It is contended by appellant in argument that the appellee, by setting out in his complaint the application for insurance from the back of the policy, upon which his name appeared, indorsed it as his act and made it a part of the contract sued upon, and was estopped from denying it. The pleader set out the policy of insurance as the basis of his action, and then says: “On the back of the policy is a copy of the application made for the insurance, in writing and print, as follows.” It is neither indorsed as correct nor adopted as or stated to he the application of the insured.
The appellant, in its amended answer, states that appellee made his application for a policy of insurance in writing, setting forth the alleged application, and avers that material statements in the application were not true, and for that reason seeks to avoid liability for the loss. The appellee, in his replication, says he did not make or sign any written application, but that the one referred to was made by Yan Arsdale, the agent of the company, without his knowledge or consent. There was no demurrer or motion filed to this reply, and the case proceeded to trial upon the issues made by the complaint, answer and replication. By these pleadings the responsibility for the written application was made a material *504issue in the case, and the court properly allowéd appellee to testify that he did not make any written application, and also to give his version of what actually took place between the parties in reference to the transaction. It is apparent from the evidence that the application for insurance upon which the policy was issued was incorrect in many important particulars; so far from being a true statement of the facts in regard to the insured property as to render a policy void if established by proof to be the act of the insured.
The first question to be determined from the evidence and the law applicable to the facts is whether the application was that of the insured, or for which he was responsible, or the application and act of the insurer by its agent, for which it was responsible. That A. D. Van Arsdale was the agent of the appellant to the extent of soliciting insurance, sending the applications for insurance to the company, obtaining policies, delivering them to the insured, and collecting the premiums, was established by his own evidence and that of J. A. Dubbs, the general agent for the state of Colorado. That in this instance he solicited the insurance is shown by the evidence of the appeilee, and is undisputed. In regard to the application, there is no great conflict between the testimony of appellee and Van Arsdale. It plainly appears that no application was made out by appellee, or in his presence, nor submitted to him, nor signed by him, and no authority given to the agent to sign his name; that the application was not seen by him, and that he was not infoi’med of its character or contents; that the interview between him and the agent occurred late at night in a saloon, without a blank form of application, and with no copy of the questions to be asked and answered. Van Arsdale says: “ I asked questions, and took his answers, and put them down from memory, as nearly as I could, next morning.” Appellee specifically denies the making of any of the important statements con-*505tamed in the application relied upon to defeat a recovery; and, in regard to several of them, he is corroboratéd by Van Arsdale, and in no important point is he contradicted by him. Van Arsdale, in making up and forwarding the application, cannot be regarded as the agent of the insured, as supposed and contended by counsel for appellant. “Where an insurer intrusts applications in blank for insurance to a person who forwards the same to the insurer, and is the medium through whom the insurer delivers the policy and receives the premium, the person so intrusted therewith is treated as clothed with the requisite authority to effectuate the duties confided to him, and to that extent represents the company, and can bind it. * * * The assured has a right to rely upon it that the agent has authority to explain the inquiries put in the application, and to determine what facts are required to be stated, as well as how they shall be stated, and, acting upon his direction, if any error is committed, it is chargeable to the insurer, and not upon the assured; and, if he,fills out the application, and, being correctly informed of the facts, misstates them, or omits to state them, the consequences are not to be visited upon the assured.” Wood, Ins. § 381; Malleable Iron Works v. Phoenix Ins. Co. 25 Conn. 465.
“ When a person is in fact the agent of the insurer in procuring a policy, a clause in the policy that persons so acting are agents of the insured, and not of the insurer, does not change the fact. He is still the agent of the company as to the acts which are done in its behalf.” May, Ins. § 140.
In Insurance Co. v. Ives, 56 Ill. 402, the court, in commenting upon the effect of such a provision in the policy, very pertinently says: “The words have no magic power residing in them capable to transmute the real into the unreal, nor had they power to make the agent of the company an agent of the insured.” May, Ins. § 140; Insurance Co. v. Chipp, 93 Ill. 96; Eilenberger v. Insurance Co. 89 Pa. St. 464.
*506“If at the time of the application the latter [the insured] states facts material to the risk, and the agent neglects to communicate them to the company, in consequence of which a policy is issued in ignorance of the fact, the neglect is not imputable to the applicant so as to make him responsible as for a concealment. That the agent is instructed to regard himself as the agent of the applicant rather than of the company, these instructions not being known to the applicant, does not alter the case,” May, Ins. supra; Bebee v. Insurance Co. 25 Conn. 51.
Wilson v. Insurance Co. 4 R. I. 141, was a case where the facts were very similar to those disclosed by the testimony in this case, where the agent sent an application he was not authorized by the applicant to send. He was held to be the agent of the company, so far as to estop it from denying the contract and from setting up its mistakes as misrepresentations as working a forfeiture. It was said: “ He was at least the agent of the company for forwarding the application; and his misconduct in that regard was imputable to his principal, and could not be allowed to prejudice the rights of the applicant, who did not know of. it.” See, further, May, Ins. § 141; Denny v. Insurance Co. 13 Gray, 492; Ames v. Insurance Co. 14 N. Y. 258; Malleable Iron Works v. Phoenix Insurance Co., supra; Woodbury Sav. Bank v. Charter Oak Ins. Co. 31 Conn. 517.
In May v. Insurance Co. 25 Wis. 291, the question of agency presented in this case was ably discussed, and it was said: “ The recent cases upon this subject fully sustain the position, that upon this state of facts the company is responsible for the accuracy and omissions of its agent, even without any express undertaking to be so, and that it cannot avoid liability by reason of any discrepancy between the real facts as disclosed to him, and his presentation of them in the papers. The tendency of modern decisions has been strongly to hold these companies to that degree of responsibility for the acts of the *507local agents which they scatter through the country that justice, and the due protection of the póop’le, demand, without regard to private restrictions upon their authority, or to cunning provisions inserted in policies with a view to elude just responsibility. See, also, Rowley v. Insurance Co. 36 N. Y. 550; Insurance Co. v. Cooper, 50 Pa. St. 331; Viele v. Insurance Co. 26 Iowa, 9; Insurance Co. v. Schettler, 38 Ill. 166; Eames v. Insurance Co. 91 U. S. 621.
Applying the law to the facts as proved, we must con■clude that the employment of Yan Arsdale, by the appellant, in the capacity and for the purpose he was shown to have been employed, made him. the agent for the company to the extent of receiving, making out and forwarding to the company correct and proper applications for insurance, and that when, as in this instance, he entered upon the duty, and attempted to discharge it, any misstatements, errors or omissions, the results of his own fraud, carelessness or neglect, are to be deemed those of the insurer, and not those of the insured. Contracts of insurance, notwithstanding the intricate and complicated provisions contained in the policies,— perhaps found necessary to protect companies from fraud,— are to be considered and construed by the same rules of law and interpretation as' other contracts, so as to carry out the intention of both parties, and hold each party responsible for his own wrong. Where there is on the part of the assured such intentional concealment, misrepresentation or omission as amounts to fraudulent conduct on his part in procuring the insurance, it should vitiate and avoid the contract, and he should suffer the direct results of his own misconduct; but where, on the other hand, there is shown no fraudulent' or wrongful representation or omission on the part of the assured, and the wrong is perpetrated through the fraud or negligence of the accredited agent of the insurer, it would be neither just nor equitable to hold the insured responsible for it.
*508In explaining our views in the present case, we can do far better by adopting and quoting from so eminent a jurist as Folger, J., than by any efforts of our own. In Rohrbach v. Insurance Co. 62 N. Y. 63, in a case presenting similar questions to the one under discussion, he said: “It is to be regretted that corporations of the power and extended business relations with all classes in the community which insurance companies have should prepare for illiterate and confiding men contracts so practically deceptive and nugatory, and should, in cases as free from fraud and wrong on the part of the insured as this is, hold their customers to the letter of an agreement so entered into. I am aware that often the companies are made the victims of dishonest and designing persons, but I cannot agree that the remedy for that is to refuse to be bound by the acts of agents of their own selection when dealing with simple and unlettered men. If there should be less greediness for business, and such care taken in the selection and appointment of agents as would insure the confidence of the companies in their capability, discretion and integrity, it would not need that there be laid upon unwise-policy-holders an agreement to take the burden of the-opposite qualities in those put forward to them as actors for the insurers.”
Under the evidence, it must be held that the application which was forwarded was the act of the agent, and consequently the act of the insurer, for which it alone was responsible, and that the company is estopped to set up any statements contained in the application to defeat a recovery. To hold otherwise would be to place every simple or uneducated person seeking insurance at the mercy of the insurer, who could, through its agent, insert in every application, unknown to the applicant, and over his signature, some false statement which would enable it to avoid all liability, while retaining the price paid for supposed insurance. Courts, while careful not *509to discriminate against insurance companies, should give ■to their contracts such interpretation, and to the acts of their agents such construction, as to afford some security to those with whom they contract.
It is contended that the policy was avoided by the •assured keeping an inn or boarding-house. It does not appear from the evidence that the character of the house in that particular was changed after the insurance was ■effected. It appears from the evidence of the appellee that the agent was informed that persons were entertained at the place, more or less, owing to want of other places of entertainment, and that some boarders were kept at times. This is admitted by the agent, Yan Arsdale, who says he communicated the fact to the general agent. Both the special and the general agents having been informed that parties were kept, and it not having been shown that such business was more extensively done after than before insurance, or that the loss by fire was in any way caused by people having been entertained, it should not be considered of sufficient importance to reverse the judgment.
It is also urged that the occupancy of the adjoining log-house as a store, carrying in stock kerosene and giant powder, greatly increased the risk, and that the failure of appellee to notify the company worked a forfeiture of the policy. It is not claimed that appellee owned or exercised any control over the building, or that the statement that the building was vacant at the time of the insurance was untrue. The proof shows it to have been occupied only two months before the fire occurred. It is provided in the policy that, if the “hazard is increased without the consent of the company in writing,” the policy shall be void., This should be construed ■as only applying to the insured premises, or to property under the control of the insured. There is nothing in the language used which would extend it to the property not under his control, and the acts of others, and *510hold him responsible for the acts of his neighbors or of contiguous owners, and require him to keep informed as to the manner in which other persons in the neighborhood used their property, or to communicate the facts to-the insurer. The contract of insurance being mutual, good faith should require that he give information of any fact or act of his own, or with his consent, on property insured or adjoining, and under his control, whereby the risk was increased. Further than that he could not be expected to go. The statement that at the time of the application the building was vacant must be regarded only as a statement of its condition at that time, not a warranty that it should remain so. He, not being the owner, could not be presumed to have intended to take possession and control of the property. May, Ins. §§ 244, 247; Wood, Ins. § 237.
In this case it is shown that the use of the log building owned by a third party in no way contributed to the destruction of the insured property or the loss; that the fire originated in the roof of the insured building, extended to and consumed the log building, but not until the goods, including oil and giant powder, had been removed.
The only remaining question is as to the rule of damages in arriving at the value of the building destroyed. It is contended that the amount allowed was excessive; that the true value was what the property would have sold for in the market. Counsel do not say whether, in fixing the value, the house is to be considered a chattel, and its value what it would bring severed from the realty, or whether its value was to be estimated in connection with the land on which it stood. The rule contended for cannot be the correct one. If so, — if there was no market demand for the property so it could be sold,— it would have no value, and there would be, consequently, no loss. Another trouble is as above suggested: It would make the value of the house insured to depend upon the marketability of the uninsured land. *511A farmer might have an insured building of the value of $5,000 on a large farm, and yet be held to have sustained no loss by its destruction because there was no demand for land in that location, and the farm, could not have been sold. While the price for which the property could be sold might be admissible in evidence to assist in arriving at its value, it was not the only, nor a safe, criterion. If not salable at all, it might have a value to the owner as a home for himself and family, or for business purposes. Where, as in this case, the policy was “valued ” (amount of insurance fixed), the rule is indemnification to the owner not exceeding the sum insured; the question, not what some one would have paid for the building, but what amount would indemnify the owner for the loss sustained.
The rule of damages is the value of the property lost, and not the cost of replacement. Steward v. Insurance Co. 5 Hun, 261. It is for the jury to determine how much money will make good to the insured his loss. Brinley v. Insurance Co. 11 Mete. 195. “It is for the jury to say what the actual value of the building was, in view of all the facts, and their finding is conclusive.” Wood, Ins. § 446.
Counsel seem to have confounded the measure or rule of damage for merchandise or goods destroyed with that for buildings. In the former the value in market is correct. In the latter it must be “ the actual value of the property in the condition it was in at the time of loss, taking into consideration its age and condition, and not necessarily what it would cost to erect a new building. The assured should be allowed the value of his building at the time of loss; and if, by reason of age or use, it is less valuable than a new building erected upon the same plan, of similar materials and .of the same dimensions, the insured should be allowed for such difference arising from deterioration.” Wood, Ins. § 446; Insurance Co. v. Sennett, 37 Pa. St. 205.
*512It follows that the original cost of the building, the cost of constructing a like building at the time of trial, on the same land, and the difference in value between the building destroyed, by reason of its age and use, and a new one, were all proper inquiries to assist the court in arriving at a just conclusion in regard to the loss sustained; and the admission of evidence upon these points was not erroneous, as supposed by appellant. In our view of the case, no serious errors occurred upon the trial, and the judgment should be affirmed.
Richmond and Pattison, CC., concur.
Pee Cueiam.For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.