Case Name: George Buckley, Respondent, v. Citizens' Insurance Company of Missouri, Appellant
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1906-03-07
Citations: 112 A.D. 451
Docket Number: 
Parties: George Buckley, Respondent, v. Citizens’ Insurance Company of Missouri, Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: Appellate Division Reports
Volume: 112
Pages: 451–456

Head Matter:
George Buckley, Respondent, v. Citizens’ Insurance Company of Missouri, Appellant.
Fourth Department,
March 7, 1906.
Fire insurance — policy called in, but unearned premium' not repaid by agent — when insurer liable for subsequent loss — when insurer bound by act of agent.
When a fire" insurance agent gives credit to the insured and according to a custom is charged by the insurance company with the premiums due, whether paid by the insured or not, and is credited with unearned premiums on policies sent in for cancellation, a policy issued by such agent on credit binds the insurance company.
So, too, when after á partial loss by fire the policy is called in by said agent for cancellation pursuant to one of its provisions, and the unearned premium on said policy, though never paid to the insured by the agent, was credited to the agent by the insurer, the policy remains in force and the insurer is liable thereunder on a subsequent destruction of the buildings by fire.
The act of the insured in delivering up the policy for cancellation on demand is not a voluntary cancellation thereof.
Hash, J., dissented, with opinion.
Appeal by the defendant, the Citizens’ Insurance Company of . Missouri, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the, plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the.county "of Oneida, oh the 30th day of October, 1905, upon, the report of a referee.
Hiram R. Wood, for the appellant.
Edward C. Rice, for the respondent.

Opinion:
Judgment affirmed, with costs, on opinion by Herwin, referee.
All concurred, except Hash, J., who dissented, in an opinion.
The following is the opinion of the referee:
Merwin, Referee:
On the 12th of April,.1903, the defendant, issued and delivered to the plaintiff its policy of- insurance, dated" April 12,, 1903,. insuring, the plaintiff's hotel for the term of pne year against loss or damage" by five to the amount of $.625. There was other insurance upon the building, the whole amounting to $2,500.
On the 21st- of June, 19Ó3, the building was idjured by fife to the amount of $53, and the amount chargeable to defendant was $13-25. There is no dispute as to this.
Oil the night of the fifth and sixth of July the building Was - totally destroyed by fire, There is no dispute about the amount of the loss.. The claim of the defendant is that the policy was canceled and was not in force at the time of the fire.
Becker & Co. of Little Falls, N. Y., were the agents of the defendant in the issuing of the policy. On- the 23d Of June,: 1903, they mailed to the plaintiff, who then lived at Bemsen, H. Y, a notice signed by them and-dated June 20, 1903, stating that the policy, describing it, " is hereby canceled from and after five days of. the date hereof," and requesting the plaintiff to return the policy' to - their office, when the unearned premium, if any be due, would be returned to him pro rata.. The notice also stated that it was given in pursuance of a condition of the policy which gave the insurance company the right to cancel the policy at any time "by giving five. days' notice of such cancellation ánd provided that in-case, the premium had been actually paid the unearned portion should be returned on surrender of the policy, the company retaining only the pro rateo .premium. " '
This -notice was received by the plaintiff, bn the twenty-third or twentyffourth of June. On or about .the twenty-sixth of June plaintiff mailed to Becker & Co. the policy, no letter or communication being sent with it. The unearned premium was not paid to the plain tiff before the fire, or at anytime. The policy was returned by Becker & Co. to the defendant after the fire, and bn July 7,1903.
Becker & Co. at the time of issuing the policy gave the plaintiff credit for the premitim. Its amount, together with the premiums on policies in two other companies issued at the same time on the same property, was $97.51. The plaintiff also owed Becker & Co. $100 for premiums on policies bn other property. In payment of these two items the plaintiff on or • about May 20, 1903, gave to Becker & Co. his note for $197.50, dated May 20, 1903, payable three months after date to the order of Becker & Co. at the First Hatiohal Bank of Remsen, with interest. Becker & Co. soon after receiving" this note, indorsed it and discounted it at a Little Falls bank, and received the proceeds thereof. The bank held the note until its'maturity, when it was taken up by Becker & Co., and they still hold it. The $100 item seems to -have been paid by plaintiff.
It was the custom of Becker & Co., as agents of the defendant to make daily reports to it of insurance placed in that company, and the premiums would be charged by defendant to Becker &' Oo.j and periodically they had to make payment thereof to the company, whether they had collected them or not. It was their general custom to pay in sixty days. In case a policy was canceled, the agents would be credited with the unearned premium when the policy was actually sent to the company .for cancellation.
The premium on the policy in question was charged to Becker & Co. by the defendant in its April account. The full amount of this account was paid by Becker & Co. to defendant in August following. The defendant on the return to it of the policy credited them with the amount of the unearned premium and this credit would appear in the July account which would be subsequently paid.
As between the plaintiff and the defendant the premium was, I think, actually paid within the meaning of the policy. (Battle v. Coit, 26 N. Y. 404, 406; Train v. Holland Purchase Ins. Co., 62 id. 598, 602; White v. Connecticut Ins. Co., 120 Mass. 330.)
If so, the defendant, in order to effect a cancellation under the notice, was bound to return or tender to the plaintiff the unearned premium. (Tisdell v. New Hampshire Ins. Co., 155 N. Y. 163.) This was not' done, and the policy was, therefore, in force at the time of the fire unless there was prior to the fire a waiver by plaintiff of such-return or tender. .
upon the pai;t of the defendant, it is in -effect suggested that the act of the plaintiff in mailing to Becker & Co. the policy after the receipt by plaintiff of the cancellation notice, amounted to a cancellation by agreement. I think not. Presumptively .the return" of the policy to Becker & Co. was in compliance with the request in the notice, in order to obtain the unearned premium, and was. not an assent tó a cancellation without the performance by Becker &'Co. of what they expressly offered to do in the" notice: No intent of that kind can properly be inferred.
Becker & Co. did not return the policy to the defendant until after the fire, a circumstance of- some considerable significance not only on the question of waiver, but also on the question 'whether, as testified by plaintiff,- Becker & Co., at an interview on the-twenty-sixth or twenty-seventh day of June, agreed to hold the policy in- force until they replaced the; insurance in some other company. They had. commenced an effort in this line before any interview with plaintiff, and "continued' it after the. interview above referred to. The plaintiff was not informed of the amount of the unearned premium until after the fire, and it is probable that until -that time there was no definite offer of adjustment.-
Waiver is said to be the voluntary relinquishment of a known right. (Richards Ins. [2d ed.] § 63; 29 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 1091.) The burden .of proof rests upon the party who asserts it. - "
It must, I think, be said upon the evidence' that the defendant has not established a waiver, and if not the policy was in force at the time of the fire, and the plaintiff is entitled to recover.