This action is upon a policy of lire insurance. The following is one of its stipulations: “ . . . or if the assured shall have, or shall hereafter make, any other contract of insurance, whether valid or not, on the property hereby insured, or any part thereof, without the consent of the company written hereon, . . . then, and in every such case, this policy shall become void.” The assured subsequently did make such other contract of insurance. No consent thereto was ever written on the policy. In point of fact, no notice thereof was ever brought home to the insurer, or to E. B. Joseph, its local agent, until after the loss for which recovery is now sought. None of these fads are controverted. One Gay was a clerk of the Capital City Insurance Company. Said Joseph was president of that company. He conducted the business of the defendant company in the office of the company of which he was president. Gay acted, in some sort, in the capacity of clerk to him, in respect to the business of the agency. It is claimed by the plaintiff that. Gay had notice •of the additional insurance, and waived the forfeiture operated thereby; but the evidence on the point is in direct conflict. Conceding, however, that he did, the question is, whether notice to him was notice to the company, and whether a waiver by him would bind the company. This depends, of course, upon the facts as to his relations with the company and with Joseph, its agent. Confessedly he was not the agent of the company. Il had not employed him. It had not authorized him to act for it. It did not know him, or that he had ever assumed, or been employed by J oseplr, to act for it. He was, however, in some manner, as we have seen, the clerk of Joseph in his business. In that capacity, he was to do mere clerical work. “He was to do what I told him to do”, Joseph swears. He had authority from Joseph to fill out insurance policies, and he sometimes issued policies, signing Joseph's *173name thereto with a stamp. He also hail authority from Joseph, it seems, to raise the rate of insurance in policies, and to indorse the fact upon them, lie did so, it appears, in this instance. But the defendant company never knew about any of these things. Joseph swears further that he had never authorized Gay to waive any of the conditions embodied in the policies of the defendant corporation. These are all the facts found in the record as to the capacity in which Gay acted, and his authority in the premises. There was no controversy as, to any of them.
Upon this showing, our opinion is, that Gay was in no sense the. agent of the defendant, nor authorized to bind it in any degree, nor was it affected by the alleged notice to him of the additional insurance. The principle of law involved we find nowhere better stated than in Mechem on Agency, § 197, as. follows : “ If an agent employs a sub-agent for his principal, and by his authority, expressed or implied, then the sub-agent is the agent of the principal, .... But, il‘ the agent, having undertaken to transact the business of his'principal, employs a sub-agent on his own account, to assist him in what he has undertaken to do, he does so at his own risk, and there is no privity between such sub-agent and the principal. The sub-agent, therefore, is the agent of the agent only, and is responsible to him for his conduct, while the agent is responsible to the principal for the manner in which the business has been done, whether by himself, or by his servant, or his agent;” and at § 72S, where it is said : “The question whether notice to a sub-agent is notice to the principal, depends upon considerations already stated” [referring to § 197, quoted above], “If the sub-agent be one whom the agent was expressly or impliedly authorized to appoint, he is deemed to be ’the agent of the principal, and notice to such sub-agent would be notice to the principal, as in the case of other agents. But, if the sub-agent be the agent of the agent merely, then there is no privity between him and the principal, and his knowledge can not be imputed to the principal.”
If it be conceded that Joseph, so far as in him lay, authorized and empowered Gay to waive the forfeiture operated by the additional insurance (though the evidence is without conflict to the contrary), and Gay attempted, by affirmative act or expressed consent (instead of the mere indorsement which he made on the policy raising the rate, after his alleged notice of additional insurance), to waive the forfeiture; yet his act or consent to that end would be entirely nugatory, so far as the right of the company to insist on the forfeiture is concerned. Joseph’s agency must be considered in the light of a personal *174trust, at least in respect to all matters embraced in it which involved the exercise of judgment and discretion, and especially with respect to so important a matter as the waiver of forfeitures stipulated for in the contract; a trust which he could not delegate to another, of whose capacity and integrity the principal may not have been advised, or which, had it been advised, would not have induced Ms employment.—1 Wait’s Act. & Def. 215; Johnson v. Cunningham, 1 Ala. 258; M. & M. L. Ins. Co. v. Huth, 49 Ala. 538; Litus v. C. & F. R. R. Co., 46 N. J. L. 393; 1 Amer. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 368.
But, in point of uncontroverted fact, as we have seen, Gay had no authority, even from Joseph, to waive the forfeiture now relied on by the defendant. At the most, he was Joseph’s agent to do certain things, clerical in their nature, or, at least, not including the act here involved. Joseph not only could not have authorized him to act in this matter, or put him forward as the representative of the company for the purposes of notice or otherwise in respect to the waiver now claimed, bathe did not assume or undertake (o do so. The case, in any aspect, is within the decision of the New Hampshire court, that ua person employed by an authorized agent of an insurance company to solicit application for insurance, receive premiums, and deliver policies, has no authority, by reason of such employment, to consent to additional insurance in other companies; and notice to him of such additional insurance is not notice to the company.”—Heath v. Ins. Co., 58 N. H. 414; also, Tute v. C. M. F. Ins. Co., 13 Gray, 79; Queen Ins. Co. v. Young, 86 Ala. 424.
There are, it is true, cases in which the agent of the agent will become the agent of the original principal by implication of law, resulting from the sub-agent’s having acted for so long for the principal, and so held himself out, or been held out by the agent as having authority to represent the principal, as that knowledge of Ms acts will be imputed to the company, it be held to a ratification of them, and estopped to deny responsibility therefor. Such was the case of Bodine v. Exchange Fire Ins. Co., 51 N. Y. 117. But the evidence here falls very far short of the facts upon which the implication of agency was based in that, or any other case, of which we are advised. There is absolutely nothing in the facts of this case to raise up an imputation that the defendant corporation knew of Gay’s alleged acts in representation of it, or ratified them, or did or omitted to do anything in respect to them, wMch will now operate an estoppel to deny responsibility for them.
Our conclusion is, therefore, that on the undisputed facts in *175the case, the policy was forfeited by the additional insurance; that the company not only did not consent thereto, as provided for in the instrument., but had no notice thereof until after the loss, and hence could not have waived, and did not in point of fact waive the forfeiture. On the case as thus presented, the defendant was entitled to the general affirmative charge in the court below; and the judgment will not be disturbed for errors of law committed on the' trial, since in no event could the plaintiff have been entitled to recover. 3 Brick. Dig. 405, § 22; Foster v. Johnson, 70 Ala. 249; Harrison v. Palmer, 76 Ala. 157; Barker v. Barclift, Ib. 414; T. C. S. O. Co. v. Perry, 85 Ala. 158; Sipsey River Nav. Co. v. Ga. Pac. Railway Co., 87 Ala. 154; Stephens v. Regenstein, 89 Ala. 561.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.