151 A. 481 | N.H. | 1930
In Domocaris v. Insurance Co.,
The defendant's argument in the main is an attack on the Domocaris case as disregarding well settled rules applicable to the relation of principal and agent, both inter se and in connection with third parties, and as leading to a radical departure from normal principles of compensation for wrong done.
The argument loses sight of the construction of P. L., c. 277, s. 6, adopted in the Domocaris case and controling the result reached. This statute, then Laws of 1907, c. 109, s. 1, provides that a solicitor of life insurance shall be regarded as the agent of the insurer and not of the insured, and the case holds it to mean that the agent's knowledge acquired in the course of soliciting business is chargeable to the insurer.
However greatly under the facts of the case the rule thus held to be imposed by the statute may depart from common-law doctrines of agency and in spite of its effect in some cases, as here, to make the insured better off than if no fraud had been committed so as to substitute a penalty for compensation, the correctness of the construction *407
may not now be questioned. The Domocaris case was decided in 1923 and the re-passage of the statute without change in the Public Laws of 1925 carried with it this construction under the well and long established rules that the reenactment of a statute without change adopts its prior judicial interpretation, a rule announced as early as 1816 in Tomson v. Ward,
The agent's knowledge being in law the insurer's, the latter is charged as though it were in fact as guilty of the fraud as he.
Exception sustained.
BRANCH, J., did not sit: the others concurred.