Bergeron v. Pamlico Insurance & Banking Co.

15 S.E. 883, 111 N.C. 45
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 15 S.E. 883 (Bergeron v. Pamlico Insurance & Banking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bergeron v. Pamlico Insurance & Banking Co., 15 S.E. 883, 111 N.C. 45 (N.C. 1892).

Opinion

Avery, J.

having stated the case as above, proceeded : When the assured is guilty of no misrepresentation, wilful concealment or fraud, insurance companies are not allowed, after selecting and sending out agents to solicit business for the benefit of the corporation and receiving the premiums collected by them from the customer, to saddle upon him the blunders of such agents and make him pay the penalty by forfeiting his right of recovery. 1 May on Ins., § 131. “Facts material to the risk, made known to the agent (or a sub-agent entrusted with the business) before the policy is issued, are constructively known to the company, and cannot beset up to defeat a recovery on the policy.” May, supra, § 132; Bennett v. Insurance Co , 70 Iowa, 600.

The principle has been more than once announced by this Court, that where a soliciting agent is informed, before the policy is issued, of a fact, which, if fraudulently concealed by the applicant, would constitute a ground of forfeiture under one of its conditions, and afterwards receives the premium and delivers the policy, his knowledge is imputed to his principal, and, whether he actually communicates the fact to the principal office of the company or not, the condition is deemed to have been waived. Dupree v. Insurance Co., 93 N. C., 240; Ibid, 92 N. C., 422; Hornthal v. Insurance Co., 88 N. C., 73; Follette v. Insurance Co., 107 N. C., 240; Ibid, 110 N. C., 377. These rulings rest upon the principle, that to *48 permit the insurer to gather into its coffers premiums collected by one of its local agents and continue to recognize the validity of the contract made through him till it becomes apparent that a loss has occurred, and then, for the first time, to repudiate the agency, would be to lend the sanction of the law to a palpable fraud. But it is contended for the company that this Court has never recognized the right of a mere clerk in the office of a general or local agent, by any act or omission on his part, to waive the enforcement of a forfeiture under the terms of a condition in a policy of insurance. The questions raised in the cases heretofore considered by this Court have been how far' the right of the insurer to insist upon a forfeiture under a condition in a policy, or for a material misrepresentation contained in the application, can be waived by conduct of an agent or subagent which induces the assured to spend money upon the risk in the reasonable belief that the enforcement of such condition or stipulation will not be insisted upon. Grubbs v. Insurance Co., 108 N. C., 472; Dupree, Hornthal and Follette cases, supra. But the principle decided in all of these cases applies with equal force when the agent sends out (instead of a subagent) a clerk in his office who induces the assured to pay premiums by statements inconsistent with the enforcement of a condition in the policy, or where he has full knowledge of the falsity of a stipulation in the application. The rule is, that in both classes of cases the knowledge of the agent is properly imputed to the principal, because to allow such agent (or clerk) to take the premiums paid by the insured, turn them into the treasury of the company, and deliver, in consideration of the money paid, a policy of insurance, with a knowledge of facts upon which its validity may be disputed, and then insist upon those facts as a ground of avoidance, is to protect the principal in the practice of a palpable fraud. 2 May, supra, § 497, and notes.

*49 In our case, the clerk Bragaw solicited insurance, and being informed by the plaintiff, Bergeron, that the building was on leased ground, told him that it made no difference whether it was on leased ground or not, and thereupon Ber-geron paid the premium, still insisting that if Bragaw should find it was necessary to state the fact communicated, he should endorse it upon the policy. Bragaw delivered the policy the same day without endorsement, and a week later Baugham, who presumptively had knowledge of every statement made by his subordinate which was reasonably calculated to induce the insured to pay his money for the premium, went to Bergeron’s place of business and told him, not that Bragaw was unauthorized to solicit and receive premiums, but in effect only that he had no power of attorney to sign his name as General Agent of the company and thereby bind it. Baugham made no proposition to return the premium procured by the representation which was in conflict with a condition of the policy. When a company uses the talent and address of any maii to solicit and obtain premiums, it is but just, if it claims the benefit derived from his misleading statements, that it should be estopped 'from denying that they were true or authorized by it.

In the case of Arff v. Insurance Co., 125 N Y., 57, the Court of Appeals of that State held that, notwithstanding a provision in a policy of insurance that no persons should be deemed its agents except such as hold its commissions, an ordinary agent of a fire insurance company had the power to employ clerks necessary to discharge the usual business of the agency, and that any waiver which the agent himself could make is to be attributed to him when made by his clerk.” In that case there was also a condition requiring the assured to notify the company of any other insurance upon the property, and that notice was given to the clerk employed by the agent to solicit insurance, see also Bordine *50 v. Insurance Co., 57 N. Y., 117; Kaney v. Insurance Co., 36 Hun., 66; Chase v. Insurance Co., 14 Hun., 456. In Bennett v. Insurance Co., supra, it was held that the knowledge of a clerk of the agent who was sent by him to solicit insurance and take an application, that there was other insurance upon the property, bound the company as fully as if the agent, the master of the clerk, had had the same knowledge.

This is not an action brought to correct a mistake in a deed or written agreement, but, on the contrary, the plaintiff’s right of recovery depends upon its enforcement. If Bergeron and the builder who constructed his house had entered into an agreement under seal and signed by both, by the terms of which the builder stipulated to forfeit his right to an unpaid balance, as liquidated damages, if the house should not be completed before a certain day, a suit brought for the balance under the contract would not be deemed an equitable proceeding to correct a mistake in a written instrument, because Bergeron had set up the stipulation in avoidance of the contract, and the builder had replied setting up certain acts amounting to a waiver of the enforcement of the stipulation.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E. 883, 111 N.C. 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bergeron-v-pamlico-insurance-banking-co-nc-1892.