
    Seelye Benedict and Others, Appellants, v. Security Insurance Company, Respondent.
    First Department,
    December 29, 1911.
    Insurance principal and agent—authority of fire insurance agent — power to accept cancellation and substitute other insurance — ratification—verdict contrary to evidence.
    Where a fire insurance broker authorized another insurance broker to take out fire insurance for his client with knowledge of the custom that insurance agents in the locality had authority to replace with other policies any policy which they had negotiated but which was canceled by the insurer, the broker authorized to place the policies had authority to replace any which might be canceled.
    Under the circumstances the broker authorized to place the policies had authority to consent to a cancellation demanded by an.insurer and to substitute other insurance although the person insured had no formal notice of the cancellation at the time, and the substituted policy is binding upon the insurer where the person insured by accepting the policy ratified the act of the broker.
    Evidence in an action on a substituted policy of fire insurance examined, and held, that findings by the jury in the defendant’s favor on specific questions of fact were contrary to the evidence.
    ' Appeal by the plaintiffs, Seelye Benedict and others, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the defendant, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 8th day of March, 1911, upon the verdict of a jury, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 2d day of March, 1911, denying the plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      George A. Strong, for the appellants.
    
      Frederick J. Moses, for the respondent.
   Scott, J.:

The plaintiffs appeal from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury and from an order denying a motion for a new trial. The action is upon a policy of fire insurance. There is no substantial dispute as to the facts.

The plaintiffs were the insurance brokers for the National Wire-Bound Box Company, having entire charge of and full authority concerning the insurance business of that company. Among other duties, in case of" cancellation of policies, they replaced the policies or arranged for their replacement without specific instructions from the box company as to the companies with whom the insurance was to be placed. They now sue as assignees of the box company. In April, 1909, having occasion to place insurance to the amount of $5,475 for the box company, plaintiffs wrote to the firm of Goodrich, Dobie & Dell, insurance brokers of Norfolk, Va. (where the property to be insured was located), asking them to place the insurance. Mr. Dobie, one of the firm, accordingly took out two policies, one for $2,975 in the Virginia Fire and Marine Insurance Company, and one for $2,500 in the Phoenix Insurance Company, and sent the policies to plaintiffs in New York. A few days later (just when does not appear) the agent of the Phoenix Company notified Mr. Dobie that his company wished to cancel its policy. Dobie, therefore, applied to Barry, Osborne & Co., defendant’s Norfolk agents, for a policy to replace the Phoenix policy. It was testified to and not disputed that when Dobie applied to Barry, Osborne & Co. for the insurance he told them that the reason he wanted the policy was that one of the companies which had insured the property had ordered its risk canceled, and, conséquently, that he was short $2,500 on the insurance. Barry, Osborne & Co. accepted the insurance on behalf of defendant and on the same day, April 30, 1909, issued the policy which is the subject of this action. On the same day Dobie sent the policy to plaintiffs, together with' a letter stating that it was offered in place of the policy previously issued by the Phoenix Insurance Company, which plaintiffs were requested to return for cancellation. On that same night the insured property was destroyed by fire, and a notice thereof sent to plaintiffs, who must have received it at the same time or very near the same time that defendant’s policy was received by them. Plaintiffs immediately wrote to Messrs. Barry, Osborne & Co., representing defendant, and Messrs. Goodrich, Dobie & Dell, making it quite clear that they claimed only $5,475 under all the policies, of which $2,975 was covered by the Virginia Company. As to whether the remaining $2,500 should be paid by the Phoenix Company or defendant, the plaintiffs did not then assume to decide, preferring to leave it to the companies to adjust the matter between themselves. Plaintiffs also caused the proper amount of premiums to be tendered to defendant, which was refused. The Virginia Company having paid its proportion of the loss, and the Phoenix Company and defendant having both refused to pay, plaintiffs bring this suit.

Besides the formal denials designed to put plaintiffs to their proofs the answer contains three separate defenses, to wit: (1) That there was a breach of the covenant as to the amount of insurance upon the property hi that there was already $5,475 of insurance upon the property when the defendant’s policy was issued. (2) That there was a misrepresentation as to the amount of insurance upon the property at the time the defendant’s policy was applied for. (3) That in applying for defendant’s policy Mr. Dobie, plaintiffs’ agent, intended to substitute defendant’s policy for the Phoenix policy, but that he exceeded his authority in attempting to do so. The second defense was clearly negatived by the evidence. Whatever may be the legal effect of the transactions between the parties, there was no misrepresentation, for defendant’s agents were distinctly informed when the policy was applied, for that it was wanted to replace a policy which was to be canceled. As to Dobie’s authority to substitute policies we think there can be no doubt, especially as his actions in that regard were subsequently ratified by plaintiffs. The plaintiffs’ manager testified that he had written the initial letter to Goodrich, Dobie & Dell asking them to place the insurance to the extent of $5,475; that he then knew that under the custom of insurance agents in Virginia, under the authority given by that letter, the agents to whom it was addressed would attend to replacing, by policies in other companies, any policies which they had negotiated which might be canceled. This clearly implies that plaintiffs understood and agreed, when they authorized Mr. Dobie’s firm to place the insurance, that they also authorized that firm to replace any policies that might be canceled. Further than this, the plaintiffs were prompt to ratify, if ratification was necessary, Dobie’s act in substituting defendant’s policy for that of the Phoenix Company. It is laid down in broad terms that one may, in his own name, insure the property of another for the benefit of the owner without his previous authority or sanction, and that it will inure to the benefit of the owner upon a subsequent adoption of it, even after a loss has occurred.” (Waring v. Indemnity Fire Ins. Co., 45 N. Y. 606, 611; Herkimer v. Rice, 27 id. 163, 179.) It is true that the Phoenix Company had not given the formal notice of cancellation provided for in the standard form of policy, but that is unimportant. If Dobie had authority to substitute and replace, he likewise had authority to consent to cancellation, and plaintiffs’ acceptance of defendant’s policy in substitution for that of the Phoenix Company indicated its acquiescence in the cancellation of the policy of the latter company. Defendant refers us to Hermann v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co. (100 N. Y. 411) and Partridge v. Milwaukee M. Ins. Co. (13 App. Div. 519) as authority for its contention that Dobie’s authority was exhausted when he had originally placed the insurance, and that he had thereafter no' authority to consent to a cancellation or to replace a policy which had been canceled. Neither of these cases fits the facts of the present case because in both the assured repudiated the agent’s authority. Here the assured has ratified and adopted the acts of the agent and thus confirmed his authority to act.

Having come to this conclusion, which seems irresistible, that Dobie had ample authority ’to consent to the cancellation of the Phoenix policy and the substitution therefor of defendant’s policy, there is no difficulty in arriving at the further conclusion that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover. It is perfectly apparent that neither plaintiffs nor Dobie ever intended to carry more than $5,475 upon the property in the aggregate, or ever considered or claimed that they were insured beyond that amount. It is equally clear that both Dobie and defendant’s Norfolk agents knew when the policy in suit was issued that it was intended to take the place of a policy for a like amount that was to be canceled. Dobie’s act in taking out a policy from defendant was an acquiescence in the request of the Phoenix Company that its policy should be canceled, which became effective the moment that defendant’s policy was issued. From that moment the Phoenix policy ceased to be effective, and defendant’s policy, which had been issued without condition, became effective. It consequently,was effective when the fire occurred. Upon the evidence as it stood at the close of the case the court would have been justified in directing a judgment for the plaintiffs, since their- right to recover depended upon undisputed facts, and the legal inferences to be drawn therefrom. Specific questions were submitted to the jury all of which were answered in defendant’s favor. These questions involved matters of law as well as of fact, and in so far ■ as they involved questions of fact the answers were contrary to the evidence.

The judgment and order appealed from must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellants to abide the event.

Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Clarke and Miller, JJ., concurred.

Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellants to abide event.  