Horace E. Chambers brought suit in the circuit court against the Allemania Fire Insurance Company upon a fire insurance policy. Chas. A. Zweng, trustee in bankruptcy for the estate of Horace E. Chambers, upon motion, was substituted as plaintiff in the case. The material facts are as follows:
J. S. Kelly was a member of a firm of general insurance agents located at Mena in Polk county, Arkansas. The agents represented some twenty-five insurance companies, among them the defendant company, and had the authority to issue and deliver policies. H. E. Chambers carried on a general mercantile business at Ink, Polk county, Arkansas. He made an arrangement with J. S. Kelly whereby his firm was to keep his stock of goods insured to an amount not exceeding $2,500.00. The arrangement was that Kelly should select the companies arid ke'dp the stock of goods injured for that amount at all times. In the early part of January, 1914, Kelly issued to Chambers an insurance policy in the Insurance Company of North America. This policy expired in the early part of 1915, and Kelly renewed it in the same company. The company notified Kelly that they had decided to accept no further business off of the line of railroad and directed him to cancel the policy on that account. The town of Ink was not situated on the line of any railroad. Kelly then cancelled the policy and made a notation to that effect on his insurance register. He rewrote the policy in the Georgia Home Insurance Company .and soon afterward that company also notified him that they declined to write any further business off the line of railroad and instructed him to cancel the policy. Kelly' made a notation of the cancellation of the Georgia Home policy on his insurance register. On the same day he immediately issued a policy to Chambers in the Allemania Fire Insurance Company in the sum of $2,350.00 on the stock of goods and $150.00 on the furniture and fixtures. That night the store house and contents of Chambers were destroyed by fire set by burglars who had entered his store. Both the Georgia Home policy and the Allemania policy contained a clause authorizing cancellation, so much of which as is pertinent to the issues raised by appeal reads as follows:
“This policy shall be cancelled at any time at the request of the insured, or by the company by giving five days notice of such cancellation.”
About ten days before the issuance of the policy sued on, Kelly passed by Chambers’ store and stopped there. Chambers reminded him that his policy of insurance would soon expire and asked him to renew it in some company to be selected by Kelly. Kelly agreed to do this and the policy in question was issued under their agreement that Kelly was to renew or rewrite the policy of insurance for Chambers as soon as it expired, in a company to be selected by Kelly. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed.
(1) It is insisted that the court should have instructed the jury to return a Verdict for the defendant on the ground that prior to the fire there was no contract of insurance between the defendant and the assured. It will be remembered that the policy in the Georgia Home Company as well as the policy in the defendant company contained a clause permitting the policy to be cancelled by the company by giving five days’ notice of such cancellation. Kelly cancelled the Georgia Home policy without giving this notice to the assured and immediately rewrote the risk with the defendant company. Counsel claim that Kelly could not, without the knowledge and consent of Chambers, cancel a policy in one of his companies and substitute for it a policy in another company. They contend that the general rule is that the same person may not act as agent for the insurer and the insured in procuring a policy of fire insurance, the reason being that such double agency imposes upon the agent inconsistent duties, a condition of affairs not permitted by law as being against public policy. Many authorities are cited to sustain the rule but we need not stop to review these decisions, for the reason this court has already taken a contrary position on the question. In Phoenix Insurance Company v. State,
It is said that such a business arrangement is in many cases adopted by firms and corporations in towns and cities, and is beneficial both to the underwriters and the parties insured, adding to the business of the one and relieving the other from anxiety regarding the expiration and replacement of risks. It follows, therefore, that the court did not err in refusing to instruct a verdict for the defendant.
(2-3) It is also insisted that the judgment should be reversed because the defendant had written to the firm of which Kelly was a member notifying them not to issue any more policies in towns off of a line of railroad. As we have already seen Kelly’s firm had authority to issue and deliver policies of insurance for the defendant and the defendant could not send its agents forth with authority to issue policies and deliver them to applicants for insurance and at the same time limit their authority by private instructions. Where an agent does anything within the real or apparent scope of his authority it is as much the act of the principal as if done by the principal himself. Peoples Fire Ins. Assn. of Ark. v. Goyne,
It is so ordered.
