63 Wis. 157 | Wis. | 1885
After the decisions of this court in. Schomer v. Hekla F. Ins. Co. 50 Wis. 575; Knox v. Lycoming F. Ins. Co. 50 Wis. 671; and Alkan v. New Hampshire Ins. Co. 53 Wis. 136,— it would be difficult to demonstrate that, for the purposes of the policy in suit, Philipps was not the agent of the defendant insurance company under the provisions of sec. 1911, R. S., as amended by Laws of 1880, ch. 240, sec. 5 (San. & B. Supp. 433). The following extract from the opinion in the case last above cited well illustrates the application of that statute to the present case: “ The assured, by h-is agent, applied to one Weil, an insurance agent, to insure the distillery property. Weil did not place the risk with any company which he represented, but placed it in companies represented by other agents,— the defendant company being one of them. There was no communication on the subject between the plaintiff and the regular agents of the latter company; at least, none is proved. His negotiations were exclusively with Weil. These facts are undisputed, and they make Weil the agent of the defendant company in respect to this insurance, by virtue of R. S. 584, sec. 1911; for, most assuredly, he aided and assisted in transmitting an application for insurance by the plaintiff to that company, and the policy in suit from it to the plaintiff.” To make the application complete it is only necessary to add that Philipps received compensation for his services out of the premium paid by Body, thus bringing the case within the amendment of ch. 240, Laws of 1880.
If the above suggestions are correct, it is plain that the policy in suit was never canceled; for, certainly, an insurance company cannot cancel its policy by a notice and return of premium to one who, in respect to such policy, stands in the relation of its own agent,'— the assured being entirely ignorant of the attempted cancellation of the policy until after his property has been burned.
In the present case, the authority of Philipps was limited to the single transaction of obtaining the insurance and there is no pretense that Body held him out as possessing
The point is made in the argument to the effect that because the company refused to insure the property in November, it was a fraud upon it for the plaintiff Body to accept a policy on the same property from a local agent of the company a few weeks later, and hence that he should not be allowed to assert any rights under the policy thus issued. We are aware of no rule of law which supports this proposition. The company might well decline to take a risk at one time, and yet take it at a later date. We do not know what circumstances affecting the risk might have intervened between the refusal and the acceptance thereof, and the assured may have applied for the policy in suit in perfect good faith, notwithstanding the rejection of his first application. We find no element of fraud necessarily involved in the transaction.
Other points were made and argued in the case, but they need not be considered, because those above determined are controlling.
By the Court.— The judgment of the county court is affirmed.