The action is brought under chapter 13, Laws of 1871, which was in force when the alleged cause of action arose ; and unless the judgment for the state can be sustained under the provisions of that chapter, it must be reversed. The provisions of that act, affecting this case, are as follows:
“Section 1. "Whoever solicits insurance on behalf of any fire, marine, inland, life or accident insurance company, or transmits for any person other than himself an application for insurance, or a policy of insurance, to or from said company, or advertises that he will receive or transmit the same, shall be held to be an agent of the company to all intents and purposes, unless it can be shown that he receives no commission or other compensation or consideration for such service.
“ See. 3. No officer, agent or sub-agent of any insurance company shall act or aid in any manner in transacting the business of insurance of or with such company, of placing risks, or effecting insurance therein, without first procuring from the secretary of state a certificate of authority so to do for each company for which he proposes to act, which shall state in substance that such company is duly authorized to do business in this state under the laws thereof, and that such agent or *462other.person has duly'complied with the laws relating to the agents of such companies. * * * *
“Sec. 5. Whoever violates the provisions of this chapter, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding $500, nor less than $50, for each offense.”
Manifestly, if the defendant was the agent of the several insurance companies named in the complaint, in which he or his firm placed the insurance obtained by him from Mr. Moore, he violated the provisions of section 3 of the act of 1871; for we regard it as too clear to require discussion, that by his transactions with Mr. Moore, at Fond du Lac, he acted or aided in transacting the business of insurance of those companies, and also in placing risks and effecting insurance therein, without first procuring the required certificate from the secretary of state, as charged in the complaint.
The question is, therefore, Was the defendant the agent of those companies in his transactions with Mr. Moore? The term “ agent,” as used in the act of 1871, is defined in section 1 of that act; and by that definition the question must be solved. Hence, if the defendant solicited insurance of Mr. Moore on behalf of any insurance company of the character specified in the section, he is chargeable as an agent of such company. That he solicited insurance of Mr. Moore is unde-nied. It is also undenied that he solicited it for the purpose and with the intention of placing the risk in several fire insurance companies, contained in a larger list of companies, which he there produced. But it is said that because the solicitation was general — that is, because no specific companies were named in which the insurance was to be placed,— the definition of the statute does not reach the case. • We are unable to assent to this view. When the defendant, or (which is the same thing) his firm, placed the insurance, he characterized the act of solicitation, and demonstrated that he solicited on behalf of the companies in which he placed the insurance. He cannot now be heard to affirm that he did not *463solicit the insurance of Mr. Moore on behalf of those specific companies. Ve Conclude, therefore, that the undisputed evidence proved that the defendant violated the provisions of the act of 1871, when, without first procuring the required certificate of the secretary of state, he solicited insurance of Mr. Moore, and that the court properly directed the jury to find for the plaintiff.
But it is claimed by the learned counsel for the defendant, that, conceding the liability of the defendant, he has committed but one offense and is liable to but one penalty. We think the position is not'well taken. The fact that the solicitation was made on behalf of all the companies named in the complaint, at the same time and in the same conversation, is not deemed material. The statute clearly contemplates that a' solicitation on behalf of each company shall constitute an offense. Had the solicitations, been made on behalf of a single company at one hour, and on behalf of another company the next hour, and so on through the list, it would not be doubted that as many offenses were committed as there were companies. "What possible difference can it make that all of the solicitations were blended in one? We are unable to perceive any difference in principle between the case supposed and the present case.
It is further claimed that the court had no authority to fix the penalty. If it was error for the court to do so, inasmuch as it was fixed at the lowest sum permitted by law, there is no possibility that the defendant was injured by the error. Hence the judgment cannot be disturbed because it was not left to the jury to fix the penalty. We do not decide whether the amount of the penalty to-be imposed should be fixed'by the court or the jury.
The above views cover all the material errors assigned, and determine the legal propositions involved in them adversely to the defendant.
By the Gourt. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.