Morrison v. Insurance Co. of North America

Stayton, Associate Justice.

Every policy holder, in the absence of fraud, misrepresentation or concealment, must be held to have knowledge of the contents of the policy when he has. *359opportunity to examine it before he accepts it. To the pleading in which the appellants sought to excuse themselves from obligation to comply with the terms of the policy, on the ground that they were, ignorant of its contents, not alleging fraud, misrepresentation or concealment, exceptions were properly sustained. The printed terms and conditions embodied in the policy were in very fine print, but from the fac simile found in the transcript it appears that they were legible, and it would be holding a very dangerous rule to assert that a party may be excused from being held to have knowledge of a contract to which he is a party, and under which he claims rights, by the fact that the instrument including the contract is difficult to read.

Every person having capacity to make a contract, in the absence of fraud, misrepresentation or concealment, must be held to have known what the words used in a contract made by him were, and to have known their meaning; and he must also be held to have known and fully comprehended the legal effect of the contract which the words used made. Contracts for insurance do not furnish exceptions to these rules.

The appellants, by their pleadings, undertook to declare the legal effect of certain provisions in the policy sued upon, making a fac simile of the policy a part of the pleading, and the court sustained an exception to so much of it. In this there was no error, for the pleadings of parties should state facts, and the averments of legal conclusions, drawn from the facts stated, are in no manner necessary to the full presentation of the right claimed.

The third section of the printed part of the policy contained the following provision: “The procuring of insurance on said property for more than its cash value, or the having of other insurance thereon, or any part thereof, valid or invalid, prior or subsequent, not made known to this company and consented to hereon, will render this policy null and void.” The contract for insurance was made through one McCarty, the agent of the company at Ennis, Texas, and the policy, which was signed by the president and secretary of the company and by McCarty, provided “that this policy shall not be valid unless countersigned by said company’s duly authorized agent at Ennis, Texas. ”

This agent of appellee was shown to have and exercise power to “issue and cancel policies for it; make renewals and endorsements of other insurance, when necessary, and collect *360premiums.” The appellee is a corporation, resident in the State of Pennsylvania, and incorporated under its laws. Such an agent was a general agent, whose knowledge was the knowledge of the company whose agent he was, and by whose acts, within the scope of his powers, his principal would be bound.

After the policy was issued, the appellants, without the previous consent of the agent, or any other person authorized to give the consent of the appellee, obtained insurance on the property covered by the policy in question. The defense was that this subsequent insurance, obtained without the consent of the company, evidenced by an endorsement on the policy, rendered it null. The appellants pleaded, and offered to prove, that A. M. Morrison, one of the plaintiffs, immediately informed McCarty, defendant’s agent, of the “other insurance” complained of; that he made no objection thereto, but promised at his earliest convenience to endorse such “other insurance” on the policy; that the notice was given for the purpose of procuring such endorsement; that plaintiffs relied on said .agent’s promise, and believed that he would perform every duty necessary for their protection; that afterwards and just before their loss, McCarty arranged with them to renew the policy at its expiration, after being again informed of the amount of insurance they were carrying and the value of their stock; that he insisted upon making renewal; that he made a memorandum of the renewal in writing, but not on the policy; that he did not object to the amount of insurance carried by plaintiffs on their stock, but was eager to renew the policy at its expiration; that from McCarty’s conduct they believed their policy to be in force up to the time of the loss.

The policy having been made’ an exhibit to the appellant’s pleadings, the court sustained an exception to so much of the pleadings as set up those matters, on the ground that no consent of the agent to subsequent insurance, under the terms of the policy, could be shown otherwise than by an endorsement upon it. The appellants filed a trial amendment, in which they alleged that the agent, since the policy issued, had been given other power than such as the policy gave, and that under this the acts of the agent, pleaded, would bind the company. There was no evidence, however, offered to sustain this last pleading, and, because of this, the evidence above referred to was excluded, and the court directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. Under the provision of his policy which we have *361set out, and the evidence showing the nature of the agency of McCarty, if nothing further affecting the power of the agent. was contained in the policy, the case of Crescent Insurance Company v. Griffin & Shook, 59 Texas, 509, would be conclusive of the liability of the appellee under the facts alleged and proposed to be proved. We see no reason to doubt the correctness of the decision made in that case, which is well sustained by the cases therein cited, as well as by the following: Insurance Company v. McCrea, 8 Lea, 513; Caerngi v. Insurance Company, 40 Georgia, 140; Insurance Company v. Young, 58 Alabama, 476; Pierce v. Insurance Company, 50 New Hampshire, 297; Jones v. Marine Insurance Company, 43 Wisconsin, 111; Insurance company v. Earle, 33 Michigan, 143; Insurance Company v. Lyons, 38 Texas, 253; Insurance Company v. Griffin & Shook, 66 Texas, 232.

The policy, however, in its sixth printed section, contains, among many other declarations, the following: “Agents of this company have no authority to bind the company in violation of any of the printed terms or conditions of insurance as herein expressed; and no printed or written condition or restriction hereof, which by its terms may be subject to waiver, shall be deemed to have been waived, except by a distinct, specific agreement, clearly expressed in the body of the policy.”

It is insisted that, under this, no act of the agent, looking to consent or acquiescing in subsequent insurance, could bind the company unless he endorsed his consent on the policy. The true construction of the provision in the policy last quoted, is not entirely clear. It recognizes the fact that there are terms and conditions in the policy which may be waived, and others which may not be. It further recognizes the fact that such conditions as are therein referred to which may be waived are such as must be waived, if waived at all, by an agreement entered into at the time the policy is executed; for it provides that such conditions or restrictions as are subject to waiver can be waived only by a specific agreement, clearly expressed in the body of the policy.

By the body of the policy we understand to be meant the entire face of the policy in its orderly arrangement existing at the time it is delivered. Looking to the entire policy, and especially to that part of its third printed section which we have quoted, it coiild not be claimed that it was intended that the consent to subsequent insurance must enter into the body of the *362policy, for it provides that this consent may be given by endorsement made on the policy. If, however, the insured desired to-have the right to obtain subsequent insurance without the consent of some one authorized to give it after the policy issued, then, under the sixth section, it would be necessary that this should be provided for in the face of the policy.

That this and like waivers to -be made before or at the time the policy issued were what was intended, is evidenced by the fact that the policy in question, as wé understand it, on its face gave to the insured the right to obtain additional concurrent insurance to the amount of five thousand dollars, without further consent.

Any condition in the policy which, under its terms, might have been waived in the body thereof, and not otherwise, must be deemed within the meaning of the sixth section a condition or restriction " subject to waiver;” and to such only, we are of the opinion, has so much of the sixth section as we have quoted any application. The first and third subdivisions of section three embrace many acts or matters which it is declared shall operate a forfeiture of rights under the policy, unless an express agreement to the contrary be made in the body of the policy, while the second subdivision of the same section, as well as the third subdivision, embrace many matters and acts permissive if consent to their doing, be given by indorsement on the policy.

The authority of the agent, McCarty, to have bound the appellee by indorsing consent to subsequent insurance is not questioned, and the sole ground on which liability is denied is that,., although he may have consented, he did not evidence his con» sent by an indorsement on the policy. A provision in a policy which declares that "the procuring of insurance on said property for more than its cash value, or the having of other insurance thereon, or any part thereof, valid or invalid, prior or subsequent, not made known to this company and consent'ed to hereon, * ********* will, under this policy, be null and void,” is, in effect, but a provision that the person who has power to give consent must evidence this in the manner prescribed. The cases cited show that consent not indorsed by writing on or in a policy containing such a claim will bind the company, when established, as fully as would the written consent, when acted and relied upon by the insured.

A provision that an agent shall not have power to evidence his consent to subsequent insurance, except by a writing on the pol*363icy, he having the power to give the consent of the company, it would seem would no more make it imperative that the agent should give consent, if at all, in the manner prescribed, than does a general declaration declaring a forfeiture of all rights under a policy, on account of named acts, unless the consent of the agent is given thereto by a writing upon the policy; and, therefore, no greater effect should be given to the first clause of that part of section six quoted, if it be applicable to consent to subsequent insurance, than should be given to that part of section three above set out. The ground on which insurance companies, under policies like that before us, are held liable for the acts of their agents done in the exercise of lawful power, but not in the manner prescribed by the policy, is that the' agent represents the company, and through him they have knowledge of every fact of which their agents have knowledge, and by failure promptly to repudiate their acts, are held to ratify them, or to be estopped by their silence when they ought to have spoken If the facts existed as appellants proposed to prove them, application for consent to subsequent insurance was made to the agent who had power to give it. This the company must be held to have known. He gave consent, but not in the manner prescribed in the policy. This the company must also be held to have known.

Subsequent insurance did not ipso facto annul the policy, but the company might elect to give it that effect or might waive it. Having knowledge of the facts, it was the duty of the company to manifest its intention as to this promptly, and, having f ailed to do so, it ought to be held to have waived the right to treat the policy as null, when it knew that by the act of its own agent the insured had been led to believe that the policy was in full force. It is not so much by force of the fact that the agent gave a verbal consent to the subsequent insurance that the appellee should be held bound, as because the company itself must be held, having knowledge of what he had done, to have ratified the consent given by him, though it may not have been given in the manner prescribed by the policy. If the policy limited the power of the agent it imposed no limitations on the power of the company itself, and, as said by the Supreme Court of Michigan in considering a provision in a policy similar to those found in the policy before us: “The condition literally applied would prevent any unendorsed consent by the company itself, by instruction of its board, or by act of its officers, as effectually as *364by anyone else. And the case seems to settle down to the simple question whether a person who has agreed that he will only contract by writing in a' certain way precludes himself from making a parol bargain to change it. The answer is manifest. A written bargain is of no higher legal degree than a parol one. Either may vary or discharge the other, and there can be no more force in an agreement in writing not to agree by parol than in a parol agreement not to agree in writing. Every such agreement is ended by the new one which contradicts it.” (Insurance Co. v. Earle, 33 Mich., 153; Insurance Co. v. McCrea, 8 La., 524.)

This finds application in contracts to be implied from silence where the party to the contract ought to have spoken, as well as in express contracts. What the agent of the appellee did was within the scope of his powers, even if the" manner in which he exercised those powers was not that pointed out by the policy; and the latter fact can not relieve the appellee from notice of all the facts known to its agent. We may say, under the facts the appellants proposed to prove, as was said by the Court of Appeals of ¡New York in a case including a like question: “We are also of the opinion that the defendant was bound on receipt of the notice of * * (the subsequent insurance) to immediately repudiate the act of the agent in giving such consent if it supposed he had acted without authority, or it must be held liable for the power he assumed to possess, upon the ground that it has acquiesced therein and authorized the plaintiff to rely thereon. It had no right to remain silent and suffer the insured to lay by and forego other insurance upon his property and subject him to the hazard of eventual loss upon the assumption, which he was authorized from its silero* to indulge, that the act of the agent was approved by it, and that there still remained in him, notwithstanding (the subsequent insurance), a valid insurance upon his property.” (Benninghoff v. Ins. Co., 93 N. Y., 503.)

The court below erred in sustaining the exception to appellant’s supplemental petition; and in excluding the evidence tending to show that the agent was notified of subsequent insurance, and agreed to the same and promised to indorse his consent on the policy, as well as the other evidence offered in immediate connection with these matters. We are of opinion, however, that the appellee did not waive any right it may have by the objections made to the proof of loss, for in the first communication made to the appellants, in regard to the loss, *365the objection of subsequent insurance in excess of that allowed by the appellee was urged, and there is nothing in that communication which evidences an intention of the insurance company to waive any right it then had.

For the reasons stated, the judgment of the court below will be reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

Opinion delivered December 20, 1887.