56 So. 379 | Miss. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
■ This is a suit on a policy of insurance, issued by the appellant on the 26th day of January, 1909, insuring the life of appellee’s husband, John W. O’Dom, in the sum of five thousand dollars. John W. O’Dom died on the 20th day of February, 1910, and, payment having been refused by the insurance company, this suit was brought upon this policy. This policy is what is known as a “term policy.” It was to run for ten years, provided, of course, the annual premiums were promptly paid. At the end of ten years it was to expire by virtue of its own limitation. The annual premiums amounted to one hundred and seventy dollars and eighty-five cents, and were to be paid on or before the 18th day of January of each year. It was provided, however, in the policy, as follows: “A grace of one month, subject to an interest charge of five per cent per annum, shall be granted for the payment of every premium after the first, during which time the insurance shall continue in force.” By the terms of the policy all premiums became payable in advance at the home office, or to an agent of the company upon the delivery, on or before the due date of the premium, of a receipt, signed by an executive officer of the company and countersigned by such agent. The policy further provides that, “except as to the period of grace herein provided, the payment of a premium or installment thereof shall not maintain the policy in force beyond the date when the next premium or installment thereof is payable,” and, further, that “no agent is authorized to waive forfeitures, or to make, modify, or discharge contracts, or to extend the time for paying a pre.
The contention of the plaintiff is that the insurance company waived the requirements of the contract, which called for the full annual premium on or before the 18th day of February, 1910, and, further, that the defendant agreed with the insured that it would accept a quarterly premium on the 21st of February, or the 18th of February, in lieu of the whole amount within the time called for by the policy. At the same time, when this policy was issued, there was also issued to M. A. O’Dom, the son of John W. O ’Dom, another insurance policy of similar tenor, the annual premium for which was the total of the two premiums, with interest, being two hundred and sixty-four dollars and forty cents, - one-fourth of which would be sixty-six dollars and ten cents. In order to support the contention of the plaintiff in the court below, Mr. M.'A. O’Dom testified that he represented his father; that he went to Meridian on the 17th day of February, 1910, just a day before the thirty days of grace expired, to try to dispose of some lumber in order to pay the premiums. Tie failed to dispose of the lumber, but he met one Col. Townsend, who was a mere soliciting agent of the company and he (Townsend) suggested that the witness write to the Jackson branch office relative to an extension of the premiums. Thereupon this witness, M. A. O’Dom, wrote a letter, dated February 17, 1910, addressed to M. V. Flood, manager of the Jackson branch of the company, as follows: “Dear Sir: Please
In view of the fact that this case was submitted to a jury, and that the findings of the jury were against the insurance company, we are bound to consider this case as if the testimony of Mr. O’Dom were true. The evidence of Mr. O’Dom further shows that the assured, John W. O’Dom, was sick on Sunday, the 20th day of February, and had been sick for a week or more; that there was no apprehension on the part of any member of his family that he was seriously sick; that the assured died on Sunday night, February 2t0h, at 8:30 o’clock.After the death of the assured the testimony shows that the soliciting agent of the company, Mr. Townsend, applied to the Jackson branch office, at Jackson, for blank proofs of death, and that Wilson, the cashier, forwarded the said Townsend blank proofs; the said Wilson hav
It will thus be seen from this statement of facts that the only question which is presented in this record is whether Wilson, the cashier, had any power or authority to waive a forfeiture, and whether the insured was misled by Wilson, and, if so, was the company in any way estopped by the acts or declarations of Wilson, the cashier. The contention of appellee is that the stipulation in the policy, “No agent is authorized to waive forfeitures, or to make, modify, or discharge contracts, or extend the time of paying the premium,” is void, and Wilson, the cashier of the company, had such powers and duties as authorized Mm to waive the forfeitures; in other words, that Wilson was the alter ego of the company.
The fallacy lurking beneath the position of appellee is as dangerous and deceptive as it is open and glaring. It consists in assuming that the cashier of the Jackson branch was a general agent of the company; that, because he had the power, to collect premiums, he also had the power to extend the time of payment; and that he could waive the forfeiture and modify or change the .contract of insurance. There is no provision in the policy which gives the insured the right to change the premium from annual to quarterly. We have made a very careful and exhaustive investigation of this question, have not only read all of thé authorities relied upon by the appellee, hut others, and fail to find any authority which sustains her contention.
Appellee invokes the settled doctrine in this and other courts: First, that “ an agency for a corporation may
It is urged with learning and ability, both in the oral argument and written brief of appellee, that these facts shown in evidence establish the power of the agent, and that the appellee had the right to rely upon the state
The burden of proof is upon him who asserts it to show either a direct authorization of the agent, or by proving such facts or circumstances, or such a course of conduct, as by implication it can be presumed that the agent was acting within the real or apparent scope of his authority. If one invests another with real authority, he
An examination of the authorities, in the light of the above principles, will doubtless reconcile the seemingly conflicting conclusions of the various courts. The Mississippi cases relied upon by appellee are: Rivara’s case, 62 Miss. 728; Bowdre’s case, 67 Miss. 620, 7 South. 596, 19 Am. St. Rep. 326; Sheffy’s case, 71 Miss. 919, 16 South. 307; Gibson’s case, 72 Miss. 58, 17 South. 13. An examination of these cases will disclose that in each and all of them the question as to the authority of the agent arose upon the policies of insurance, the essential parts of which were agreed upon by the agent, who had full power to issue policies and to conclude contracts, without having to refer them to their principles. An agent who is empowered to issue policies and to make contracts of insurance is the general agent of the company, and, being a general agent, can waive conditions and forfeitures, and do any other thing which his principal can do. The cases outside of this state relied upon by appellee are cases easily distinguishable from the case
After a thorough examination of the authorities, we have been unable to find any case, except the James case, 148 Mo. 1, 49 S. W. 978, and the Fallows case, 110 Tenn. 720, 77 S. W. 937, which holds that an agent, having simply the authority to collect premiums, had the power to waive forfeitures, where the policy, as in this case,, provides that “no agent is authorized to waive forfeitures, or to make, modify, or discharge contracts, or to extend the time for paying a premium.” But even in the James case and Falloivs case, supra, it will be seen that in both of these cases the course of business and the custom had been such as to justify the parties in believing that the agent had the authority to extend the time of payment. Such had been done before and the acts of the agent ratified by the company. But if we be mistaken as to the ruling in Fallows’ case, 110 Tenn. 720, 77 S. W. 937, this case is squarely overruled in Archer v. N. Y. L. Ins. Co., MS. opinion, delivered November, 1910, assenting to Crook v. Insurance Co., 112 Md. 268, 75 Atl. 388. In all the cases relied upon by appellee there can be found general expressions which will justify the conclusions that an agent, authorized to receive and receipt for premiums, is such an agent as clothes him with power to extend the time of payment; but this general language must be construed and interpreted by referring to the facts as shown in each particular case. The difficulty is not so much in making general statements of the law, but applying them to a certain state of facts, and the power of agents to bind their principals is varied by
Turning, now, from the authorities relied upon by'appellee, we find that the best-considered and the decided weight of authority is that a mere collecting agent has no power to vary, alter, or modify a contract of insurance, or to extend the time’ of payment, especially where the notice of the agent’s authority is brought home to the other party. This court, in Insurance Co. v. Sorsby. 60 Miss. 14, has squarely decided the proposition. In that case the policy prescribed that if any other insurance was taken upon the property, without the consent of the insurance company, the policy would be void. After the issuance of the policy, additional insurance was taken out by the insured upon the property. (This was a fire policy.) The insured claimed that the conditions of the policy were waived by Bracy, the agent of the company. Bracy was a soliciting agent. He forwarded the applications to the general manager. The policy was returned to Bracy, who delivered the same to the insured and collected and receipted for the premiums. The proof was that the insured, when he applied to Bracy, informed Mm that he intended to take out addition insurance, and that after he had taken out the additional insurance he informed Bracy, the agent, and that Bracy said that it was all right. This court, speaking through its then distinguished Chief Justice Campbell, ■said: “It whs not within his real or apparent authority to make contracts with the company. He was not authorized to issue policies, or alter the terms of those issued by the company. His information of Sorsby’s purpose to obtain other insurance was not imputable to the company, and his express consent to it did not in any way affect the company.”
The recent case of Crook v. New York Life Insurance Co., 112 Md. 268, 75 Atl. 388, is a case on all fours with the case at bar. The policy in that case contained the
An examination of the authorities cited by this author bears out the correctness of the statement. In Iowa Life Insurance Co. v. Lewis, 187 U. S. 335, 23 Sup. Ct. 126, 47 L. Ed. 204, et seq., it is held that “the authority of the agent of an insurance company to waive a forfeiture, which had accrued by reason of nonpayment of a premium note at maturity, cannot be inferred from an act of the company in sending such note to the agent for collecting the same some time before it was due, especially where his contract with the company and provi
The appellee relies upon London Guarantee & Accident Co. v. Mississippi Central R. R. Co., decided by this court June, 1910, and reported in 52 South. 787 et seep, for authority sustaining appellee’s position, with the provision in the policy to the effect that “no agent, etc., •can waive a forfeiture or extend the time of payment.” The provision in the Accident Company’s case, which this court held unavailing, was a very different one from the provision in this policy. The stipulation in the one •case was that “no officer, no agent, and no other representative shall waive,” etc. This stipulation brought forth from the court the expression that “this clause is a species of refinement, by which the corporation withdraws within its invisible and intangible ideality, Avhen liability is sought to be imposed upon it, bound by the acts of no agent, officer, or other representative,” and for that reason held that the stipulation was too broad •and comprehensive in its terms, and at the same time referring to the distinction which was the foundation of Cleaver’s case in 65 Mich. 527, 32 N. W. 660, 8 Am. St. Rep. 908, as contradistinguished from the case of Insurance Co. v. Earle, 33 Mich. 143. This court in the Accident Co. case, supra, expressly approved the decision in ■Cleaver’s case.
We see no reason why a corporation, which necessarily contracts through agents, but may have agents of superior or inferior authority, should not stipulate, in any contract executed in its behalf, that its provisions can be varied by no notice or representations not brought, home to the actual knowledge of one of its principal officers, nor any waiver not authorized by them. The stipulation in the policy that “no agent has power to modify the terms of the contract, or waive its conditions, is notice to the insured of the limited authority in these respects, and under such a stipulation the insured cannot rely upon any actual conduct of the agent as constituting a modification or waiver.” Such is the statement of the rules as laid down in 25 Cyc. 861, and such is the generally accepted rule, especially in Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York,
If, therefore, the insured had notice that only the general agents or officers of the company had power to grant the extension of time, how can he be heard to say that
Reversed and remanded.