42 P. 611 | Or. | 1895
Opinion by
There is a class of cases which holds that where a person is authorized by an insurance company to
After a contract of insurance is complete, the policy delivered and accepted, it becomes binding upon the parties the same as any other valid contract, and its plain and unambiguous provisions must be interpreted by the same rules. If, therefore, it contains a limitation upon the power and authority of an agent to subsequently waive its stipulations or change its terms, such provision is necessarily notice to the assured that for such purpose the power of the agent of the company is limited, whatever his authority may be in other respects. No rule is better settled, than that where a limitation on the power of an agent is brought home to the person dealing with him, such person relies upon any act in excess of such limited authority at his peril; and hence, when an insurance company limits the power of its agent, and notice of such limitation is brought home to the person dealing with him, it is not bound by any act done by the agent in contravention of such notice: Wood on Insurance, §107; Weidert v. State Insurance Company, 19 Or. 261 (20 Am. St. Rep. 809, 24 Pac. 242). Now, in this case the policy expressly provides that no officer or agent or other representative of the company shall have power
The relation of agency, it is true, is the result of the contract between the agent and his principal, and the power of the agent must be determined by his real or apparent authority, as gathered from facts in the case, and a declaration in an insurance policy to the effect that no agent has authority to change or modify its terms or conditions, except in a specified manner, would not preclude the assured from showing, as a matter of fact, if he could, that the defendant did invest the agent with such authority. But where the policy itself, issued and delivered by an agent, informs the assured that for certain purposes no officer, agent, or representative of the company has authority to bind it except in a specified manner, it contains notice to him that the authority of the agent so issuing the policy is limited, and this limitation and restriction is binding upon the assured unless he can show that such power has been enlarged in some way. Mr. Hart was the general agent of the company, and, unless his powers were expressly limited, and the assured had notice of such limitation, it would perhaps be presumed from the nature of his agency that he had power to modify or waive the terms of the policy, because, as general agent, he stood in the place of and