163 P. 588 | Or. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the court.
The policy was written on behalf of the defendant by E. H. Cooper, whose firm was duly authorized to countersign and deliver policies. It further appears that the defendant had provided Cooper with a form of rider which he was authorized to attach to policies of insurance on property purchased under contract. This form of rider recites such purchase and provides that the loss, if any, should be payable to “both seller and purchaser, as their respective interests may appear.”
Plaintiff produced four witnesses who testified that Cooper was informed on threé different occasions that plaintiff’s interest in the property insured was that of a vendee under an executory contract of purchase. Two of these conversations took place before the insurance was written and the third of them at the time the premium was paid. Cooper admits that he participated in these conversations and corroborates the other witnesses as to some of the matters discussed, but de
*282 “The law is well settled that where the general agent of a company is intrusted with the power to make and issue policies, and the insured fully and frankly discloses all facts material to the risk, and the agent in making out the policy through fraud or mistake fails to state such facts, such error or fraud on the part of the agent cannot he relied on by the company in avoidance of the policy, and a court of equity upon application will reform the policy so as to make it express the real contract between the parties.”
To the same effect see National Bank v. Ocean Co., 62 Me. 519, 523; Niagara Co. v. Jordan, 134 Ga. 667 (68 S. E. 611, 20 Ann. Cas. 363).
Plaintiff’s right to relief is not barred by his failure to read the policy: Carlton Co. v. Lumber Insurance Co., 81 Or. 396 (158 Pac. 807, 809, 810). It is true that since 1907 the form of fire insurance policies in this state has been statutory, but they are still subject to reformation in equity, at least in the provisions which local agents are authorized to supply and modify: Holden v. Law Union & Rock Co., 63 Or. 253 (127 Pac. 547), and Carlton Co. v. Lumber Ins. Co., 81 Or. 396 (158 Pac. 807). If it should have appeared that Cooper had no authority from the defendant to modify the provision in the policy relied on by the defendant, a different question would be presented.
Modified and Affirmed.