165 Mass. 565 | Mass. | 1896
The only exception taken in this case by the defendant is to the admission of evidence of a general custom and usage to the effect that persons authorized by mutual fire insurance companies in Massachusetts to solicit insurance can bind the company until notice of the refusal of the risk by the company is received by the agent and communicated to the person desiring the insurance.
The case at bar differs essentially from Brewer v. Chelsea Ins. Co. 14 Gray, 203, and Baxter v. Chelsea Ins. Co. 1 Allen, 294, in each of which cases the by-law provided that before the policy should be delivered the assured should pay such premium and give such deposit note as the president and directors should determine. The efféct of this by-law was held to be that the contract could not be completed nor the policy take effect until the premium was paid and the note given.
There was sufficient evidence in this case to warrant the. jury in finding that Porter, if not the general agent of the company, was held out by the company as having authority to make such a contract as is alleged to have been made in this case, and as the evidence shows was made. If Porter’s authority was limited by private instructions given to him by the officers of the company, this cannot bind the plaintiff if he had no knowledge of it. His authority “ must be determined by the nature of his business