1 Port. 251 | Ala. | 1834
This action was assumpsit, for money had and received, &.c.; brought by Watkins, for the use of C. & A. Batre, against the present defendant, in the Circuit Court of Mobile. A trial was had on the general issue, in which the defendant prevailed. A bill of exceptions taken on the trial, discloses the following facts, as the foundation of the action.
Fifty eight guns, the property of the plaintiff, had been, placed by him in the defendant’s store, to be sold at auction. The defendant had caused the same, with other goods, amounting to more than three thousand dollars, to be insured by valued policies at two thousand dollars ; and after a loss of the goods by fire, had received the latter sum. The insurance embraced all the goods in the defendant’s store, and were described in the application and policy, as goods belonging to himself, or held in trust or on commission. The plaintiff moved the court to charge the jury, that if they believed that the guns mentioned in the schedule of insured articles, were in fact, the property of - the plaintiff, the defendant was es-topped thereby, and could not say the plaintiff had not instructed him to cause insurance on his goods. This charge the court refused; but instructed the jury, that the plaintiff could .■ (h^- found from the testimony, that the
In this case, there being no subsequent agreement, as in the other, for the payment of a proportion of the insurance, it may be proper to notice more particularly, the effect of such insurance at the instance of the one, and the right of adoption by the other.
In the case of Hagerdon vs. Oliverson,
Hughes, in his Treatise on Insurance,
^ s™^ar Principle was recognised in Ruth vs. Thompson,
The cases cited in argument, in opposition to the plaintiff’s right to recover, do not, it is conceived, conflict with the principles already advanced. In Cohen vs. Hannam,
Iñ Bell vs. Ansley,
The case of Graves vs. The Boston Marine Insurance Company,
The bill of exceptions does not purport to disclose the whole of the evidence on the trial. No question is presented, respecting the necessity, or sufficiency of any adoption or dis- ■ claimer, between the time of the loss, and the institution of this suit ; nor whether the commencement of the suit was of itself a sufficient adoption of the policy. We cannot, therefore, anticipate these questions. But, in the opinion of the court below, that the plaintiff's original authority for the insurance, or his adoption of it, prior to the loss, was indispensable to the plaintiff’s right to recover, we all think there was error — and for which, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.
L.
See p. 240.
2 Maul. & Sel. 485.
Highes or^ Ins. 41.
13 East, 274.
2 New R. 283. 29_, 307.
5 Taunt. 101.
16 East, 141
2cranch 419
Hughes on Insur. 44, 45, 386, 387.