110 So. 909 | Ala. | 1926
Lead Opinion
An agent who is authorized only to solicit and take applications for insurance, receive the premiums, and deliver the policy after it has been signed by the proper officers has no authority, express or implied, to waive a breach of any condition of the policy after it has been delivered. Queen Ins. Co. v. Young,
But when the agent is "empowered to enter into contracts, take risks, deliver policies, and receive premiums, without consulting the insurer," he is quoad hoc, a general agent, notwithstanding the restriction of his territory; and the apparent scope of his authority "includes the power to dispense with conditions in policies issued through his agency, and his acts in the exercise of this power will bind the insurer in the absence of any limitation on his authority known to the insured. His power and authority in respect to waiver are the same as that of the insurer himself. He may accordingly waive a forfeiture which has occurred by reason of a breach of condition, in the absence of collusion between himself and insured." 26 Corp. Jur. 287, 288, § 360; 14 R. C. L. 1158, § 339. And, on the same principle, he may waive or excuse the performance of a duty imposed upon the insured, consequent upon the loss, and in relation thereto. Syndicate Ins. Co. v. Catchings,
Under its written commission from the defendant company, which is to be liberally construed, and the testimony of Mr. Jones, the president of the Mabry Securities Company, we think the latter company was the general local agent of defendant, with the apparent authority to waive or excuse the making of proofs of loss as required by the policy. This authority is not defeated by the provision of the policy itself that "no officer, agent or other representative of this company shall have power to waive any provision or condition of this policy except such as by the terms of this policy may be the subject of agreement indorsed hereon or added hereto." Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Allen,
Plaintiff relies upon two separate conversations, held by him in the office of Mabry Securities Company, as showing a waiver by, or estoppel upon, defendant with respect to his failure to furnish the required proofs of loss. The first of these was with one Paul Stewart, an office clerk of the Mabry Company, who, on its behalf, solicited applications for insurance, to be placed contingently with one or another of the several companies represented by the Mabry Company. One McLean, a casual solicitor for the Mabry Company, secured the application for this policy from plaintiff, and Stewart placed it with defendant and superintended its issuance and delivery. Stewart was not the agent of defendant, and, so far as appears, defendant had no knowledge of his employment. He was, therefore, without authority to bind defendant by any declarations he may have made to plaintiff as to the necessity, or not, of making proofs of loss. Waldman v. North Brit.
Merc. Ins. Co.,
The conversation with Mr. Jones, president of the Mabry Company, occurred on September 27, the sixtieth day after the fire. Plaintiff visited the Mabry Company's office for the purpose of inquiring as to defendant's failure to pay him the insurance money. Mr. Jones told him he understood the insurance company had enough evidence to show that plaintiff himself burned his house. Plaintiff asked him what was the best thing for him to do. Mr. Jones said it would be best not to stir them up and get them mad, and that if plaintiff burned it up he would know better than any one to say nothing; and the only thing he could say for him to do would be to write them a nice letter and ask them for it. Plaintiff asked him if an affidavit of any kind would be required, and he said "No."
Plaintiff's witness, Moore, who was present during the conversation, testified that plaintiff said, "I am ready to sign any paper, Mr. Jones, to the fact that my house was burned up"; and Mr. Jones said, "It is not necessary to do that; write the people a letter, a nice letter, and tell them about your house being burned up and that you want your money."
The necessary implication from this conversation is that plaintiff's claim was understood to have been presented to the company, and that the question of its payment had been under consideration. It does not appear that Jones knew that proper proof of loss had not been seasonably made by plaintiff. The subject of the conversation was the delay in the settlement and the company's alleged evidence showing that plaintiff was *484 the guilty author of the fire. The affidavit offered was to show merely that the house was burned and to induce and expedite payment.
Our conclusion is that the time, circumstances, and substance of this conversation do not permit a reasonable inference that the Mabry Securities Company, through Jones, intended to waive or excuse the performance of plaintiff's obligation to furnish to the company the proof of loss required by the policy, and that Jones' statement that no affidavit was necessary, for the limited purpose under discussion, is not a basis for estoppel of the company with respect to such proof. It results that the trial court erred in rendering judgment for plaintiff under the evidence before it.
Replications 3 and 6, setting up the waiver and estoppel relied on, are substantially defective in not alleging that defendant's agent, Mabry Securities Company, was duly authorized in the premises, or that its acts and declarations in that behalf were within the scope of its agency. Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Wood,
Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.
Addendum
Appellant excepts to the statement in the opinion that the written commission of the Mabry Securities Company "is to be liberally construed." This principle is stated in 1 Joyce on Insurance, §§ 425, 426, 440, where it was said that "the tendency of courts of the present day is toward a liberal rather than a strict construction of an agent's powers," a text which was quoted with approval in Ga. Home Ins. Co. v. Allen,
Our consideration of the applications for rehearing, made by both appellant and appellee, has not persuaded us that our conclusions, as stated, were wrong, and both applications will be overruled.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.