Court Opinion

ID: 6618415
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:26:19.298543+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:37.158773
License: Public Domain

Gill, J.
This is an action on an insurance policy issued October 1, 1892, to one E. W. Culver and covering a large mill plant located in Lawrence county,Arkansas. During the life of the policy, in March, 1893, the property was destroyed by fire. Shortly thereafter Culver assigned the policy and all claims-thereunder to plaintiff Rosencrans, as trustee, for the benefit of the Union National Bank of Kansas City, to-whom Culver was then largely indebted. The mill had formerly belonged to a corporation known as the North Arkansas Lumber Company, of which Culver was the vice-president. The company had become-financially involved and had incumbered its property by a mortgage and deed of trust, to secure said Union National Bank on a claim of about $35,000 which it. had against the lumber company. In September, 1892, Culver bought the property from the lumber-company and assumed this indebtedness to the bank. Kinney, Medes & Crittenden, insurance agents at: Kansas City, had been theretofore placing and carrying all insurance on the mill property. Immediately on the purchase of the mill, Culver went with one of' the bank’s officers to the office of these insurance-agents at Kansas [City, intending to have the policies assigned, or changed so as to correspond with the new condition of things. After some consultation, it was concluded,rather than assign the existing policies, to-take out new ones in Culver’s name; and he (Culver) thereupon agreed to take from Kinney, Medes & Crittenden $20,000 insurance, the selection of the companies to be left with these agents. Culver had not, prior to this time, had anything to do with insuring *357the mill property — that matter being left alone with Leach, the president and manager of the lumber company. The evidence clearly shows that Culver had •expected Medes, the agent, to write the insurance in companies represented by this Kansas City agency. It seems, however, that the Medes agency could not write insurance on property located in Arkansas, and Medes thereupon applied to W. H. Parker, defendant’s agent at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and secured through that source the policy sued on. The policy was, in fact, written up by Parker and sent to Medes at Kansas ■City, who delivered same to the Union National Bank, for Culver, and collected from Culver the premium. ■Culver knew nothing of the manner in which the policy was obtained. Out of the premium, the agent’s commissions were deducted — half going to Medes and the other part to Parker — and the balance was paid •over to the defendant company.
The main defenses relied on are: That the property was incumbered; that the mill had not been a profitable concern; that it was idle and not in operation ; that there were no watchmen; that the mill did not employ forty men, etc., all contrary to certain representations contained in a printed or written application alleged to have been furnished Parker, the defendant’s agent, when the policy was issued.
On a trial by jury, there was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $2,244 and defendant appealed.
The principal objections to plaintiff’s' right to recover in this action are based on certain false statements in relation to the title and condition of the property, which are found in an application filled out and signed by Kinney, Medes & Crittenden and forwarded to defendant’s agent at Pine Bluff, Arkansas. It was an application in the usual form, purporting to *358be that of “E.' W. Culver, Applicant, by Kinney, Medes & Crittenden, Agents.” It stated, in effect, that there was no incumbrance on the property, that the mill was then being operated and forty men employed, that the enterprise was profitable and had been so for the last year, etc., closing with the statement that “the applicant hereby covenants and agrees to and with the said company that the foregoing is a just, full, and true exposition of all the facts and circumstances in regard to the property hereinbefore mentioned, and said answers and representations are considered the basis on which insurance is to be effected, and the same is understood as incorporated in and forming a part of the policy,” etc.
I do not see how it can be successfully claimed that the assured, Culver, is bound by the contents of this application. The testimony stands undisputed that he never authorized Kinney, Medes & Crittenden (or Medes, with whom he dealt) to make and sign any such paper for him, and that he had no knowledge that they had done so until after the fire and about the time this action was commenced. Medes, who alone dealt with Culver, and Culver himself, both testified that no such authority was given. Culver, in this instance, did as is usual with parties desiring to place insurance, he applied to Medes, who was engaged in that business, for $20,000 insurance on his property. Culver knew that the Medes office represented various companies and left it with the agent to furnish the requisite policies. Medes secured the policy in suit and Culver paid him for it. Medes was not Culver’s agent to solicit insurance, but, was rather the defendant’s agent in furnishing the policy. May v. Assur. Co.,27 Fed. Rep. 260; Lycoming v. Ins. Co., 90 Ill. 545; The Ins. Co. v. Hartwell, 123 Ind. 177; Ins. Co. *359v. Saindon, 52 Kan. 486; McGonigle v. Ins. Co., 168 Pa. St. 1.
The facts in the case first above cited were very-similar to those here. A applied to B, an insurance agent, who had been carrying his insurance for a series of years, and who knew the condition of his property, for $20,000 insurance, and B being unwilling to carry that amount in the companies he represented, applied to C, the agent of another company, for a policy of $2,500, and C, without any communication, with A, or knowledge of the property, took the insurance, wrote the policy and delivered it to B, who gave it to A. It was there held by the United States circuit court, Judge Brewer delivering the opinion, that the company represented by O was bound; that B was not A’s agent, but was C’s subagent, and his acts and knowledge were to be treated as those of the insurance company.
In the Hartwell case, supra, the supreme court of Indiana said: “Insurance companies are not only responsible for the acts of their agents, within the scope of their agency, but also for the acts of their agent’s clerks, when the company knew as it ought to have known, that other persons would be employed by and to act for the agents.” In the case at bar, the defendant saw proper to permit its agent at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, to extend his business, negotiate for and place insurance with parties at Kansas City. In order to do this, it was, of course, necessary to engage someone at the latter place to attend to defendant’s interest. In this capacity, Kinney, Medes & Crittenden acted. They represented the defendant; they reported certain risks which the defendant might secure; the defendant accepted, signed up the policy and forwarded the same to the firm at Kansas City, who took and delivered it to the assured and collected the premium, which, less *360the agent’s commission, was remitted to the defendant.
In support of the contention that Kinney, Medes & Crittenden were Culver’s agents, defendant’s counsel invoke that provision of the policy reciting that “any person other than the assured who may have applied for or procured this policy, or any renewal thereof, shall therein be deemed to have acted as the agent of the assured and not that of the company.” The courts have quite uniformly rejected this effort of insurance companies to make their agents the agents of the assured, when such agents have acted within the scope of their employment. 2 Wood on Eire Ins., sec. 409, and authorities cited. As well expressed by the Indiana supreme court, in the Hartwell case, 123 Ind. 193: “Whether upon a given state of facts, one is or is not to be deemed the agent of another, is a question of law, which the courts decide themselves, and they have invariably repudiated all attempts of insurance •companies to bind them by such provisions.” An insurance company will not be allowed to negotiate and secure a contract of insurance through the efforts •of its agent for that purpose, and then, by a clause inserted in the body of a policy, transfer the company’s responsibility for the acts of this agent to the other •contracting party. It is an attempt to reverse the law •of agency and to declare that a party is not bound by the acts of his agent.
Eliminating, then, all defenses based on the application and there is nothing left upon which defendant can justly rely to defeat this action. The evidence quite conclusively shows that when the insurance was taken out, the defendant’s agents fully understood that the property was incumbered. Kinney, Medes & Crittenden had, at that time, full knowledge of its condition, and Parker, the agent at Pine Bluff, was like*361wise informed before the premium was paid. It has been repeatedly decided that such notice or knowledge on the part of the agent issuing the policy will estop the company from avoiding the policy on account of such matters. Anthony v. Ins. Co., 48 Mo. App. 65, and eases cited; Trundle v. Ins. Co., 54 Mo. App. 197; Columbia Planing Mill v. Ins. Co., 59 Mo. App. 204.
There was some evidence to the effect that the mill was occasionally stopped on account of the weather, want of materials to work on, or stage of the water, and it was claimed that this violated the condition of the policy which provided that the mill should not “stand idle.” In this connection, the trial court instructed the jury: ‘ ‘That although the actual running of the mill may have been stopped at intervals between the first of October, 1892, and the time of the fire, for several days or weeks at a time, yet, if the jury believe from the evidence that the stopping of the mill was necessitated by the stage of the water in Black River and Lindsay’s bay, or by the character of the weather, or for the temporary want of logs, and not as the result of an intent on the part of Culver to cease operating the mill as such, then such stopping of the actual running of the mill does not constitute such standing idle of the mill as will avoid the policy, and constitutes no defense to this suit.”
In the light of the evidence, we can discover no fault in this instruction. From the undisputed testimony, it appeared that the mill was run and operated as is usual with such manufactories; that the occasional stoppage of the machinery was because of the temporary want of logs, the stage of the water, or condition of the weather, etc., and that during all such suspensions, men were kept working about the mill in doing repairs, shipping lumber, etc. The mill was not, at any time, unoccupied, or in want of business. Besides *362this, watchmen were kept in and about the premises, night and day. As well said by plaintiff’s counsel, the defendant, in issuing its policy and using the terms there employed, must be held to a knowledge of the character of the property insured. It undertook to insure plaintiff’s sawmill, machinery, and lumber. The face of the policy gave defendant notice that the continual operation of the mill was subject to the usual interruptions of breakage, want of water, or materials to work upon; and that there might be, from time to time, ■ temporary suspensions of the mill on that account. The standing idle, or vacancy clause of the policy was not intended to cover these necessary interruptions. 1 May on Ins., sec. 248, and other authorities cited in plaintiff’s brief.
After a careful consideration of every point urged for reversal, we find nothing to justify us in disturbing the judgment and it will accordingly be affirmed.
All concur.