Phenix Insurance v. Searles
This text of 27 S.E. 779 (Phenix Insurance v. Searles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
1. Facts communicated to an insurance agent who in behalf of the company represented by him receives and acts upon an application for insurance, collects the premium and issues the policy, are in law considered as having been communicated to the company itself, and the agent’s knowledge of such facts is imputable to it.
2. Although a policy covering a house stipulated that it should he void if the house was “on ground not owned by the insured [98]*98in. fee simple,” and' the building thus insured was in fact on land owned by another, the policy, so far as relates to this matter, was nevertheless binding upon the company if an agent such as is above described knew at the time -of issuing the policy the real facts as to ownership.
3. In the absence of such knowledge, either on the part of the company itself or its agent, the policy would be void if the house was in fact located upon land not belonging to the insured; and therefore, where upon the trial of an action thereon it was a disputed issue as to whether the agent did or did not, .at the time of issuing the policy, know that the house was upon land belonging to one other than the insured, it was error to charge, in substance, that if the insurer, before issuing the policy, made no inquiry as to the question of ownership, and the insured communicated to it no information on this subject, tbe policy would not be void; and to refuse to charge that if the company had no notice or information until after the fire that the house was located on land belonging to a party other than the insured, there should he a verdict for the defendant.
4. A statement made by such an agent to the insured, within the time during which the latter, under the terms of the policy, was allowed to furnish proofs of loss, that the company declined or refused to pay the loss, will amount -to a waiver of such proofs; but where proofs of loss were not furnished within the time stipulated, a subsequent refusal to pay would not be such a waiver.
5. Where a policy of insurance, after stipulating that unless certain, proofs of loss were furnished within a specified time the policy should he void, further provided that the company might require of the insured additional information or evidence as to the nature and extent of the loss; that the latter should submit to written examinations under oath concerning the same; and that, in the event of disagreement as to the ¡amount of loss, there should he an appraisement thereof; and also stipulated: ■“This company shall not be held to have waived any provision ■or condition of this policy or any forfeiture thereof by any requirement, aot, or proceeding on its part relating to the appraisal or to any examination herein provided for”: Held, that the company did not, by availing itself of its right under the policy to obtain 'such additional information, etc., waive any forfeiture of the policy which may have resulted from the failure of the insured to furnish, within the time prescribed, the proofs of loss called for in the first instance. Especially is this so where, in undertaking to exercise this right, the company expressly stated in writing to counsel for the insured that it [99]*99did so “without waiving any of the rights of the company under the policy.” Judgment reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
27 S.E. 779, 100 Ga. 97, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phenix-insurance-v-searles-ga-1897.