1. “A second insurance on the same property, unless by consent of the insurer, will void the policy.” Code § 56-830. “The taking out of additional insurance on the same property, unless by consent of the insurer, renders the policy void as to the insured.”
American Ins. Co.
v.
Hattaway,
194
Ga.
15 (2) (
2. A provision in a policy of fire insurance as follows: “No provision shall be accepted or waived or any provision be valid unless granted herein or expressed in writing attached hereto” is valid and requires that a waiver by the insurance company of a policy provision shall be in writing.
Fire & Casualty Ins. Co.
v.
Fields,
212
Ga.
814 (
3. However, the amended petition alleges that, prior to renewing the policy of fire insurance, the insured gave parol notice to the company’s agent, Charles Darling, of the “other insurance” written on the property in question; that such agent notified the company of such other insurance; that with actual knowledge of these facts the company, by endorsement dated July 17, 1958, renewed and reissued the policy of fire insurance for a period from July 17, 1958, to July 17, 1959, and accepted a renewal premium for this period, and that the fire which caused the loss sued on took place on December 14, 1958, while such endorsement was in effect. Since Code § 56-830 does not require that the consent of the insurer to the taking out of additional insurance must be in writing, these facts, showing that the company with actual knowledge of the other insurance in force elected to reissue the policy and accept the premium thereon, are sufficient to show implied consent on the part of the insurer to the existence of the “other insurance”, there being nothing on the face of this petition to- indicate that the company objected to the additional insurance.
Swain
v.
Macon Fire Ins. Co.,
102
Ga.
96 (1) (
4. The only remaining question is whether the policy provisions themselves present a bar to recovery under the facts stated. It appears that the decision in
Greenwich Fire Ins. Co.
v.
Sabotnick,
91
Ga.
717, supra, is in fundamental conflict with that of
Beasley
v.
Phoenix Ins. Co.,
140
Ga.
126, supra, on the question of whether notice to a mere agent of the company of the acquisition of other insurance is sufficient, but we do not have that question before us because here actual notice on the part of the company is alleged. A further distinction between the, policy sued on here and that in all of the above cited cases with the exception of the
Peek
case, is that, while the policy under consideration prohibits the acquisition of additional insurance, it does not in terms provide that acquisition of such insurance will void the policy. The reason why it might void the policy in any event would be that it might increase the risk, but as to this reason, of course, knowledge on the part of the company of such insurance and an election to renew the policy at the same rate would offer good argument for the conclusion that the company did not consider the additional insurance as an increase of risk in this case. The general rule is that if an insurance company intends for the violation of a policy provision to void the policy
ipso facto
it must so provide in the contract. “This results from the familiar rule that forfeitures are not favored, and that a contract will not be construed to work a forfeiture unless it is manifest that it was the intention of the parties that it should have that effect.”
Southern Fire Ins. Co.
v.
Knight,
111
Ga.
622, 624 (
The act of the insurance company in renewing the insurance policy with actual notice that other insurance had been taken out on the same property constitutes a technical equitable estoppel against the defendant to assert that its policy of insurance so issued is void. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in overruling the demurrers to the petition as renewed after amendment.
Judgment affirmed.
