37 Minn. 106 | Minn. | 1887
This action was brought upon a policy of insurance-to recover the value of wood destroyed by fire between the hours of 10-a. m. and 1 p. m. of May 15, 1885. The policy bore date May 13, 1885, and purported to insure plaintiff’s wood on the north side of' the Manitoba railway, at Armstrong’s station, for one year from noon of that date. The defence was that the agreement to insure was not-entered into until May 18th, three days after the property was de-. stroyed, of which fact plaintiff had knowledge at the time, but withheld the information from the defendant, who made the contract and executed the policy in ignorance of the loss of the property. It appears from the evidence that an application for insurance was made by plaintiff, on either the 14th or 15th of May, to Milligan & Er-mentraut, insurance agents in Minneapolis, in the form of a written memorandum left at their office with their clerk, calling for $1,000' insurance on wood, “on north and south sides” of the Manitoba railway at Armstrong’s station. It is customary for insurance agents, when they have no company in which to carry a risk, to place it with some other agency, in which case the agency which takes the risk, after writing up the policy, intrusts it to the other agency to deliver, and to collect the premium, and then the two divide the commissions between them.
In the present instance, Milligan & Ermentraut, having no company in which they could carry the risk, on May 15th, took plaintiff’s memorandum to the office of Cheney, the agent of defendant, and, not finding him at home, left it with his clerk, with the request to have it written up. The clerk promised that the matter would be attended to, but in fact she had no authority to accept applications, or bind the defendant company. The application was called to Cheney’s attention about 4 o’clock in the afternoon of the same day,
Upon this state of facts we do not see how plaintiff can recover. As in the case of any other contract, to constitute a contract of insurance, the minds of the parties must meet and concur as to terms. Now, prior to May 18th, Cheney had never had any communication with any one regarding this insurance. He was ignorant even of what had passed between plaintiff and Milligan & Ermentraut. He knew nothing about the matter except what was disclosed by the memorandum of application left at his office May 15th. Had he accepted the risk on the terms of this application, and written up the policy accordingly, a different question would have been presented. But this he declined to do, because the risk in the form stated in the application was not one which he could take. The terms of the con
If at that time loth parties had been ignorant of the loss, it would have been competent for them, by antedating the policy, to have made it retroactive. But in fact the plaintiff then knew that the property had been destroyed, but did not communicate that fact to defendant’s agent, who, in ignorance of the loss, accepted the risk, and issued the policy. Under these circumstances, the policy is void, and does not cover the loss.
Order reversed.'