188 Iowa 425 | Iowa | 1920
The defendant, answering, admits that its business was and is the issuing of fire insurance policies, in which it contracts and undertakes to indemnify those insured under its policies against loss or damage to the property, described in its policy; alleges that it was fully authorized to do such business in Iowa,‘and that, at the time the policies in question were issued, it had, and now has, an agent and place, of business in Dubuque, Iowa; admits that it issued the policies sued on, that it issued them in consideration of premiums paid therefor, but subject to the conditions' named in the policy. It further admits that riders were attached to each of the policies on December 24, 1915, January 11, 1916, and February 4, 1916, respectively, and that the same were attached to each of the said policies on these dates. It further admits that, on the 10th day of February, 1916, the property covered by the policies was dam aged or destroyed by fire; that due and legal notice of said fire and of the alleged loss under said policy was given to the defendant, pursuant to the terms of the policy; and that due and legal proofs of loss were furnished it, as required by the policy. It further admits that the amount of its liability, if any liability there is under the policy, is the sum mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, to wit, $9,465.59, with interest.
“It is hereby agreed that the insured may obtain other additional insurance in companies authorised to do business in the state of Iowa.”
The defendant alleges that, on and prior to February 4, 1916, and .thereafter, until the happening of the fire, plaintiff had other contracts of insurance on the property in companies not authorized to do business m the state of Iowa; and says that it never authorized plaintiff to carry additional insurance in companies not authorized to do business in the state of Iowa, and had no knowledge that plaintiff was doing so; that, by reason thereof, each of said policies became null and void, under the conditions and terms of the policies themselves, and were not in force, and, therefore, not enforcible at the time the fire occurred. The defendant further alleged that it had no knowledge or notice that its agent at Dubuque, Iowa, Chester A. Buff, had consented to the attachment of any riders to the policies, authorizing the plaintiff to take additional insurance in companies not authorized to do business in the state of Iowa; that any permit given by Chester A. Ruff to do so was given without the knowledge and consent of the defendant; that the granting of such permission, if granted, was beyond his power, and not within the scope of his authority as agent.
Plaintiff replies that the last rider, of the date February 4, 1916, became a part of the policy, and contained the provision “additional insurance permitted,” without
Plaintiff further replied, by way of estoppel, that Ches, ter A. Ruff is and was the recording agent of the defendant at Dubuque, Iowa, and the one by whom the original policies were issued; that the said Chester A. Ruff, while acting for the defendant in issuing the policies and attaching the riders, knew that plaintiff was carrying, and intended to carry, and continued to carry, insurance on the property covered by these policies, in companies not authorized to do business in the state of Iowa, and knew that plaintiff, in procuring the rider of February 4, 1916, procured it to supersede the riders of December 24th and January 11th, which limited additional insurance to companies authorized to do business in the state of Iowa, and acquiesced and consented to insurance in-companies not autTioriz'ed to do business in the state of I.owa; that defendant issued the policies and received the premiums with knowledge that plaintiff was, at "that time, carrying additional insurance in companies not authorized to do business in the state.
Upon the issues thus tendered, the cause was tried to a jury, and a verdict returned for the defendant. On motion of plaintiff, a new trial was granted, and from this, defendant appeals.
This brings us to a consideration of the evidence, not for the purpose of determining whether or not the plaintiff is or is not entitled, from our viewpoint, to recover, but whether or not there was a fair question for the jury, under the record made, as to plaintiff’s right to recover, and for the purpose of further determining whether or not the court sent the case to the jury without undue burden and handicaps on the plaintiff in his effort to present the case to the jury for its consideration. It is the contention of the defendant that the undisputed evidence shows that plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this suit, and that the court, therefore, erred in setting aside a verdict against .-he plaintiff and in favor of the defendant.
“It is hereby agreed that the insured may obtain $- additional insurance in companies authorized to do business in the stata of Iowa.”
Section 1758-c provides:
“Any insurance company, its officers or agents, or either of them, violating any of the provisions of this act, by issuing, delivering or offering to issue or deliver any policy of fire insurance on property in this state other or different from the standard form, herein provided, for, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,” and provides a fine for the first and second offenses, and further provides: “But any policy so issued or delivered shall, nevertheless, be binding upon the company issuing or delivering the same.”
Section 1758-d provides:
“Nothing contained in this act nor any provisions or conditions in the standard form of policy provided for herein, shall be deemed * * * to prevent any insurance company issuing such policy, from waiving any of the provisions or conditions contained therein, if the waiver of such provisions or conditions shall be in the interest of the insured.”
Code Section 1749 provides:
“Any person who shall hereafter solicit insurance or procure application therefor shall be held to be the soliciting agent of the insurance company * * * issuing a policy on such application or on a renewal thereof, any
Section 1750 of the Code of 1897 provides:
“The term agent used in the foregoing sections of the chapter shall include any other person who shall in any manner directly or indirectly transact the insurance business for any insurance company complying with the laws of this state. Any officer, agent 0¶* representative of an insurance company doing business in this state who may solicit insurance, procure applications, issue policies, adjust losses or transact the business generally of such companies, shall be held to be the agent of such insurance company with authority to transact all business within the scope of his employment, anything in the application, policy, contract, by-laws or articles of incorporation of such company to the contrary notwithstanding.”
The record discloses, without any question, that Ruff was the agent of this company, and had an office at Du-buque for the transaction of the business of this company; that he had a right to issue policies for the company; that these forms of policies were sent to him already signed by the officers of the company; that he filled them out, attested them as agent, and delivered them to the plaintiff; that thereafter, some controversy arose between the plaintiff company and Ruff as to whether or not the provisions of the policy were broad enough to allow additional insurance in companies not authorized to do business in the state of Iowa. It appears that plaintiff procured and had this agent attach to the policies a waiver of any claim that the taking of additional insurance in companies not authorized would vitiate the policy. This, interpreted, was an agreement on the part of the company to permit plaintiff to carry additional insurance in companies not authorized to do business in Iowa. Thereafter, this contract or this waiver was canceled by this agent, by drawing a pen through the
The contention that Ruff had no right to permit other insurance except in companies authorized to do business in Iowa, is predicated upon the thought that the standard form of policy provides for additional insurance only in companies authorized to do business in Iowa, and on the further thought thaf the statute places an inhibition upon any change in form from the standard form. It is argued that, inasmuch as the statute itself makes it a misdemeanor to issue a policy not in conformity with the standard form, it cannot be assumed that it was within the scope of Ruff’s employment to agree or consent to that which involved the company in penal liability. But the statute itself provides that, notwithstanding the fact that the policy issued does not conform to the standard, the policy, nevertheless, is binding upon the company; and the statute itself authorized the company to waive any provision in the standard policy, if the waiver of such provision or condition were in the interest, of the insured. The insured had, at the time the policies were issued, and at the time this last rider was attached, insurance in companies not authorized to do business in Iowa. The jury could well find that a waiver that protected him from forfeiture by reason thereof was to his interest, and that Ruff knew this at the time the policies were issued, and at the time the rider of February 4th was attached. It is not to be assumed that the company was playing fast and loose with the insured in this matter. It is not to be assumed that the agent, acting for the company, was playing fast and loose with the insured at the time he issued the policies, and at the time he attached the riders. If the agent, Ruff, at the time he issued the policies, knew that the defendant had other insurance in companies not authorized to do business in Iowa, as said before, his knowledge was the knowl
There is no provision in the statute as to how waiver should be made. In Lake v. Farmers’ Ins. Co., 110 Iowa 473, it is said:
“The test [of a waiver] is whether the acts and conduct of the insurer are inconsistent with the intention to insist on strict compliance with the terms of the policy and statute. The waiver is put on the ground that an insurer whose conduct is such as to induce the insured to rest under a well-founded belief that strict performance with a condition will not be insisted on cannot, in good faith, af-terwards set up as a bar to recovery.”
The plaintiff was a foreign company! It secured the right to do business in the state of Iowa. It had a right to do business in the state of Iowa. It placed the agent here to transact that business for it. He was, in every sense, the general agent of the company, with authority to transact its business in the state of Iowa.- It was a corporation. It can act only through agents. Its agents are its hands, its eyes, its feet. What its -agent does in respect to the matters committed to his charge, is the act of the company, and binds the company just as effectually as though the company were a living and breathing entity, with power to act for itself, and acted. It is idle to say that the com: pany did not know that which was within the knowledge of its authorized agent. All it can know must come to it through this avenue, and the knowledge of its agents is its knowledge. The act of the agent, within the scope of his authority, is its act. It cannot repudiate the act of its agent and receive the benefits which flow from the act. If Buff knew, at the time he issued these policies, that the plaintiff had insurance in companies not authorized to do
“I said to Buff that we had insurance in unauthorized
This was before the rider of February 4, 1916, was attached. However that may be, there was a clear conflict in the evidence as to the knowledge of Buff of the fact that the plaintiff1 was carrying unauthorized insurance prior to February 4, 1916.
“If you fail to And from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff did not know that the defendant’s agent (Buff) had no authority to consent to such unauthorized insurance, then it will be your duty to find your verdict for the defendant,” and further: “If you fail to find from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the plaintiff company did not know that the defendant company would not consent to the issuance of such policies, if the plaintiff was carrying other additional insurance in companies not authorized to do business in the state of Iowa, then, and in that event, it will be your duty to find your verdict in favor of the defendant.”
Upon the whole record, we sáy there was a fair question for the jury as to the right of plaintiff to recover, upon the issues tendered, and a burden was laid upon plain
Upon the whole record, we think the court was right in setting aside the verdict, and in granting a new trial. Its action is, therefore, — Affirmed.