Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Hale

CourtArkansas Supreme Court
Writing for the CourtHughes
CitationPhoenix Ins. Co. v. Hale, 55 S.W. 486, 67 Ark. 433 (Ark. 1900)
Decision Date10 February 1900
PartiesPHŒNIX INS. CO. v. HALE.

Appeal from circuit court, Mississippi county; Felix G. Taylor, Judge.

Action by William P. Hale against the Phœnix Insurance Company. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals. Affirmed.

The appellee, William P. Hale, plaintiff below, brought suit at the fall term, 1897, of the Mississippi circuit court, against the Phœnix Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., alleging, in substance, that on the 12th of November, 1891, the insurance company issued and delivered to him a policy of insurance, No. 6,906, for the sum of $600, in which it covenanted and agreed, in consideration of the payment of the premium of $19.50, to insure his barn, located upon the Witherspoon place, against all loss or damage by fire for the period of three years from the date of said policy. (Neither the original policy nor copy thereof was exhibited with complaint, but plaintiff alleged that it had been lost or mislaid.) Plaintiff further alleged that shortly before the expiration of said policy the local surveyor and agent of the insurance company, Charles H. Gaylord, made to plaintiff a proposition for renewal of said policy for the further term of three years; that plaintiff accepted the proposition, and then and there paid said agent the sum of $19.50, as premium for renewal of policy No. 6,906, insuring the same property for the same amount for the further period of three years from the expiration of the original policy; that at the time the said agent of the insurance company issued and delivered to plaintiff the following binding receipt, viz.:

"Branch of the Phœnix Insurance Company, Hartford, Conn. Binding Receipt. Premium $19.50. Number 6,906. This certifies that W. P. Hale, of Osceola, Ark., has paid to the duly-authorized surveyor of this company the sum of nineteen and 50/100 dollars, which entitles him to a renewal of policy No. 6,906 (which expires November 12th, 1894) in the Phœnix Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., for the period of three years from the countersigning of this receipt, which is binding for a period not exceeding thirty days from the date of the countersigning by the duly-authorized surveyor of this company at Osceola, Ark., and subject, in case of loss or damage by fire, to all the printed conditions of said policy, and to be invalid upon the issue of such renewal. This receipt is not assignable, and any erasure or change made hereon will render it unconditionally null and void, but the same shall not be binding until countersigned by the duly-appointed surveyor of the company, at Osceola, Ark. D. W. C. Skilton, Secretary.

"Countersigned at Osceola, Ark., this 27th day of October, 1894. C. H. Gaylord, Surveyor."

Plaintiff then alleges that he does not remember whether an additional policy was issued to him or not, as he can find none, but says that, having accepted defendant's proposition to renew, and having paid the premium for renewal, he considered this to be a contract and agreement of renewal of his original policy No. 6,906. He also alleges that said transactions above set out had the force and effect of a contract of insurance, and of renewing and keeping alive his said original policy, No. 6,906, for the period of three years from the 12th day of November, 1894, and is as binding upon the insurance company as if a new policy had been issued and delivered to him. Plaintiff then alleges that on the 6th day of April, 1897, his said barn was totally consumed by fire, under circumstances not within the excepted causes mentioned in said policy, and became a total loss to plaintiff; that by reason of said loss the insurance company became indebted to him in the sum of $600; that he immediately notified the insurance company of the loss, and demanded payment, which they refused on the ground that he had no insurance with them at the time of his loss. To which complaint the insurance company interposed a general demurrer, alleging that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which demurrer was, by the court, overruled, and to which ruling of the court the defendant at the time excepted. Defendant then answered, denying its indebtedness to plaintiff in the sum of $600, or any other sum, but admitting that on the 12th day of November, 1891, plaintiff took out the policy of insurance No. 6,906, which said policy ran for a period of three years, expiring on the 12th day of November, 1894; that since the 12th of November, 1894, plaintiff has carried no insurance with defendant company for any amount, nor has defendant, since said time, issued plaintiff a policy of insurance. Defendant admitted that plaintiff did make application to its local surveyor and agent, C. H. Gaylord, for renewal of his said policy upon his barn on the 27th of October, 1894, but denies that he paid to their local surveyor and local agent the sum of $19.50 as premium for renewal of said policy, or that he paid any sum to their said local agent as premium for renewal of said policy. Defendant admitted the execution and delivery of the binding receipt described in the complaint to the plaintiff by their local surveyor, who at once forwarded the application of plaintiff to the office of the defendant company, which application was at once rejected, and the plaintiff notified that his said application was rejected, unless he would include in his application his dwelling on his farm, and then with a condition annexed that he must reside in the dwelling. Defendant further alleged that at the time said application was made by plaintiff for a renewal he then had a policy of insurance with some other fire insurance company upon his dwelling on said farm, and declined to include his dwelling in his application. Defendant further alleged that its local surveyor and agent, C. H. Gaylord, had no authority to pass upon applications for insurance to bind the insurance company, nor had he any authority to issue policies of...

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1 cases
  • Phoenix Insurance Company v. Hale
    • United States
    • Arkansas Supreme Court
    • February 10, 1900
    ... ...          A parol ... contract of insurance is good when the parties have come to a ... definite understanding upon all the elements of the contract ... 13 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 Ed.), 218; 63 Ark. 204; 19 N.Y ... 305; 90 N.Y. 281; 19 How. 318; 21 Am. St. Rep. 883n; May, ... Ins., § 19; Ostrander, Ins. 10 n, 17, 18; 5 Laws ... Rights, Rem & Pr. § 2040, 2044 ... [55 S.W. 487] ...           ...           [67 ... Ark. 437] HUGHES, J., (after stating the facts.) ...           There ... was evidence in the case tending to show, and from ... ...