60 A. 1009 | N.H. | 1905
The defendants do not contend that the plaintiff's father, George L. Johnson, was not authorized as the plaintiff's agent to negotiate the policy of insurance in suit and to complete the contract by acceptance of the policy upon its delivery to him. If he had not such authority, there was no contract between the parties to this suit. Busher v. Insurance Co.,
In the absence of statutory prohibition, the parties had the right in an insurance contract, as in any other contract, to incorporate into their agreement such conditions as appeared to them proper. Dwyer v. Insurance Co.,
"If there be a condition precedent to do an impossible thing, the obligation becomes single." Worsley v. Wood, 6 D. E. 710, 719. Whether the parties intended the giving of notice to be a condition precedent to recovery when the plaintiff was without knowledge of the injury or of the fact of the accident, or when for other reason compliance with the stipulations of the policy was impossible, or whether as matter of law such impossibility is in such case legal excuse for non-performance, are questions not considered because not presented. The authorities relied upon by the plaintiff may be decisive in such cases, but they have no application.
Exception overruled.
All concurred. *263