Upon consideration of the foregoing questions, it is apparent that they all relate to the same policy, and that each should be answered in the light of the facts gathered from all the questions combined. The answers given must be understood accordingly. Some of the questions, however, can not in any view be answered either yes or no without qualification.
In Home Friendly Society v. Berry, 94 Ga. 606 (supra), it was held: “1. Where one residing in Atlanta, Georgia, who was already a member of a beneficial society having its headquarters and principal office in Baltimore, Maryland, and who was the holder of a certificate of membership which embodied and embraced a policy of insurance by the society upon his life, made at different times two written applications for membership in the same society, and in each of them made several material representations, amongst them that he was not a member of that society, and thus obtained on each application a separate certificate of membership and policy of insurance upon his life, which declared upon its face that if the representations upon which the certificate was granted were not true the certificate should be void, both these certificates should, after the death of the member, be treated as void and of no effect, unless the company had notice, at some time before receiving the last dues upon some one of the three certificates, that the same identical person was a member when he applied, for and procured one or both of the additional certificates and the cumulative insurance which they provided for. 2. Notice to the society’s local agents at Atlanta who received the applications and collected the dues on all three of the certificates of membership, but who, so far as appears, had no power to represent the company in making contracts or waiving conditions expressed therein, the applications having separately and at different times been forwarded to Baltimore for acceptance and the certificates of membership having there, separately and at different times, been issued by the society’s general officers, would not be notice to the society of the falsehood of the representation as to non-membership contained in the applications, unless it appeared that no such representation was actually *83 made to the agent who received and filled out the applications, hut that he inserted the false statement without authority from the applicant and without his knowledge.”
Following that decision, the Court of Appeals, in National Life & Accident Insurance Co. v. Weaver, 38 Ga. App. 590 (supra), held as follows: “Where a life-insurance policy provides that 'unless otherwise stated in the “space for endorsements” in a waiver signed by the president or secretary, this policy is void if . . any policy on the life of the insured has been issued by this company and is in force at the date hereof, unless this policy contains an endorsement signed by the president or secretary that such prior policy may be in force/ there can be no waiver of this provision of the policy by reason of the conduct of the company after notice of the existence of a policy in the company on the life of the insured at the date of the issuance of the policy, unless the notice is given to the president or secretary of the company, or to some agent of the company authorized to waive the condition. . . Where the policy provides also that 'the company shall not be presumed or held to know of . . any previous policy unless such fact . . shall be expressly shown in the application, and the issue of this policy shall not be deemed a waiver of this condition/ the mere fact that at the date of the issuance of the policy there was in existence in the same company a policy on the life of the same insured was, in the absence of knowledge of this fact by the president or the secretary, or some officer of the company with authority to alter contracts, insufficient as notice which would serve as the basis for a waiver by the company of the provisions of the policy. Were this otherwise, the provision in the policy which voids it by reason of the existence of another policy in the same company upon the life of the same insured would be meaningless and a mere nullity. . . This being a suit by the beneficiary against the insurer to recover under the policy for the death of the insured, and there being, on the policy sued on, no endorsement of a waiver of the existence, at the date of the issuance of the policy, of a pre-existing policy in the same company upon the life of the insured, and it not appearing that the president or the secretary of the company, or some officer of the company with authority to alter contracts had ever had knowledge of the existence of the other1 policy, and the fact of its existence not appearing in the application, the verdict found for the *84 plaintiff was, under the above rulings, unauthorized.” A similar conclusion was reached in Harris v. Bankers Health & Life Insurance Co., 40 Ga. App. 678 (supra). In that case the facts were as follows: The suit was by the beneficiary against the insurer to recover on a life-insurance policy. The policy contained the following provisions: “This policy shall be void if there shall be in force on the life of the insured a policy previously issued by the company, unless the first issued policy contains an endorsement signed by an officer of the company authorizing this policy to be in force at the same time. . . No person except the president or secretary has the power to modify or in the event of lapse to reinstate this policy or to extend the time of payment of the premiums. . . No agent has the power on behalf of the company to waive any forfeiture, or to bind the company by making any promise, or by making or receiving any representation or information.” Upon the trial the plaintiff’s evidence showed without dispute that at the date of the issuance of the policy there was of force a preexisting policy in the same company upon the life of the insured, upon which there was no endorsement authorizing the issuance of the policy sued on. There was nothing to indicate that either the president or the secretary, or any other officer of the company having authority to make or alter contracts, had ever waived the condition as to other insurance, or had any knowledge of the existence of the first policy as applying to the insured, nor did the fact of such previous insurance appear in the application. It was held that under the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
Under the foregoing authorities, question No. 1 of those certified in this case is answered: Yes, unless some officer or agent having authority to issue policies or to enter the “waiver” had actual knowledge of the existence of the first policy at or before acceptance of one or more premiums on the second policy. See, in this connection,
Lippman
v.
Ætna Insurance Co.,
108
Ga.
391 (
We come next to questions 4 and 5. A person like a building
*85
may be overinsured. Also, an insurer may not itself wish to carry more than so much on a particular applicant, regardless of other insurance; and it has the right to contract as it pleases, in regard to the amount. Hence the question of other insurance either in the same or in a different company may become material for consideration in passing upon any application.
Beasley
y.
Phœnix Insurance Co.,
140
Ga.
126 (
Constructive knowledge, that is, knowledge which might have been acquired by diligence but was not acquired, would not suffice as notice.
Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Co.
v.
Hughes,
145
Ga.
716 (
*87
In
Equitable Loan & Security Co.
v.
Waving,
117
Ga.
599 (
*88
Question 6 is answered as follows: In such case the insurer may avoid liability on the second policy, notwithstanding it has continued to collect premiums until the death of the insured, unless the beneficiary produces evidence that some officer or agent having authority to issue policies or to enter the “waiver” had actual knowledge of the existence of the first policy. The’ questions do not indicate whether under the terms of the policy only an executive officer would be authorized to endorse thereon the waiver as to prior insurance. In any event, the question should be one of actual authority as distinguished from, mere formal designation. The defense may be asserted without return of premiums.
Beasley
v.
Phœnix Insurance Co.,
140
Ga.
126 (
Furthermore, in speaking of officers or agents having authority to make contracts or to enter a “waiver” as described, we do not mean to imply that only such persons as are expressly so entitled or authorized may be shown to have had knowledge of the former policy. Some other officer or agent, or even a mere clerk, may, with permission of the company, actually and finally pass upon such matters, acting, however, not in his own name, but in the name of the company by its executive officers, and using for that purpose printed or stamped forms, including signatures; or even when actual signatures appear, they may have been attached merely as a matter of form, on the judgment and suggestion of a subordinate,
*89
who by implicit arrangement, really determines the matter. If these should be the facts, knowledge of the person who would thus be actually authorized to handle the transaction should be imputed to the company to the same extent as if acquired through the officers or agents whose names or signatures are declared by the contract to be requisite on a waiver. It would seem that in view of the many policies and waivers to be considered, the executive officers might be unable to pass upon such matters except through clerks or others, under some arrangement of this kind. If so, then the true medium of information should be any person having authority to act upon it, in behalf of the company or its officers. In such a case the law, as in other cases, should deal with the matter according to its facts and realities, and not by forms, names, or titles. Such a disposition would be in accord with “the true intention of the parties.” See
Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co.
v. Price, 132
Co.
687 (2) (
Much of the foregoing discussion might seem to be superfluous in view of the decision in the
Berry
ease, supra, which appears to be directly in point; and having been concurred in by all the Justices as the court was then constituted, it is binding as authority. Code, § 6-1611. The decision was brief, however, and we have thought it not amiss to notice some of the reasons which would seem to underlie it, especially as some courts have taken a different view. In addition to the authorities listed by the Court of Appeals, all of which have been considered, see, either as contrary or as tending to the contrary: Phœnix Mutual Life Ins. Co.
v.
Central State Fire Ins. Co.,
In the Kiser case, supra, which is the latest case we have found on the subject, the Supreme Court of Tennessee refers to a number of the earlier decisions, and winds up by sustaining a clause limiting recovery to return of premiums. The court, however, approved the reasoning in the Helm case, leaving the inference that it would have held the clause invalid, if it had provided that the policy would be
void
in case of other insurance. It might be remarked in this connection that the statements in both cases upon that question were mere dicta, since no such clause was involved in either case. In some decisions, a stipulation similar to that quoted in question 3 in the instant case, is treated as allowing the insurer a reasonable time as a sort of grace period, in which to ascertain the truth as to existence of other insurance. Atlas
v.
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
The decision by the Court of Appeals in Interstate Life & Accident Co. v. Wilson, 52 Ga. App. 171 (supra), seems to us not to accord with the rulings in the Georgia cases of Berry, Weaver, and Harris, supra. We agree to the statement by Broyles, C. J., that there was no material difference between the facts of that case and those involved in the Weaver and Harris cases.
Questions answered accordingly.
