar condition in a contested policy, held that as to all preliminary negotiations, the ageut acts only on behalf of the company, and that the company cannot escape the consequences of ■ fraud or mistakes of its agent by inserting a stipulation in the policy that such agent shall be deemed the agent of the assured, who, at the time of applying for the policy, was ignorant of the insurer’s intention to so stipulate.
In Gans v. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co., 43 Wis. 108, it was held that where an agent is authorized by the insurance company to receive applications and issue its policies, the company could not, by a stipulation in the policy, substitute the assured for itself, as the principal of the agent; and the court in commenting on the question, remarked that—
“If the stipulation substitutes the assured for the company, as the principal of the agent, then it is competeut for a person to make a contract with his own agent which shall bind a third party who is a stranger to it, and who never agreed to be bound by it. This would be a manifest absurdity.” (See also Sprague v. Holland Purchase Ins. Co., 69 N. Y. 128; Columbia Ins. Co. v. Cooper, 14 Wright, 331; Boetcher v. Hawkeye Ins. Co., 47 Iowa, 253.)
“ It cannot, therefore, be used to deprive a party of his right to have questions of fact determined by a jury. It matters not, therefore, whether the testimony which a party offers to prove a fact be absolutely conclusive, or only very weak and of uncertain import; he has the right to have that testimony considered and its value and sufficiency determined by a jury. The court may sustain a demurrer to evidence only under the circumstances which will permit it, after all the evidence has been presented on both sides, to withdraw the consideration of the case from the jury and decide it itself.” (K. P. Rly. Co. v. Couse, 17 Kas. 571.)
In another case it is said that before a case can be withdrawn from a jury the court must be able to say that, “ admitting all the evidence to be true that the plaintiff has introduced, and that none of the evidence conflicting therewith is true, the plaintiff has utterly failed to make out his case.” (Brown, Admr., v. A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co., 31 Kas. 1;
In this case it is clear that the testimony, though it may be weak and unsatisfactory, when considered in connection with the testimony of the defendant, and though it might have fallen far short of satisfying the minds of the jury, to say the least, fairly tended to establish the theory of facts assumed by the plaintiff.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, with all the facts reasonably and legally inferable therefrom, the evidence offered upon the part of the plaintiff tended to show that the untruthful answers respecting the flues were wrongfully written by the agent of the defendant without the dictation or knowledge of the plaintiff after .he had given truthful answers to the questions asked. In his testimony he says he was not asked of what material the chimneys were made, nor whether the stove-pipes passed through the roof; neither was he asked anything about how the flues were built through the roof; that the insurance contract was made in Forbriger’s office, and that no papers were read to him at that time. Forbriger asked questions in regard to the house; and if there were good flues, and he told him that there were, but that the agent did not ask him whether the chimneys were made of brick, stone, or tin. He asked the agent how much the insurance would cost for three years, and when he was told he paid the amount asked, and then the agent began writing and asking him questions, which he answered correctly, when theagentsaid “Allright; you are insured now;” thattheagent never read or explained the application to him, and that the false answers written by the agent in the application were never given by him.
It is true the testimony of the plaintiff regarding the flues is not very satisfactory, and the jury, if it had been submitted to them with appropriate instructions, might have found in favor of the defendant as did the court; but when it is considered in connection with the admitted facts, it made a case
The judgment of the district court will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.