prepared the opinion for the court.
The plaintiff brought this action to reform a policy of fire insurance and to recover the amount due thereon after loss of *467the property covered by the insurance. Before the witnesses were sworn and any testimony was offered in the case, the defendant requested that a jury be impaneled for the trial of the case, which request was denied by the court upon the ground that the action was one in equity, and thereupon the court proceeded with the trial sitting without a jury. Honorable William A. Clark, one of the judges of the fifth judicial district, presided at the trial. Before findings of fact were made and conclusions of law rendered by the court, Judge Clark died. Thereafter, by stipulation of the parties, the cause was submitted to Honorable Charles A. Rose, judge of the eighteenth judicial district, upon the pleadings, files, and a transcript of the testimony, to be by him considered and passed upon with like effect as if he had presided at the trial. Thereafter findings of fact and conclusions of law were duly rendered favorable to the plaintiff and judgment duly entered thereon against the defendant, ordering the policy reformed and for the entire amount of risk assumed by the defendant under the policy. The appeal is from such judgment.
Briefly stated, the facts giving rise to this cause of action are as follows: On November 27, 1916, the plaintiff had practically completed a one-story shingled roof hall in the. vicinity of the town of Goldstone in Hill county, Montana. On that date a soliciting agent of the defendant insurance company having met the plaintiff solicited insurance upon his hall. Defendant’s agent in company with the plaintiff inspected the building. The plaintiff desired $1,000 insurance on the building and $300 on the piano and other personal property contained therein. Defendant’s agent filled out an application for the desired insurance which he submitted to the plaintiff for signature. Plaintiff alleges and testified that he did not read the application before signing. This application was forwarded by the agent to the head office of the defendant corporation at Great Falls, Montana, and'the policy of insurance forming the basis of this action was thereafter issued by its authorized offi*468cers. The face of the application, omitting nonessential parts, is as follows:
“On one-story shingle-roof hall dwelling house............ $1,500 $1,000 $270 $27.50
On piano................... 450 300 270 8.10
Situated on 160 acres, section 2, Tp. 36, R. 9, county of Hill, State of Montana, 191—
* * * Dated this 27th day of Nov., 1916.
William W. Stevens, Applicant.
E. Sprigs, Witness.”
On the back of the application, in addition to some fine print not applicable to the class of property covered by this policy, there were fourteen questions apparently addressed to the applicant and three to the agent, as well as a plat locating the property insured with reference to exposures by other buildings. The questions addressed to applicant, material in this case, and the answers, are as follows:
“6. Are you sole owner of property insured? Yes.
“7. How much land do yon own here? 320.”
“19. Is the house occupied for private dwelling only? Hall.”
Those to the agent:
“Did you make a personal survey? Yes.
“Do you fully recommend this risk? Yes.
“Remarks: Fair risk.”
The policy, when issued, contained the following description of the property insured:
Sum
Insured. Deposit.
“$1,000.00 27.50 On the one-story frame building and its additions thereto, * * * while occupied as a dwelling house, and marked No. - on diagram.
*469$ 300.00 8.10 On household and kitchen furniture useful and ornamental, including beds, bedding, linen, carpets, firearms, bicycles, family wearing apparel, jewelry in use, * “ *' printed books and music, musical instruments, * * * bric-a-brac, statuary, works of art, * * * all while contained in the above described dwelling house.
* =::= « All property while owned by the insured and situated on farm about - miles distant from the town (or village) of Goldstone, county of Hill, state of Montana, on 160 acres, section 2, township 36, range 9,” This description is contained in a rider pasted on the face of the policy. There was also reference in the printed matter on the face of the policy to conditions printed on the back, which by such reference were made a part of the policy. Therein, among 123 lines of closely printed matter, may be found the following: “This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void # * * if the subject of insurance be a building on ground not owned by the insured-in fee simple.”
The plaintiff received the policy by mail. He testified that he did not look at it until after the loss occurred. The building and the personal property were completely destroyed by fire on the 20th of September, 1918. The defendant denied liability under the policy, and the complaint in this action was filed May 13, 1919. Among other things, the plaintiff alleges that by mutual mistake the policy was not in accordance with the agreement between the plaintiff and defendant’s agent. It is admitted that the building was not used as a dwelling-house and that the plaintiff was not the owner in fee simple of the ground on which the same was constructed. Likewise, the personal property is not all described in the policy. The defendant by its answer denied that there was any mistake, and therefore no right on the part of the plaintiff to have the *470policy reformed. Several affirmative grounds of defense were also tendered by the defendant. It is not necessary to point these out' in detail.
The trial court by its judgment ordered the policy reformed so as to include the following language: “$1,000 on the one-story frame building * * * while used as a public hall. $300 on all public hall furniture, useful and ornamental, including musical instruments, benches, chairs, stove, couch and platform for music stand, all while contained in the above-described public hall, * * * said insured’s interest in the land upon which said building, piano, stove, couch, platform for music stand and benches are or will be situated being only a leasehold,” and by striking out all parts inconsistent therewith. It also made findings favorable to the plaintiff upon all material issues and ordered judgment against the defendant for the sum of $1,300, with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent per annum from the twentieth day of September, 1918.
The defendant’s appeal from this judgment presents the following questions for the consideration of this court: (1) ■Was the defendant entitled to a jury upon the issues arising upon the legal defenses to the action? (2) Are the allegations and proof sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to reformation of the policy? (3) Was the plaintiff negligent in failing to read the application before signing? (4) Was the plaintiff negligent in failing to inspect his policy on receipt and retaining it without objection to any of its provisions, particularly as to his ownership in fee of the ground upon which the hall stood? (5) Was the value of the property destroyed sufficiently established by the evidence?
We will consider each of these questions in their order.
1. The defendant contends that by reason of the legal de[1] fenses interposed by its answer, the cause should have been tried to a jury. It concedes, however, that an action to reform an insurance policy is one in equity. Had it been content to stand upon the legal defenses solely, it would have been en*471titled to the privilege of trying the issues presented thereby to a jury. But it joined issue upon the facts by which the plaintiff sought to establish his right to equitable relief. Indeed, practically the only question presented to the trial court or argued seriously in this court is whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to a decree reforming the policy in question. The legal -defenses were either abandoned expressly, or were supported by evidence of such slight weight that appellant makes no serious contention of error on the part of the trial court in disregarding them. If the plaintiff was entitled to a reformation of the policy he was entitled to recover the full value of the property destroyed. Without reformation, he could recover nothing. No authority is required to support the proposition that an insurance policy may be reformed in the same manner as any other contract and that to obtain this relief the plaintiff must invoke the aid of a court exercising [2] equitable jurisdiction. When a court of equity obtains jurisdiction of a controversy, it may, if it grant the equitable relief, maintain jurisdiction and render that further judgment which properly follows thereupon. (Imperial Shale Brick Co. v. Jewett, 169 N. Y. 143, 62 N. E. 167; Tayloe v. Merchants’ F. Ins. Co., 9 How. 390, 13 L. Ed. 187 [see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]; Maloney v. King; 30 Mont. 414, 76 Pac. 939.) In this state a party is not entitled to a jury trial in a court of equity as matter of right. (Steiner v. McMillan, 59 Mont. 30, 195 Pac. 836.)
The appellant cites Chessman v. Hale, 31 Mont. 577, 3 Ann Cas. 1038, 68 L. R. A. 410, 79 Pac. 254, as authority for its claim of right to a jury trial. That was an action to have a nuisance declared, for damages and to enjoin the continuance of the nuisance. The trial court, by reason of the injunctive relief sought, treated the action as one in equity and rejected certain findings of the jury favorable to the plaintiff and made findings favorable to the defendant. For this action on the part of the trial court the cause was reversed, this court, through the opinion of Mr. Commissioner Poorman, *472holding that the plaintiff was entitled to trial by jury of the legal issues as in an ordinary action at law, and that the prayer for equitable relief did not deprive him of this right. It will be .observed, however, that the order of presenting the legal and equitable phases of that case and the case at bar are reversed. In the Ghes'smcm Case the plaintiff first had the burden of establishing that the defendant had maintained a nuisance to the plaintiff’s damage. This part of the ease was purely legal. The equitable relief was only incidental and could not be granted until the legal cause of action was established. In the present ease the plaintiff first had the burden of establishing his right to equitable relief, namely, reformation of his policy. The defendant by his answer put in issue the right of the plaintiff to this relief, and thereby deprived himself of the right to a jury trial.
2. The next question is whether or not the pleadings are sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to a reformation of the policy. The trial court ordered reformation of the policy in three material respects: (a) In describing the building covered by the policy as a public hall rather than a dwelling-house; (b) by adding an indorsement on the policy to the effect that the plaintiff’s title to the land on which the building was situated was that of lessee, rather than owner in fee simple; and (c) in completing the description of the personal property.
The application itself plainly described the building upon which the plaintiff desired insurance as being a hall. The word “dwelling” was stricken out. It was then obviously a mistake to make the policy cover “the one-story frame building * # * while occupied as a dwelling house.” The defendant conceded this during the trial, and no further discussion is necessary.
Whether the reformation with respect to the plaintiff’s title [3] was proper will require more careful consideration. It is alleged in the complaint that it was the intention by both the defendant and the plaintiff that the description of the property insured by said defendant should be set forth in said insurance *473policy in language contained in the order of the court reforming the policy, including plaintiff’s title to the land, as previously set forth in this opinion. The plaintiff testified as to his conversation with the agent of the defendant company at the time the contract for the insurance now in controversy was being negotiated. This testimony is sufficient to support the findings of the court in all material respects. The agent, E. Sprigg, testified as a witness in behalf of the defendant and denied the conversation detailed by the plaintiff. He did not attempt to relate any of the conversation with reference to the plaintiff’s title. So far as may be gathered from his testimony, he made no inquiry in that regard further than to obtain in-v formation for filling out the blank application. The trial court found that the plaintiff told the agent of defendant that the building was on leased land. It cannot be said that the evidence preponderates against this finding. ¥e are satisfied that the pleadings and proof were- sufficient to warrant the reformation, both as to the plaintiff’s title in the land, and the description of the personal property.
The defendant admits that E. Sprigg was its agent. The [4] company will be regarded as having the same knowledge of the condition and situation of the property as possessed by the agent transacting the business. Any error or neglect on the part of either the agent or the company in stating the title or interest of the assured will not avoid the policy. (People’s F. Ins. Assn. v. Goyne, 79 Ark. 315, 9 Ann. Cas. 373, 16 L. R. A. (n. s.) 1180, 96 S. W. 365, and cases cited in note; Wright v. Fire Ins. Co., 12 Mont. 474, 21 Pac. 87.)
3. A great deal is said by both parties about the application, which the plaintiff states he signed without reading. The appellant contends that the failure of this application to contain a complete and technical description of the property to be insured, including the title of the plaintiff to the land on which the building was situated, was due to the carelessness of the plaintiff in failing to read the application. The respondent contends that some sort of fraud was perpetrated by the defend*474ant’s agent in not correctly inserting the answers to questions given by the plaintiff. There are many cases reported where the application prepared by the agent for signature by assured contains untruthful statements, although the assured has given truthful answers to the agent. We fail to find any such situation in this case. The question was asked: “Are you the sole owner of the property insured? A. Yes.” It was the building and the personal property that was insured, and the plaintiff was the sole owner of this property. It would have been a simple matter to have asked the question: “Are you the owner of the land on which the building is constructed?” But no such question was asked. Instead, they ask: “How much land do you own here?” This could refer to the land «on which the building was situated, or it might have referred to lands generally. As a matter of fact, the plaintiff owned 320 acres of land 3% miles from the hall. The answer stated that he owned 320 acres. If the plaintiff had filled out the application himself after carefully reading the same, we cannot see how the truth would have compelled any different answer. If the officers of the company who issued the policy were deceived, it was because the question was not sufficiently definite to elicit the desired information.
There are certain things about the application itself that should have put the officers of the company upon inquiry before issuing the policy in question, had they considered the plaintiff’s title to the land of serious importance. On the face of the application it states that the hall is situated on 160 acres of a particular section, without designating any particular subdivision of the section. This should have suggested the question as to why the situation of the hall was not stated as being on 320 acres, if the 160 acres was a part of the 320, This question was asked of the agent on cross-examination. He answered that he was attempting to describe the location of the hall in a particular part of the section. However, he did not do so. The quarter-section upon which the building was situated was not designated in any manner.
*475Furthermore, the agent admits that on the same day he took an application for insurance on a store building belonging to J. R. Hoar, situated on the same quarter-section as the hall. A policy was issued as a result of this application. This alone ought to have put the agent upon inquiry as to the title. Certainly each party could not individually have been the sole owner of the tract in fee simple.
It will be noted that the agent on the application, under the head of “Remarks,” passed on the requested insurance as a “fair risk.” Just what mental reservation caused the risk to be classed as “fair,” after he had recommended it, does not appear. The company ought to have called for his reasons. But it did not. The officers of the company do not appear to have exercised much care in passing upon applications for insurance. H. A. Reeve, the assistant secretary of the company, testified in its behalf. He testified on cross-examination that the plaintiff’s application should have been rejected. He says: “The application was taken, and the stenographer who wrote the policy must have overlooked the fact that it was a hall.” Apparently all that was expected of the officers who passed on the application and signed the policy was to see that the signature of insured was attached to the one and then fix their own names to the policy prepared by a stenographer.
4. The most difficult legal question connected with the entire [5] case is whether the plaintiff, by retaining the policy without objection to its provisions with respect to his ownership in the land, was bound by the conditions in that regard. This question has received the attention of many courts of last resort in this country and in England. The decisions are far from being in harmony. By far the greater number, however, hold that the insured is not bound to search through the mass of printed matter on his policy for some clause that makes the policy void to which he must promptly object or forever hold his peace. He has a right to rely upon the good faith of the agent and the company. It is not carelessness on his part to suppose that a policy has been issued that will give him pro*476teetion under the state of facts that he has related to the company. He is not then bound to discover every condition which “crouches unseen in the jungle of printed matter with which a modern policy is overgrown,” designed to make a defense for the company, after the loss has occurred. against which the insurance professes to guard. (Van Schoick v. Niagara F. Ins. Co., 68 N. Y. 434.) Many of the authorities upon this question are gathered in the note to Suravitz v. Prudential Ins. Co., reported in L. R. A. 1915A, 273 (244 Pa. 582, 91 Atl. 495).
The case of Collins v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 32 Mont. 329, 80 Pac. 609, is cited by appellant to the contrary. ¥e realize that much is said in that ease which is in apparent conflict with what we have just stated. However, that case is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar. There the condition, which was held to be binding upon the assured when he accepted the policy, was the simple matter of fixing the dates upon which the premiums became due. In the present case the condition, if given effect, avoided the policy from the beginning. The cases cited in the note in 16 L. E. A. (n. s.) 1201 et seq. emphasize this distinction. Much of the reasoning in the ColUns Case was not necessary for a determination of the question there presented. What we say in this opinion, so far as it is in conflict with the reasoning of the Collins Case is supported by the overwhelming weight of authority.
The defendant in this case illustrates the general attitude of insurance companies towards avoiding clauses in policies similar to the one now under consideration. After the loss occurred, it took the position that the policy was void from the beginning and tendered back to the plaintiff the entire amount of the premium. The witness Eeeve, secretary-treasurer of the company, was asked what it would have done had the discovery been made before the fire that the building was on leased land. He answered: “We would have canceled the policy and returned the premium on a pro rata basis.” This was in fact done in the ease of J. E. Hoar’s policy. Under *477the same theory it would have retained all of the premium, had the term of the policy expired before a loss occurred. The attitude is one of, “Heads I win, and tails you lose.” The inconsistency of this position cannot be upheld. If the policy could earn premiums on a pro rata basis, it must be held to have protected the assured.
5. The proof as to the value of the property destroyed is questioned by the appellant. Whatever our personal opinion might be as to the value of the property, the findings of the court are supported by sufficient evidence. The building did not cost the plaintiff $1,000 for material and hired labor. But he performed a large part of the labor himself. Other labor was donated. Witnesses who qualified to testify as to value fixed it at $1,500 in its finished condition. The piano cost $203, nearly two years before the fire. The court fixed its value at $240. No reason is shown for this increase in value. However, the other personal property was fixed at $75. The evidence could have justified a greater sum as the value of this part of the property. On the whole, we think the evidence sufficiently establishes the value of all the personal property to have been at least $300, the amount of the insurance.
We therefore recommend that the judgment be affirmed.
Per Curiam :For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed,.