76 So. 548 | Miss. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
The suggestion of error must be overruled. The position of the court is, not that a soliciting agent may waive
Any one “who shall examine or inspect any risk, or receive, collect or transmit any premium of insurance, etc., shall be held to be the agent of the company for which the act is don' or the risk is taken as to all the duties and liabilities imposed by law, whatever conditions or stipulations may be contained in the policy or contract, ’ ’
We are not called upon to declare all the purposes of this statute. One of its purposes certainly was to prevent fraudulent agencies. But it speaks the policy of our state, to bind the company for any act done by an agent within the scope of his duties. Here the socalled soliciting agent was fully authorized to inspect the risk and accept the business. ' This he did with full knowledge of the ■conditions and in the face of his representations that a fire proof safe was unnecessary. The question of fáet as to these representations of the agent is a question for the jury. It is well settled that, if an insurance company, with full knowledge of the fact, accepts as a risk improved property which is vacant and unoccupied at the lime the policy is delivered, the contract cannot be forfeited on account of the familiar stipulation against vacancy. In such case the same argument could be made as in the present case, to the effect that the soliciting agent has no authority to waive any of the provisions of the policy.
“His principal was bound by the knowledge he had when the application was prepared and accepted, but not by statements he made outside the scope of his apparent powers.”
And, in quoting from the subsequent Iowa case of Cornelius v. Farmers’ Ins. Co., 113 Iowa, 183, 84 N. W. 1037, it quotes to approve this statement:
“It thus appears that the application contained no misstatement of any existing fact or past transaction, nor did it omit any. What was said related solely to an anticipated, though not settled, use of the property. It was an arrangement as to conditions of the policy with which a soliciting agent had nothing to do rather than a representation of the existing or past conditions •of the property to be insured.”
In the present case the representations of the agent at the time the risk was accepted that a fireproof safe was unnecessary became and was the act and statement of the company itself; and, this being so, as said by Judge Calhoun in the Randle Case, 81 Miss. 720, 33 So. 500, “the company therefore is bound as upon both waiver and estoppel.” In this connection it is intimated by learned counsel that the language of Judge Calhoun which we quoted in our opinion was intemperate and ealculated to do insurance companies an injustice. We, of course, cannot withdraw language employed by Judge
We believe the views expressed in our opinion are sound, and we accordingly adhere to them.
Suggestion of error overruled.