Tbe appellant’s counsel assign nine distinct matters as errors of tbe court below, but in tbeir argument they make but four points, and classify tbe assignment of errors thereunder, to wbicb arrangement we will conform as far as practicable.
1. Principal and agent: general agents. I. On the trial, tbe defendant offered to prove tbe instructions given by the defendant’s agents to tbeir clerk, as to taking risks upon vacant property, and also the defendants’ instructions to tbeir agents in . 0 regard to risks on small pox hospitals and property termed extra hazardous. This evidence was excluded by tbe court, and, we think, properly. There was no offer to prove that tbe action of tbe clerk or agents was contrary to tbe ordinary action of persons in those relations, or in excess of tbeir general autboritj’-, or that tbe supposed instructions came to the knowledge of plaintiff. The rule is, as to tbe public, that the authority of a general agent may be regarded by them as measured by the usual extent of bis general employment, and cannot be limited, as to them, by private instructions as to the mode and manner of executing bis agency. 2 Pars. Cont., 40-42; Story on Agency, § 73, et seq.; Hatch v. Taylor, 10 N. H., 538; Barber v. Britton & Hall, 26 Verm., 112; Lightbody v. The North American Insurance Company, 23 Wend., 18. The defendant also introduced one of tbeir agents, who made tbe insurance in this case, and asked him, if be bad known there were rumors that tbe building was to be used for small pox patients, current in tbe neighborhood, would be have taken tbe risk? This was objected to, and tbe objec*280tion sustained. • While there might be some doubt as to the correctness of excluding this question, if the proof had shown that the plaintiff, by its committee, had .knowledge of such rumors, and had concealed them from defendant’s agents; yet, since it appears from the evidence and finding of the court, that they had no such knowledge, and therefore made no such concealment, the question is wholly immaterial, and the ruling of the court was therefore without prejudice to appellant. The language of the condition annexed to the policy, that any “ omission to make known any fact or rumor material to the risk,” must, of course, we think, be construed to mean any such fact or rumor known to the insured. Certainly, an omission to make known that of which the city or its committee had no knowledge, cannot, and ought not to be construed as a warranty that it did not exist.
3. lien : judgment against a city. II. The question and answer in relation to incumbrances, in the application for insurance, became, by the express terms of the policy, a warranty that there were n0 incumbrances upon the property. That there were several large j udgments for money, rendered by the District Court of Scott county, against the plaintiff, in full force, and unsatisfied, was proven and so found by the' court. The question, then, is, were those judgments, liens or incumbrances upon the property ? By § 4105 of the Revision, i t is provided that “ j udgments in the Supreme or District Courts of this State, or in the District or Circuit Courts of the United States, if rendered within this State, are liens upon the real estate owned by the defendant,.at the time of such rendition, and also upon all he may subsequently acquire before the expiration of the lien, as hereinafter provided.” By subsequent sections, the lien is limited to the counties in which the judgments are rendered, or counties in which attested copies are filed in the office of the District Court clerk. Under these sections, *281tbe judgments are incumbrances, unless tbe property is exempted therefrom by other provisions. By § 3274, it is provided, that “public buildings owned by the State, or any county, city, school district or other civil corporation, and any other public property which is necessary and proper for carrying out the general purpose for which any such corporation is organized, are exempt from execution. The property of a private citizen can in no case be levied upon to pay the debt of a civil corporation.” It was found by the court, and is conceded by counsel, that the building, in this case, was necessary and proper for the preservation of the health of the city, and for carrying on the purposes of its government. Our statute has a similar exemption from judicial sale of the homestead of every head of a family, and it was held by this court in the case of Lamb v. Shays, 14 Iowa, 567, that a judgment did not attach as a lien upon property exempt from execution sale. BALDWIN, Oh. J., delivering the opinion of the court, says : “The lien of a judgment upon lands in this State, being conferred by statute, it can only have such force as is given thereby, and it can only attach, or become effective in the manner, at the time, and upon the conditions and limitations imposed by the statute itself A lien, without the power to enforce it, carries with it no advantage to the owner thereof. It cannot be enforced as against the homestead, because it is exempt from judicial sale. It is inoperative, and cannot be otherwise, as long as the homestead is used as a home. Construing the two sections together, having been passed at the same time by the legislature, we think that it could not have been designed that the lien should ever attach upon property that was declared exempt from judicial sale.” This case is decisive of the question now presented, and fully supports the conclusion of the court below, that the judgments were not *282incumbrances on tbe property. See also Cole v. Green, 21 Ill., 104; Green v. Marks et al., 25 Id., 221.
3. Insurance: antedating policy. III. In tbe seventh assignment of error, appellant complains that tbe court erred, iu finding, as a conclusion of Mw, tbe policy was binding from tbe 20th day March, it having, in point of fact, as appears from the finding of the court, been executed and delivered on the 21st. The evidence fully sustains the finding of the court below, that an agreement for insurance was made between the parties, by their agents, on the 20 th day of March. The policy was executed, delivered and received, in perfect accordance with that agreement, and in ignorance of the fire, on the morning of the next day. The charter of the insurance company (defendant) provides, that “all policies of insurance made by the corporation, shall be subscribed by the president, or, in case of his death or absence, by the vice-president, and countersigned and sealed by the secretary of the company ; and all losses arising under any policy so subscribed and sealed, may be adjusted and settled by the board of directors.”
It is claimed, by appellant’s counsel, that under this clause in the charter, no agreement for insurance can be binding on the company, unless it is in writing, subscribed by the president, and signed and sealed by the secretary; and that, since the agreement in this case was in parol until after the loss, and the plaintiff had no insurable interest at the time the policy was actually signed and delivered, no recovery can be had thereon.
Arg. 1. Contracts by corporation. The English rule, that a corporation cannot expressly bind itself, except by deed, unless the act establishing it authorizes it to contract in another mode, has been broken in upon, and indeed entirely overturned, as a general proposition, throughout the United States ; and it is here well settled that the acts of a *283corporation, evidenced by vote, written or unwritten, are as completely binding upon it, and are as complete authority to its agents, as the most solemn acts done under the Arg. 2. - agents. corporate seal; that it may as well be bound by express promises through its authorized agents, as by deed; and that promises may as well be implied from the acts of its agents, as if it had been an individual. Angell & Ames on Corp., § 237; Bank of Columbia v. Patterson's Administrator, 7 Cranch, 305; Flechner v. The United States Bank, 8 Wheat., 357; The Bank of United States v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat., 68; Dunn v. The Rector of St. Andrew's Church, 14 Johns., 118; The American Insurance Company v. Oakley, 9 Paige, 496; Overseers of North Whitehall v. Overseers of South Whitehall, 3 Serg. & Rawle, 117; Hamilton v. Lycoming Insurance Company, 5 Barr, 344; Legrand v. Hampden Sydney College, 5 Mumf., 324; Union Bank of Maryland v. Ridgely, 1 Harris & Gill, 413; Hayden v. Middlesex Turnpike Corporation, 10 Mass., 401; White v. The Westport Cotton Manufacturing Company, 1 Pick., 215; Bulkely et al. v. The Derby Fishing Company, 2 Conn., 256; Garvey v. Colcock, 1 Nott & McCord, 231; Petrie v. Wright, 6 Smede & Marsh, 647; Baptist Church v. Mulford, 3 Halst., 182; Abbott v. Hermon, 7 Greenl., 118; Waller v. The Bank of Kentucky, 3 J. J. Marsh., 201; Lee v. The Trustees of Flemingsburg, 7 Dana, 28; Bunscombe Turnpike Co. v. McCarson, 1 Dev. & Bat., 310; Bates & Hines v. Bank of Ala., 2 Alabama, 452; Eastman v. Coos Bank, 1 N. H., 26; Sheldon v. Fairfax, 21 Verm., 102; San Antonio v. Lewis, 9 Texas, 69; Palm's Adm. v. Medina Insurance Company, 20 Ohio, 537, and very many other cases.
Arg. 3. - Charter. It is clear then, that the defendant, as a corporation, had the power, by virtue of its existence, to bind itself ex-in writing or by parol, through its author-jze¿ agents jn any matter within the scope of the object, purpose, or business for which it was created, *284unless by tbe act of its incorporation it was expressly limited therein. The only limitation to which our attention has been called, or which has any bearing on the question made in this case, is that which requires “ all policies of insurance made by the corporation,” to be signed by the president, and countersigned and sealed by the secretary. The limitation then, only extends to “policies of insurance,” and, therefore, any other contract may be made in writing or by parol, through its agents, as with other corporations. The contract, or agreement to execute a policy of insurance is not within the limitations, and such a contract may be made in the ordinary way, through its agents, and will bind the corporation. It may be said that such a construction will place it in the power of an agent to bind the corporation to execute a policy in the manner provided by its charter; and thereby an agent may do indirectly what he could not do directly. This is true; and it results from the fact that the corporation possesses general powers for the accomplishment of the purposes of its creation, while the limitation specified by the charter extends to the direct act, and that "alone. It would have been competent for the legislature to have imposed a further limitation, so as to have prohibited the indirect act also, except in the manner specified, or any other acts; but since the legislature failed thus to impose further restrictions, it is not competent for the courts to supply them. Upon principle, then, the agents of defendant had the power to bind the corporation by their agreement to execute a policy of insurance upon the property in question, and that it should commence to run from the time agreed upon. And the execution and delivery of the policy, on the next morning, in accordance with the agreement as made, and in the manner provided by the charter, was not only legal and binding in itself, but was an act obligatory on the defendant to perform.' We have discussed this *285branch of tbe case so far, upon principle onlj, without reference to precedent or authority. Let us now look at it in another view, and see if the same conclusion may be sustained by precedent.
In the case of Kohne v. The Insurance Company of North America, 1 Wash. C. C., 93, the agent applied to the president of the insurance company to effect an insurance on goods on board a ship, and settled with him the terms of the insurance, but left the office before the policy was filled up. It was soon after filled up and executed, and about the same time, the company received intelligence of the capture of the vessel and loss, which was not known to either party when the agreement was made and the policy executed. On a subsequent day, the agent. called to pay the premium and receive the policy, but the company refused to deliver it, objecting that the agreement was inchoate, and having heard of the loss before the delivery of the policy, the company had a right to retract. But Mr. Justice WASHINGTON held that since there was no unfairness nor knowledge of the loss when the terms of insurance were settled, the objection was entitled to no weight, and the contract perfect and binding. In the case, Lightbody v. The North American Insurance Company, 23 Wend., 18, the plaintiff, through his agent, made a contract for insurance of buildings in IJtica, with the defendant’s agent in Troy, late in the evening of the 30th day of March, 1837, and paid the premium and took a receipt. About two o’clock in the morning of the next day, the buildings were consumed by fire. The policy was not made or delivered till the 21st day of April following, and was delivered by the agent after the plaintiff had called upon defendant for payment of the loss, which was refused, denying the authority of their agent to make the contract of insurance, and notifying him that the agent’s authority; as their agent, had been revoked. The court, per Bkonson, J., *286beld that the policy toot effect by relation, from the day of its date, which was on the day the premium was paid and the contract concluded; that it was the manifest intent of the parties, that the contract should operate from the day of its date, so as to give the plaintiff the same legal remedy which he would have bad if the policy had in fact been delivered on that day; and the law will give effect to that intention. The plaintiff had made a valid contract with the defendants, and was entitled to the usual evidence of that contract — a policy of insurance. He could have maintained an action on the case for a refusal to deliver the policy, in which he would have recovered damages to the full amount of his loss. But if his remedy at law was questionable, he had a perfect equitable right to the delivery of the usual policy, which he might have enforced in the proper forum.
The plaintiff recovered the full amount of his policy and interest. In the case of Perkins v. The Washington Insurance Company, 4 Cow., 645, the plaintiff, on the 5th day of January, 1820, applied to defendant’s agent in Savannah, Georgia, the defendant being a corporation in New York, to insure a stock of goods for five thousand dollars, which the agent agreed to do for a premium of two and a half per cent. The plaintiff paid the premium accordingly, and the fee for survey and policy, and took the agent’s receipt therefor. On the morning of the 11th day of January, an extensive fire broke out in Savannah, and consumed the plaintiff’s goods. The plaintiff gave notice to the agent of the loss, and offered the usual preliminary proofs, and demanded a policj1' of insurance; but the agent stated that he had not forwarded the premium to the company, and had not received a policy, and intimated that the cornpany would not feel bound by what had been done. The proper notice, with the usual proofs, were, in May, 1820, given to the defendant in New York: but *287defendant refused to execute a policy, although plaintiff tendered the amount of premium. The plaintiff thereupon brought his suit iu chancery, to recover for his loss, and set up in substance the foregoing facts. The defendant admitted the facts as stated, but denied the agent’s authority to contract for insurance, but averred that he only had authority to make surveys, receive probable premiums, and transmit them to defendant to prevent unnecessary delay. The court held that the defendant was bound by the acts of the agent, and should make good to plaintiff his loss. In the case of the Franklin Fire Insurance Company of Philadelphia v. Hewitt, Allison & Co., 3 B. Monr., 231, the policy of insurance did not cover the property intended and applied to have insured, but was not noticed till after the loss. The court held that plaintiffs were entitled to recover for the loss of the property as specified to the agent in the application to him for the insurance. And the court say, “ if then the company had delivered no policy as according to the import of their agent’s acts, they were bound to do, the insured would have remedy against them in a court of equity, perhaps for coercing the execution of a policy before a loss, and certainly for enforcing the indemnity implied in the insurance upon the occurrence of a loss by fire, within the period fixed by the terms of the agreement.”
In Carpenter v. Mutual Safety Insurance Company, 4 Sandf. Ch. Rep., 408, the court held that an agreement to insure, evidenced by the receipt for the premium, may be specifically enforced, and that, if a loss happened, payment may be compelled in equity. Indeed, it is laid down as a general rule, by Angelí on Fire and Life Insurance, §§ 33 and 34, that in commercial towns, actions on mere agreements to insure, whether against fire or perils of the sea, are not uncommon; and they are always sustained whenever it appears that the terms of the *288agreement have been fully settled by the concurrent assent of the parties, so that nothing remains to be done but to deliver the policy. The contract is executory in the first instance, and completed when the policy is drawn up. Mere receipts for premiums, are very common in the city of New York, and much insurance is effected, in the first instance, by means of such receipts. When the negotiation for insurance is so far completed that nothing remains to be done but to deliver the policy corresponding with the terms and date of the application, should a loss occur before the execution of a policy, a court of equity would relieve the assured; and upon a bill properly framed, instead of confining itself to a specific execution of the agreement to insure, would probably decree the payment of the loss. There are very many other cases fully sustaining the doctrine, that an agreement by the agent to insure, will be specifically enforced against the insurance company for which he acts, even where no policy has been executed. Hamilton v. Lycoming Insurance Company, 5 Barr, 339; Andrews v. The Essex Fire and Marine Insurance Company, 3 Mason’s C. C. Rep., 6; McCullough v. Eagle Insurance Company, 1 Pick., 278; Palm, Adm'r, v. Medina Insurance Company, 20 Ohio, 529; Tayloe v. Merchant's Fire Insurance Company of Baltimore, 9 Howard (U. S.), 390.
4. - Contract of insurance: relation back. IY. The doctrine that an act done at one time may take effect as of a prior time, by relation hack, is well exemplified in its application to insurance policies, in the case of Lightbody v. The North American Insurance Company, supra, and fully sustains the view of the court below in this case. The fact that in that case, the premium was paid and receipt taken, does not vary the doctrine, which is, that where there are divers acts concurrent to make a conveyance, estate, or other thing, the original act shall be preferred; and to this, the other act shall have relation. The contract or agreement to insure is the *289principal act, and whether the premium is paid or waived, is an immaterial circumstance, and the formal execution of the policy may be a concurrent or subsequent act, and if subsequent and made as of the date of the principal act, will have relation back to the time of doing that principal act. This doctrine is an old one, and has been repeatedly recognized.
In Jackson ex dem. Loan Officers of Rensselaer v. Bull, 1 Johns. Cases, 81, it was held, that a deed executed in pursuance of a previous contract for the same premises, is good by relation from the time of making the contract, so as to render valid every intermediate sale or disposition of the land by the grantees.'
In Jackson ex dem. June v. Raymond, 1 Johns. Cases, 85, the same doctrine is held in a very similar case. In Heath v. Ross, 12 Johns., 140, a patent for land, dated the fourth of December, but which did not pass the great seal until the twenty-eighth of the same month, was held to relate back, as between the parties, so as to vest the title in the patentee from the date, and enable him to maintain trover for timber cut and carried away between those dates.
In Jackson, ex dem. Noah, v. Dickinson et al., 15 Johns., 309, the sheriff made a sale on the first day of March, but did not deliver the deed until the nineteenth of the same month. On the tenth of that month a mortgagee of the same land filed a bill of foreclosure, without making the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale, a party. It was held that the deed related back to the time of the sale, and that the purchaser was not precluded from contesting the validity of the mortgage in an action of ejectment at law, he not being a party to the bill in equity, as his title was acquired previous to the notice of lis pendens in chancery, though not consummated till afterwards. The court say “the subsequent delivery of the deed being mere, matter of, form must have relation back to the time of purchase *290at the sheriff's sale.” This doctrine is a fiction of law, resorted to for the promotion of justice and the lawful intention of parties, by giving effect to instruments, which without it,- would be invalid, but it is- never applied to the prejudice of third persons, not parties or privies. See, also, Doe v. Howland, 8 Cow., 277, and argument of Mr. Jay; Com. Dig., Bargain and Sale; B; 9 Viner’s Abr., tit., Relation, 290; Jackson, ex dem., &c., v. Ramsay, 3 Cowen, 75; Klock v. Cronkhite, 1 Hill, 107; Jackson v. Bard, 4 Johns., 230, &c. In this case the action is based upon a policy of insurance, duly executed by the defendant, in the manner provided by its charter, and dated prior to the loss. The defendant seeks to avoid liability on this policy, by showing by parol, that the policy was not in fact executed or delivered until the day after its date. The plaintiff then shows by parol that such ante-date was not the result of accident or mistake, but was done intentionally and in pursuance of a previous contract between the parties. This parol testimony was clearly competent, and shows, beyond controversy, that there was no fraud, accident or mistake in the transaction, but that both parties did exactly what they intended to do, and have put in writing, in a legal binding form, the mutual contract between them, and the obligations of the respective parties. Such a contract, thus fairly entered into, both good morals and good law require shall be enforced, and the losses, if any, must fall on that party, which for a valuable consideration voluntarily assumed the possible burdens of them. Affirmed.