Court Opinion

ID: 6841470
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 20:19:15.785016+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:04:51.819739
License: Public Domain

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.
In a state court, Weiner, a citizen of Pennsylvania, brought suit against the Western Assurance Company, a corporate citizen of Canada, to recover on an alleged oral insurance contract on plaintiff’s store for loss by fire of use and occupancy. The defendant, a corporate citizen of Canada, removed the case to the federal court below. Trial'by jury was waived, tbe facts stipulated, whereupon the trial judge made findings of fact that the alleged oral contract was duly proved, and entered judgment for the plaintiff. Whereupon the defendant took this appeal.
We here note that the case has been tried and argued on the assumption that this Court will consider the case de novo. On the contrary, the judgment entered below has the same force and effect as a judgment entered upon a verdict. It follows, therefore, that on this appeal this court has but two questions before it: First, was there evidence in the ease from which tbe findings of fact could be made? And, secondly, was there error in tbe application of the law to such found facts?
On the trial, no oral proof was given, the facts were stipulated, and they were such as warranted the court in finding as a fact what it did, namely, that an oral contract was made between the defendant’s duly authorized agent and the plaintiff for insurance against the loss of the use and occupancy by the burning, of the plaintiff’s store; that defendant’s agent noted a binder for tbe defendant, in writing, on a memorandum pad; that tbe term of insurance was for one year; that the amount of indemnity was agreed on as the profits and expenses showed by plaintiff’s books of account; that the premium was fixed .as the rate established by the Underwriters’ Association of the Middle Department of Pennsylvania. Without entering further into the details of the stipulation, we are of opinion the trial judge had before him stipulated facts .which warranted him in finding, as he did, that “in the ease at hand, the subject matter of the insurance, the duration of the risk and the extent of the hazard assumed are certain and definite beyond question, and that on these necessary elements of oral insurance there was a.clear meeting of the minds of the parties.”
All the elements of an insurance contract being established, the single question remains: Was such contract unenforceable because not in writing? As no statute requires it should be in writing, it logically follows that, if sufficient in its terms and clearly proved, the fact that it was not in writing does not make it unenforceable.
Finding no error here involved, the judgment below is affirmed.