Judges: Cook
Filed Date: 10/15/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
delivered the opinion of tlie court.
Appellant begun this action in the chancery court of Warren count by bill asking the reformation of a certain insurance policy issued by the Vicksburg agency of appellee. The chancellor, after hearing full proof, denied the relief prayed for, and dismissed the bill.
The allegations of the bill, if true, would entitle appellant to relief; but appellee, in its answer, denied all the allegations' of the bill, and, upon the evidence, the chancellor entered the decree. We believe it to be unnecessary to review the evidence offered by appellant, because we think the allegations of the bill were supported by evidence, and the chancellor would have been warranted in granting the prayer of the bill. This being the case, we will consider the case from appellee’s standpoint, for the purpose of testing the conclusions reached by the trial court.
It appears that appellant was engaged in the public business of running automobiles for hire, and had obtained from the Wilkerson Insurance Agency, of Vicksburg, a policy insuring a certain White Steamer automobile from loss by fire. This risk was originally written in the Firemen’s Fund Insurance Company, for the sum of two thousand dollars; but the company, for some reason, ordered its agency to cancel the same. The Wilkerson Agency did not represent any company which would rewrite this risk; so, in accordance with a custom, or understanding, between the insurance agents of Vicksburg, the Wilkerson Agency solicited the Flowers Agency, the regular agents of appellee in Vicksburg, to issue a policy covering this machine. A policy was issued in the Hartford Company, and was delivered to the Wilkerson Agency, and by them delivered to appellant. When the policy was delivered to the appellant, it had
It is the contention of appellant that the contract made by them was for a policy exactly like the one canceled, and that the Hartford Company agreed to write this kind of policy, but by mistake a different policy was written, and this poiley did not cover the loss. In order to maintain this contention, it is insisted that the dealings between the Wilkerson Agency and the Flowers Agency made the Wilkerson Agency the agent of the Hartford Insurance Company; that they had applied to the Wilkerson Agency for a policy like the one canceled by the Firemen’s Fund Insurance Company, and they had agreed to obtain this policy; whereas, in fact they had delivered to them an entirely different policy, which only covered the automobile while it was in the garage.
The following statement of the law by Mr. Cooley, in his Briefs on the Law of Insurance, vol. 3, pp. 2529, 2530, is the principle relied on, viz.: “If an insurance agent, to whom a request for insurance is made, procures all or part of such insurance, through other agents, from a company not represented by him, and receives the policy written by such company for delivery to the applicant, he will generally be regarded as the agent of the company issuing the policy, especially if he receives a part of the premium as commission. The principle underlying this doctrine is that the company issuing the policy ratifies the acts of the first-named agent, and constitutes him its agent for that transaction by accepting the application
Appellee’s evidence tends to show that appellant knew at the time they received this policy the Flowers Agency was the agents of appellee; that they also knew that the Wilkerson Agency was not authorized to make contracts of insurance for appellee. The evidence goes further, and shows that appellant knew that the policy actually delivered was the only policy which the Hartford Company would write upon the machine in question; that they were fully advised of this fact, and knew that no agent of the Hartford was authorized to write a policy like the one canceled. In other words, the evidence introduced by appellee shows the limitation placed by the Hartford upon its agents was known to appellee when it accepted the Hartford policy.
Viewing tbe ease from appellee’s standpoint, nothing was ever said about the Firemen’s Fund policy. They wrote the policy exactly as they intended to write it. They had no authority to bind the Hartford by any different contract of insurance, and this was known to appellant. The chancellor could have believed appellant knew Wilkerson was not tbe agent of appellee; but Flowers was the agent, and when they accepted the policj^ they were fully advised that any agent assuming to act for appellee would exceed his authority if he undertook to bind the Hartford by any other form of contract than the contract actually written and delivered.
Affirmed.