This action is brought against a foreign insurance company upon a policy of fire insurance in the standard form prescribed by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 175, § 99, to recover for the loss by fire of the plaintiff’s household furniture.
When the policy was issued the furniture was located on Huntington Avenue in Boston. Before the fire the plaintiff had moved it to Roslyn Place, where it was destroyed. The policy contained a condition that it should be void if the property should be removed without the assent in writing or in print of the company. There was no assent in writing or in print completed and delivered as a finality on the part of the company. There was, however, testimony from the plaintiff as to a telephone conversation between himself and one Hoffman, an agent of the company, before the furniture was moved to Roslyn Place which need not be stated in detail, but from which, if true, it may be assumed the jury could have found that Hoffman had assented orally to the removal and had promised to mail a written assent at once, and that if the company was bound by Hoffman’s statements in spite of the requirements of the policy, it had either waived the condition or was estopped from asserting it. This presents the principal question in the case. There was also evidence that Hoffman was "the duly authorized general agent in Boston for the purpose of
A long line of decisions in this Commonwealth establishes the general rule that provisions or conditions in an insurance policy which by their terms cannot be altered or waived except by certain specified officers or agents or in certain specified ways, as in writing or by indorsement on the policy, are integral parts of the policy and until revoked or modified in some legally recognized manner are valid and binding upon the insured. The principal cases are collected in the footnote.
But when we are concerned with a corporation, which must of necessity act through agents, it is indispensable that inquiry be "made into the authority of the particular agent whose acts in the particular instance are claimed to be the acts of the corporation. And when the assertion is made that a condition in a policy inserted for the company’s benefit has been waived or destroyed by the company in some way other than that required by the policy, it becomes necessary to show that the acting agent had authority to bind the company in ways contrary to those contemplated by the contract. As the probabilities will be against such grant of authority, definite proof will be required. Authority to make the original contract or to waive the condition in the manner prescribed therein is not enough. If this were not so, the particular requirements of the contract would become meaningless. Some further and additional delegation of authority derived from the fountain head of corporate power must be shown broad enough to include the abrogation of the condition in a manner excluded by the very terms of the contract itself. Porter v. United States Life Ins. Co.
If these underlying principles are kept in mind, the confusion which has sometimes arisen from reading separately cases, each of which has been decided on its own particular facts, will be avoided. Thus the recent cases of Shapiro v. Security Ins. Co.
The present case falls within the general rule. There is no evidence that Hoffman had been authorized by the company to waive the condition requiring assent in writing or in print to the removal of the goods. His appointment as “general agent” did not make him an original source of such authority. Kyte v. Commercial Union Assurance Co.
There was no evidence of a new oral contract to insure the furniture at Roslyn Place. Parker v. Rochester German Ins. Co.
Judgment for defendant on the verdict.
Notes
Worcester Bank v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.
