Supreme Court of Canada
World Marine and General Ins. Co. Ltd. v. Leger, [1952] 2 S.C.R. 3
Date: 1951-12-17
World Marine & General Insurance Company, Limited
(Defendant) Appellant;
and
Yvon Leger (Plaintiff)
1951: October 19, 22; 1951: December 17.
Present: Rinfret C.J. and Kerwin, Rand, Kellock, Estey, Locke
and Cartwright JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW BRUNSWICK, APPEAL
DIVISION
Insurance, Fire—Sub-agent with no evidence of
authority—Power to bind Principal—Effect of receipt of premium with application
by such sub-agent—Loss occurring before application received by General Agent.
A sub-agent of a fire insurance company who has nothing from
the company in the way of interim receipts or even official receipts with the
name of the company on them and in fact nothing to indicate that he has any
authority to enter into a binding contract of insurance on its behalf, is not
an actual agent for the company so as to bind it to any insurance either in
writing or orally. Linford v. Provincial Horse & Cattle Insurance
Co., 34 Beav. 291, followed. Mackie v. European Assurance
Society, 21 L.T. (N.S.) 102; Murfitt v. Royal Insurance, 38
T.L.R. 334; Kline Bros. v. Dominion Fire Insurance Co., 47 Can.
S.C.R. 252 and Grimmer v. Merchants' & Manufacturers' Fire Insurance
Co., 4 M.P.R. 582, distinguished. Potvin v. Glen Falls Insurance
Co., [1931] 1 W.W.R. 380 at 390, approved.
Assuming that in the case at bar the sub-agent had authority
to receive payment of the premium with the application, all that amounted to was,
as pointed out in Linford v. Provincial Horse & Cattle Insurance
Co., supra, at 293, that he had made "a proposal with a deposit which
the company was entitled either to accept or reject, and the company never
having accepted it, was not bound."
There is no authority binding upon this Court which lays down
as a rule of presumption that one who testifies to an affirmative is to be
credited in preference to one who testifies to a negative. Taschereau J. in Lefeunteum
v. Beaudoin 28 Can. S.C.R. 89 at 93-94 was speaking only for himself and
his statement, so far as it is inconsistent with this decision, cannot be
supported.
Decision of the Supreme Court of New Brunswick, Appeal
Division, 28 M.P.R. 59, reversed.
APPEAL from the judgment of the Supreme Court of New
Brunswick reversing the judgment of Anglin J.
dismissing respondent's action against appellant.
[Page 4]
J. L. O'Brien K.C. for the appellant. The issues are
limited to the question of whether Robidoux, if he told respondent that he was
insured, bound appellant by so doing. The question of the liability of the
other defendant Anderson is not in issue, as there has been no appeal from the
judgment dismissing the action against Anderson. The questions in issue are
essentially questions of fact to be decided on the evidence at trial, and the
questions of fact to be decided are, 1. Whether Robidoux had ostensible
authority to bind any one. 2. Whether, if he had such authority, it could be
said to be authority to bind Anderson or to bind appellant.
In the judgment appealed from the question of whether Robidoux
had authority to bind any one is dealt with very briefly with the following
remarks:—"That is the usual custom among fire insurance agents. It would
be detrimental to business if they did not have such authority." It is
clear from the evidence that the custom of the insurance business in New
Brunswick is such that power to bind on the part of an agent is the exception
rather than the rule, only one of every twenty having such power, and that Robidoux
did not have that power. In the light of the evidence it is difficult to
understand how the Court of Appeal could have found as it did. Not only was the
trial judge right in his finding that there was no evidence of Robidoux' power
to bind, but that, on the contrary, the only evidence was to the effect that he
had no such power and that it was not the usual custom for an agent to have
such power. Hughes J. suggests that although Robidoux had only authority to
canvass insurance, he could bind his principal if he exceeded that authority,
quoting from Mackie v. European Assurance Co. . That case
is not an authority for the finding that Robidoux with authority only to
canvass for insurance could bind his principal if he exceeded this authority.
Even if it could be said Robidoux had authority to bind, such authority was not
on behalf of the appellant. There is no evidence that he had any authority to
bind, but, if he had, it must have been on behalf of J. A. Anderson & Co.
or other insurers with which that company placed risks. Not only is it clear
from the record that the appellant never allowed Robidoux to hold
[Page 5]
himself out as having authority, but that the respondent
himself admits that he did not even know the name of the appellant until after
the loss occurred. On the facts, this is not a case where the Appeal Court
should have reversed the trial judge. Roche v. Marston
per Kerwin J. at 496. Hughes J., without expressly so stating, seems to imply
from the authorities he quotes that in law an insurance agent when taking an
application, is empowered to bind the insurer. In the present instance, if such
were true, it would not be the appellant who would be bound. The case of Kline
Bros. & Co. v. Dominion Insurance Co. referred
to, it is submitted, is of no authority in the present instance, nor Grimmer
v. Merchants & Manufacturers Insurance Co. . In that
case the sub-agent had the necessary powers or qualifications. The Court also
held that the general agent had approved the sub-agent's binder.
The question of whether or not an insurance agent can bind the
insurer is, in each case, a question to be decided on the particular facts of
the case. Insurance agents, like other agents, may have very limited or very
extensive powers. Welsford & Otter Barry's Fire Insurance 4th Ed. p.
84; Bowstead on Agency 4th Ed. 82-3, 273; Potvin v. Glen Falls
Insurance Co. ; Newsholme v. Road Transport
& General Insurance Co. .
E. G. Gowling K.C. for the respondent. The respondent supports the judgment of
the Court of Appeal. There was no restriction on Anderson's authority. If
Anderson had dealt directly with the respondent and told him he was insured,
the appellant would have been bound because Anderson was its general agent.
That it was the only company for which both Robidoux and Anderson were acting
in the transaction is conclusively proved by the fact that when Robidoux
notified Anderson of the fire, the latter's immediate reaction was to telephone
the appellant in Montreal and advise that the application had arrived, a fire
had occurred, and he was disclaiming liability, to which the appellant agreed.
[Page 6]
MacGillivray on Insurance Law,
3rd Ed. at page 389 points out
there is no absolute rule of law requiring a contract of fire insurance to be
made out in any particular form; at 390, that there is nothing in law to
prevent a valid contract of insurance being constituted by informal writing or
even by mere oral communication; and at 391, if the contract may be fully
performed with the year, the Statute of Frauds, does not apply.
Appellant's counsel submitted that the words in the
application "All insurance subject to the approval of the company,"
placed the burden on the plaintiff to prove the approval. These words do not
mean that the Head Office must approve. Such approval can be given by the
general agent or the sub-agent if authorized to bind. If Head Office does not
care for the risk it has the privilege of cancelling but until that is done the
insurance is in force. One way of expressing approval is to tell the applicant
he is covered, another is to accept the premium.
As to the sub-agent's authority. This is the issue in the case
and is not to be decided by Anderson. His statement to the Court that Robidoux
had no authority to bind was volunteered without his knowing any of the
instructions given to the sub-agent. He left all the instructions to his office
manager, who was not called; nor was any one from Head Office, which was
notified of the appointment, called to state the nature of the authority.
Anderson's statement that the sub-agent did not write policies is probably
correct, but that the sub-agent did not have interim and renewal receipts may
be questioned. Robidoux was a member of the Board of Fire Underwriters. Not
only could he have got the application form but interim receipts from it as
well. It is therefore quite conclusive that the sub-agent's authority did not
depend on what forms were supplied him by his principal.
Anderson knew Robidoux was accepting premiums at the time of
taking applications. If it is a fact that he told Robidoux to fill in the
application and forward it to him and he would try and place it (which the
respondent does not admit, but denies), he should have warned Robidoux then and
there not to accept any premium or make any commitments until he had placed it.
[Page 7]
It is open to this Court to find that the risk was approved
then and there by Anderson. That in all probability he told Robidoux to cover
and collect the premium. Welsford & Otter-Barry's Fire Insurance, 3rd Ed.
p. 80 states: "The acceptance of the proposal by the insurers may be more
or less conclusively shown in one or other of the following ways namely …
"(2) By accepting the premium. Where no policy has been
issued to the proposers before the loss, the receipt of the premium and its
retention by the insurers, though by no means conclusive may raise the
presumption, in the absence of any circumstances leading to the contrary
conclusion, that the insurers have definitely accepted his proposal. In such a
case they are not entitled to refuse to issue a policy to him, and they are,
therefore, liable to him in the event of a loss." at p. 191, "The
insurers, by accepting the payment of the premium, may, even where no policy
has been issued, be estopped from denying the existence of a contract of
insurance between the assured and themselves."
McElroy v. London Assurance Corp.
per Lord Maclaren at 291.
Authority is a question of fact. Murfitt v. Royal
Insurance Co. Ltd. . The receipt given comes within this
category. Hals. 2nd Ed. 423. Murfitt v. Royal Insurance Co. supra,
which it is stated was followed in Parker & Co. (Southbank) v. Western
Assurance .
The judgment of the Court was delivered by:—
Kerwin J.:—This
is an appeal by World Marine and General Insurance Company Limited (hereafter
called the company), against a judgment of the Appeal Division of the Supreme
Court of New Brunswick, allowing an appeal by the plaintiff, Yvon Leger, against the judgment at the trial which had dismissed
his action. Suit was brought not only against the company but also against J.
Arthur Anderson carrying on the business of an insurance agent at Saint John
under the name of J. A. Anderson & Co. and the said J. A. Anderson & Co.
As the trial judge's dismissal of the action against Anderson was affirmed by
[Page 8]
the Appeal Division, and no appeal from that part of the
latter's judgment has been taken by the plaintiff, we are not concerned with
the claim against Anderson although it will be necessary to refer to his
position in the events under review.
The claim before us is for the recovery of the sum of
$7,000, for which amount the plaintiff claims the company insured him on May
30, 1947, against loss by fire of his portable sawmill near Shediac in New
Brunswick. The mill was destroyed by fire the following day. No policy of
insurance was issued but the plaintiff relies on an alleged verbal contract
between himself and one Maurice Robidoux and claims that in making that
contract Robidoux acted as the agent of the company so as to bind the latter.
The company denies the contract and in any event, alleges that Robidoux had no
authority either actual or implied to bind it. In order to determine these
issues, it is necessary to examine the relevant facts in some detail.
At all material times the company was an insurer carrying on
the business of fire insurance in New Brunswick. J. Arthur Anderson had an
agency contract with the company by which he was appointed its general agent
for the province in respect of all classes of fire insurance authorized by the
company to be written in the province as it might from time to time determine.
Clause 4 of this contract provides:
The agent, in consideration of the remuneration hereinbefore
specified, agrees faithfully to perform and observe the duties of a general
agent. He may appoint sub-agents and accept applications for insurance in the
classes which the company shall authorize the agent to undertake in the
province of New Brunswick. He agrees to be governed by the judgment and opinion
of the company as to lines and classes of hazards to be insured and to
recognize at all times the authority of the company as to cancellation of
certain lines or classes of hazards and to be governed by such rules and
regulations as may from time to time be issued by the company.
Anderson had about 60 sub-agents, of whom 6 had specific
power to bind on his behalf. In the entire province there are about 800
licensed insurance agents of whom only 41 have specific power to bind the
insurance companies. Prior to January. 1947, Maurice Robidoux had
[Page 9]
been soliciting accident and sickness insurance for Anderson
as a sub-agent. He never had a written contract with Anderson, nor did he ever
have in his possession interim receipts or renewal applications. His powers as
sub-agent were limited to taking applications. In connection with any business
resulting in the issuing of a policy, he would be billed at the end of each
month for the total of the premiums less his commissions. It was his
responsibility to see that the premiums were collected and one feature greatly
relied upon by the repondent is that, to Anderson's
knowledge, Robidoux would, in many, if not all cases, receive the premium at
the time the application was signed.
In January 1947, Robidoux commenced soliciting fire risks on
behalf of Anderson and in April he submitted to Anderson an application for
$4,000 fire insurance on a portable sawmill belonging to Thomas J. Kingston. On
behalf of the company Anderson accepted this application and issued and
delivered a policy. When the company learned of this it sent Anderson a letter
on April 18th advising him that portable sawmills were in the category of risks
upon which they looked with disfavour. This information was immediately
conveyed to Robidoux in a letter from Anderson and finally, the Kingston matter
was arranged by Anderson securing the cancellation of the policy and the
issuance of a policy for $2,000 by the company and the issuance of policies by
other insurers to cover the balance of the $4,000. Later Robidoux called
Anderson and asked him if he could place insurance on a portable sawmill
belonging to one Philias LeBlanc. This was arranged by $2,000 of the risk being
placed with the company and the balance with other insurers.
We now come to the specific circumstances giving rise to the
claim advanced by the respondent. In January 1947 Robidoux saw the respondent
in connection with sickness and accident insurance and truck insurance and as
he understood the respondent was going to purchase a portable sawmill, suggested
that the respondent take out fire insurance on it. The respondent said that he
would see
[Page 10]
Robidoux when he had purchased the
mill. Either at this or a subsequent interview Robidoux handed the respondent a
business card reading as follows:
cCc MAURICE
ROBIDOUX
J. A. Anderson & Co.
86 Prince William St. Saint
John, N.B.
(It was explained that "cCc" are the initials of
another company, not a fire insurance company).
Soon after the purchase of the mill and between May 1st and
May 20, 1947, the respondent saw Robidoux on the street at Shediac and asked
him what the insurance would cost. Robidoux said that he would call Anderson on
the telephone. This he did when Anderson told him to fill in the application
and forward it "and I will try to place it." Anderson also told him
that the premium for $7,000 coverage would be $315. According to the evidence
of Robidoux at the trial he told the respondent not only the amount of the
premium but also that Anderson had said that he would try to place the insurance,
or as he put it in another way, "I told him they (fire insurance risks on
portable sawmills) were very hard to place and would have to be brokered
out." Not having the money, the respondent told Robidoux that he would see
him later.
The next meeting occurred on the night of Friday, May 30th,
at Robidoux's house. The respondent paid the money and received a receipt on an
ordinary receipt form which merely states that Robidoux had received from the
respondent $315 "for fire insurance on mill." At the same time the
respondent signed an "Application for Farm Risks and Country
Dwellings", not addressed to any particular insurance company but "To
the …. Insurance Company Limited." At the foot of the first sheet of this
application immediately above the date and the respondent's signature appears
in heavy type "All Insurances Subject to the Approval of the
Company." The respondent's testimony that on this occasion Robidoux told
him that "starting from that time I was insured," was denied by
Robidoux.
It should here be explained that in his reasons for judgment
the trial judge first came to the conclusion that the action against the
company must be dismissed on the ground that there was no evidence of the
authority of
[Page 11]
anyone, and in particular of Robidoux, to effect the alleged
insurance by the company. Undoubtedly, as the trial judge held, Robidoux's
examination for discovery, part of which had been put in at the trial, was not
evidence against the company and on the argument before this Court we announced
our agreement with the trial judge that the order for the examination of J.
Arthur Anderson "and Maurice Robidoux, agent of the above named defendant,
J. A. Anderson & Co., for discovery," refers only to the defendants,
J. Arthur Anderson and J. A. Anderson & Co.
After disposing of the claim against the company, the trial
judge proceeded to discuss the claim against Anderson. It was in that
connection that he decided that Robidoux had told the respondent on May 30th
that the latter was insured. He did this on the basis that, being unable to say
whether the story of Robidoux or the respondent was correct, one who testifies
to an affirmative is to be credited in preference to one who testifies to a
negative, referring to the remarks of Taschereau J. in Lefeunteum v. Beaudoin
.
In considering whether, at the meeting in Shediac between May 1st and 20th,
Robidoux had told the respondent that Anderson would try to place the
insurance, or whether, as the respondent testified no such statement was made,
the trial judge also, as to the claim against Anderson, on the same basis
decided that Robidoux had told the respondent that the insurance had to be
"brokered out."
The remarks of Taschereau J. in the case referred to have
been adopted and followed by trial judges in several decisions in Canada and it
is therefore advisable to point out that Mr. Justice Taschereau was speaking
only for himself. However, he referred to an extract from the judgment of the
Master of the Rolls in Lane v. Jackson , and to
what was said by Baron Parke speaking for the Judicial Committee in Chowdry
Deby Persad v. Chowdry Dowlut Sing . I doubt that the Master
of the Rolls or Baron Parke or Mr. Justice Taschereau were dealing with the
matter otherwise than as set forth in 6 Law Magazine (1831) 348 at 370,
referred to with approval in chapter 8 on Presumptions in Prof. Thayer's
Preliminary Treatise on Evidence in a foot-note at page 313, i.e., that
[Page 12]
what was involved was a mere natural presumption which,
according to Mr. Starkie as set forth in 6 Law Magazine, is derived wholly by
means of the common experience of mankind, from the course of nature and the
ordinary habits of society. The word "presumption" used by Mr.
Starkie is unfortunate and liable to misconstruction and it is putting it too
high to say, as Mr. Justice Taschereau is reported to have said, that it is a
"rule of presumption." There is no decision binding upon this Court
which lays down any such mechanical formula. It is in every case the duty of
the tribunal of fact to ascertain the facts in the light of all the
circumstances present in the particular case. It would appear perhaps more
logical where the Court finds itself faced with a choice between two witneses
testifying to the affirmative and negative, respectively, of a particular
proposition, if it finds itself unable to choose, after taking into
consideration all the circumstances, that the decision should be that the
burden of proof has not been met, than that the finding should be for the
affirmative. It may be that in all the circumstances of a given case the Court
could come to the conclusion that the affirmative should be accepted, but it
should not do so on the basis of the application of any rule of thumb.
In the present case we are willing to assume that Robidoux
told the respondent on May 30 that the latter was insured but on a reading of
the record we are satisfied that at the earlier interview Robidoux told the
respondent that Anderson had said he would "try" to place the
insurance, thus indicating to the respondent that the proposal had not been
finally accepted.
On Saturday, May 31, the mill was destroyed by fire but the
application had already been sent through the post office by Robidoux to
Anderson and it was with the incoming mail on Anderson's desk in Saint John on
the following Monday morning when Robidoux telephoned Anderson and advised him
of the fire. A few days later Robidoux saw the respondent who asked him the
name of the company he (Robidoux) was acting for, whereupon Robidoux handed him
the heading of a printed copy of agents' returns showing the name of the
appellant company. Undoubtedly, until that time the respondent did not know the
name of the company but this fact is of no importance to the legal
[Page 13]
problem involved. Robidoux sent a cheque for the amount of
the premium to the respondent who, however, declined to accept it as that would
prejudice his claim.
In these circumstances there can be no doubt that Robidoux
was not an actual agent for the company so as to bind it to any insurance
either in writing or orally but it is argued that he falls within that class of
agent for whose contract with a proposed insured an insurer should be held
liable. It is of the utmost importance that Robidoux had nothing from the
company in the way of interim receipts or even official receipts with the name
of the company on them and in fact nothing to indicate that he had any
authority to enter into a binding contract of insurance on its behalf.
Furthermore, the application form signed by the respondent clearly states
"All Insurances Subject to the Approval of the Company," and as
stated above the proper conclusion on the evidence is that Robidoux told the
respondent that Anderson would "try" to place the proposed insurance
or that it would be "brokered out." All cases such as this must be
determined upon their own circumstances and the facts that on May 30th Robidoux
received payment of the $315 and told the respondent he was insured do not
separately or in conjunction add anything, no matter what effect they might
have under other conditions. Estoppel was not pleaded but even if it were there
is nothing to show that anything that happened in connection wtih the Kingston
and LeBlanc applications ever came to the knowledge of the respondent and therefore
he did not act upon any holding out that could possibly have been otherwise
urged.
Hughes J. speaking for the Appeal Division referred to the
decision of Vice Chancellor Malins in Mackie v. The European
Assurance Society . There, however, as pointed out by
McCardie J. in Murfitt v. The Royal Insurance Company Limitedi ,
the agent had been supplied with a book of printed forms and it was held that
he was authorized to make contracts on behalf of The European Assurance Society
in accordance with the terms in the forms. In Linford v. The
Provincial Horse & Cattle Insurance Company , the
Master of the Rolls held that it was not the ordinary duty of an agent of a
company to
[Page 14]
grant or contract to grant policies of assurance. In that
case the plaintiff had paid the agent 10s on account but it was held all the
plaintiff had done was to make a proposal with a deposit, which the company was
entitled either to accept or reject. In the Murfitt case McCardie J.
stated the Linford decision to be good law but he then referred to the Mackie
decision. McCardie J. pointed out that in the case before him the agent
occupied a position in which he might well have been authorized to give oral
cover and that he had been habitually giving it for 2 years before, to the
knowledge of his superiors and with their consent. It was on that ground and on
the special facts of the case that judgment was directed to be entered for
Murfitt. The decisions in Murfitt and Mackie depend upon their own particular
facts.
Hughes J. also referred to Kline Bros. & Co. v. Dominion
Fire Insurance Company , and the remarks of Chief Justice
Fitzpatrick at page 255. The quotation from that page must be read in
connection with the preceding sentence and a perusal of all the reasons makes it
clear that the Court was there dealing with the question of an agent admittedly
qualified to bind the company at the inception of a risk. The only other
decision referred to by Hughes J. is Grimmer v. Merchants' and
Manufacturers' Fire Insurance Company . There, the sub-agent had
been supplied with interim receipts and had power to issue them, but as he had
none with him at the time he accepted the application for insurance, he gave a
verbal binder and it was held that the insurer was liable as if the interim
receipt had been issued. These circumstances show that the decision is quite
distinguishable.
On behalf of the respondent we were referred to two extracts
from Welford & Otter-Barry on Fire Insurance, which in the 4th Ed. appear
at pages 80, 81 and 198, and read as follows:
p. 80:
The acceptance of the proposal fey the insurers may be more
or less conclusively shown in one or other of the following ways, namely:
p. 81:
(2) By accepting the premium. Where no policy has been
issued to the proposer before the loss, the receipt of the premium and its
retention by the insurers, though by no means conclusive, may raise the
[Page 15]
presumption, in the absence of any circumstances leading to
the contrary conclusion, that the insurers have definitely accepted his
proposal. In such a case they are not entitled to refuse to issue a policy to
him, and they are, therefore, liable to him in the event of a loss.
p. 198:
The insurers, by accepting the payment of the premium, may,
even where no policy has been issued, be estopped from denying the existence of
a contract of insurance between the assured and themselves.
There, however, the authors are discussing the effect of the
acceptance of a premium by the insurers, that is, where no question arose as to
the money having been received by the insurers or someone on their behalf.
"Accepting" payment of the premium is, as explained in the text,
"receipt and retention." At p. 193 the authors deal with payment of
premiums to an agent who has no authority to accept applications, and at p. 85,
where the application is not accepted, the applicant is entitled to a return of
the premium as is stated. Even assuming in the present case that Robidoux had
authority to receive payment of the premium with the application, all that this
amounts to from the standpoint of the respondent is, as pointed out by Sir John
Romilly M.R. in Linford v. Provincial Horse and Cattle Insurance
Company (supra), that he had made "a proposal with a deposit which the
company was entitled either to accept or reject, and the company never having
accepted it, was not bound."
More to the point are the remarks of Ford J. in a case
referred to by Counsel for the appellant, Potvin v. Glen Falls
Insurance Co.. We agree with Mr. Justice Ford's
statement therein that in all cases where it was held that an agent of an
insurance company had implied authority to bind the company, the agent either
had in his posession some indicia of authority, some forms to implement
his promise of an interim covering, or the course of dealing between the agent
and his principal showed that, with the knowledge and consent of his superiors,
he had been habitually exercising the authority he assumed. The same principle
may, we think, be deduced from the statement in MacGillivray on Insurance Law,
3rd Ed. page 381. These remarks appear in an earlier edition of the textbook
referred to by Ford J. except for a few additions, one of which is
[Page 16]
that acceptance of a premium by an agent who has no actual
or apparent authority to contract, does not bind the company.
In the reasons for judgment in the Appeal Division, after
referring to the fact that Robidoux was paid the premium and thereupon informed
the plaintiff that he was insured it is stated "That is a usual custom
among fire insurance agents." We are unable to find any evidence in the
record to support that statement.
The appeal should be allowed, the judgment of the Appeal
Division set aside and that of the trial judge restored. The appellant is
entitled to its costs in this Court and the Appeal Division.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellants: Ritchie, McKelvey
& Mackay.
Solicitors for the respondent. Inches & Hazen.