5 A.2d 721 | N.H. | 1939
The facts recited above disclose a situation parallel to the one considered by this court in the case of Bilodeau v. Insurance Co.,
In the Domocaris case the liability of the defendant was predicated upon the statute (Laws 1907, c. 109, s. 1, now P. L., c. 277, s. 6), which provides that any person who solicits an application for insurance upon the life of another shall be regarded as the agent of the insurer and not as the agent of the insured. After quoting the above statute at length the opinion proceeds as follows: "It is clear that when the agent was engaged in writing in the application false answers, . . . he was the agent of the defendant. In performing these acts which were within the scope of his employment, he was the representative of the company. His act was its act, and his knowledge was its knowledge. The policy was written by the defendant with full knowledge of the physical condition of the assured, and *177 it is a valid contract untouched by any fraud of the plaintiff or the assured, upon which the defendant is liable."
This rule was criticised in the later case of Bilodeau v. Insurance Co., supra, upon the ground that it constituted a departure, "from common-law doctrines of agency" and upon the ground that it produced the effect of making "the insured better off than if no fraud had been committed so as to substitute a penalty for compensation." Nevertheless in this later case the rule of the earlier one was followed for the reason that after the decision in the earlier case was announced the statute relating to life insurance agents had been reenacted without change in the Public Laws of 1925, and that this reenactment "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."
In the case of Karp v. Insurance Co.,
The above strictures on the rule are well founded. In the Domocaris case it was apparently assumed that the statute which made the agent who solicited the insurance the agent of the company also made the company chargeable with its agent's knowledge of uninsurability of the applicant. Such is not in fact the case. This statute, unlike the one relating to soliciting agents for fire insurance companies (P. L., c. 276, s. 5), does not provide that the insurer shall be charged with its agent's knowledge of facts relating to the risk "as if they were stated in the application." With respect to life insurance the legislators saw fit to go no further than to provide that the agent who solicits the policy shall be regarded as the agent of the insurer; it left the decision of the question of the scope and extent of the agency relationship which it created to the common law. The question presented, then, is not one of statutory construction at all but it is one of determining the common-law rule relating to the chargeability of a principal with the knowledge of his agent.
This rule is stated in Brookhouse v. Company,
Two years later, in the case of Warren v. Hayes,
Applying the foregoing rule to the facts in the case at bar it is evident that the defendant is not chargeable with its agent's knowledge of the poor health and hospital record of the insured. In soliciting the application for the policy of life insurance the agent was without doubt acting within the scope of his employment, but in falsely reporting the answers made by the insured to the questions contained therein the agent was engaged in an independent fraudulent act upon his own account and for his own benefit. It cannot be said that when the agent embarked upon this scheme to defraud not only the insured but also the insurer that he was acting either for the latter or in its behalf. It might be argued that the insurer is bound by its agent's knowledge because the latter, although personally engaged in perpetrating a fraud, was still acting as an agent of the defendant when he solicited the policy. "The defect in this reasoning is that when the agent acts in this dual way knowledge on his part is not chargeable to his principal." Dearborn v. Fuller, supra.
In the Domocaris case (p. 179), it is said: "To hold that the plaintiff cannot collect this policy of insurance, which was obtained through no dishonesty on his part or that of the assured, but was written by reason of the fraudulent conduct of the defendant's own agent, would fall far short of meeting the demands of justice. It was the fault of the company that this dishonest man was made its agent with *179
authority to solicit insurance of the plaintiff and the assured, and the defendant and not the plaintiff, who has done no wrong, must suffer on account of his fraudulent conduct." Whatever may be the situation with respect to policies of fire insurance where the statutory provisions, as noted above, are different, and where almost any property may be insured at some premium, this argument, as pointed out in Ryan v. Insurance Co.,
Not all of the authorities cited in the Domocaris case sustain its result. The cases of Union Mut. Insurance Co. v. Wilkinson, 13 Wall. 222, and Am. Life Insurance Co. v. Mahone, 21 Wall. 152, are not cases involving fraud. The cases of Continental Insurance Co. v. Chamberlain,
With the exception of the Domocaris and Bilodeau cases no others squarely in point in this jurisdiction have come to our attention. But, in McDonald v. Insurance Co.,
We are of the opinion that the rule of the McDonald and Delouche cases ought to have been consistently followed by this court, . . ." that the rule of the Fletcher and Ryan cases is sound and that the rule of the Domocaris case is both unsound in principle and unfortunate in result. It is hereby overruled.
It does not avail the plaintiff that the assured was unable to read or write the English language. Levesque v. Insurance Co.,
There remains to be considered the argument relied upon in the Bilodeau case to the effect that regardless of whether or not the rule of the Domocaris case is correct, adherence to it is compelled for the reason that since it was announced the statute relied upon therein, (Laws 1907, c. 109, s. 1), was reenacted without change by the legislature. P. L, c. 277, s. 6.
We are not called upon to consider the validity of this rule in general because upon more detailed analysis it appears to be inapplicable to the situation presented. As already appears, the actual question presented in the Domocaris case was not one of statutory construction. This court was not then, any more than it is now, called upon *181
to construe the above statute or to give a meaning to any of its terms. The factual situation under consideration presents a question of the common-law rule applicable to an agency relationship of statutory origin. As a rule of the common law it stands as others do, subject to judicial revision or reversal without regard to the reenactment by the legislature of the statute which creates the relationship to which the common-law rule applies. Jaffrey v. Smith,
Since the defendant's motion for a nonsuit should have been granted, its other exceptions do not require consideration.
Judgment for the defendant.
ALLEN, C. J., and MARBLE, J., dissented: the others concurred.