Witt v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.

225 N.W. 174, 198 Wis. 561, 1929 Wisc. LEXIS 185
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 225 N.W. 174 (Witt v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Witt v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp., 225 N.W. 174, 198 Wis. 561, 1929 Wisc. LEXIS 185 (Wis. 1929).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

The only question presented by this appeal is whether the insurance corporation is liable to pay the judgment in this case. The defendants Wonser did not appeal and therefore do not question their liability. The issue presented is whether the defendants Wonser were insured by the defendant corporation at the time that the accident happened, and that in turn depends upon the question whether Mr. Kamps was the agent of the defendant corporation at the time that the policy here in question was written and the premium, collected.

1. Sec. 209.05, Stats., provides that “Every person . . . who solicits insurance on behalf of any insurance corporation or person desiring insurance of any kind, or transmits an application for a policy of insurance, other than for himself, to or from any such corporation, ... or collects any premium for insurance, or in any manner aids or assists in doing either, or in transacting any business of like nature for any insurance corporation, . . . shall be held to be an agent of such corporation to all intents and purposes, unless it can be shown that he receives no compensation for such services.”

There is no proof of an express agreement to pay Mr. Kamps compensation for his services, but the proof is undisputed that a commission had always been paid to him for soliciting insurance for other agents. The proof also establishes that when, four or five years before this time, he did solicit insurance for the agents who wrote this policy, they paid a commission to Mr. Kamps for the business which he procured for them. So that he would not only be entitled to commission under this uniform custom of insurance agents, but he actually had in his pocket the premium from which such commission would be paid.

But it may be said that it is unreasonable to make the de[565]*565fendant corporation responsible for the acts of Mr. Kamps, to whom it has never given any authority to act for it in any way. “The answer to this objection is, the legislature has assumed the right to regulate the business of insurance, and prescribe the manner in which it shall be conducted in this state. It has declared that whoever solicits insurance on behalf of an insurance company, or makes any contract of insurance, or in any manner aids or assists in making such contract, or transacts any business for the company, shall be held an agent of such company to all intents and purposes. The obvious intention of the legislature is to make an insurance company responsible for the acts of the person who assumes really to represent and act for it in these particulars, and to change the rule of law that the insured must at his peril know whether the person with whom he is dealing has the power he assumes to exercise, or is acting within the scope of his authority. If there could be a doubt as to the real object of the section, it would be removed by a reference to its history and origin. . . . The law of 1871, which contains the clause more directly applicable to the question under consideration, is entitled ‘An act to protect the public against unauthorized insurance agents.’ The title of the act indicates the purpose to be in strict accord with the interpretation we have placed upon it. Indeed, we do not see how the provision can fairly receive any other construction. It seems to be designed in the clearest manner to make the company responsible to the public for the acts of one whom it permits to solicit insurance on its behalf, or who receives applications for insurance, makes, or aids in making, contracts of insurance, or transacts the business, whether such person has in fact authority to act for it or not. The law imposes upon the company the duty of seeing to it that none but its regular authorized agents shall do its business or deal with the public. It is certainly not difficult for an insurance company to say to its local agents that they alone .must transact its business; that they must in all cases deal [566]*566directly with the insured in making insurance contracts, and not allow the interference of any stranger in its business, for whose acts it does not wish to be held responsible. That this is the plain object and intent of the statute we have no doubt. And, where the insurance company issues a policy in a case where a person has assumed the right to act for and represent’ it in making the contract, it must abide by the consequences and meet the liability which the statute imposes upon it.” Schomer v. Hekla Fire Ins. Co. 50 Wis. 575, 583-4, 7 N. W. 544.

2. Nor is the liability of the defendant corporation for the acts of Mr. Kamps imposed upon it by sec. 209.05 of the Statutes limited in any way by sec. 209.04, which requires that all insurance agents shall procure a certificate of authority from the company which they represent and imposes a penalty by way of a fine upon those who do not secure such certificates.

The statutes which, after repeated amendments, became secs. 209.04 and 209.05 of the Statutes, were first enacted by the legislature of 1870. They both appear in a form which is somewhat similar to the present statutes as a part of the same legislative act in ch. 13, Laws of 1871, and ch. 240, Laws of 1880.

Neither in these original statutes nor in any subsequent amendment thereof down to and including the present statutes is there any indication of a legislative intent that the insurance carrier shall be relieved of liability for the acts of those who are made its agents by the provisions of sec. 209.05, because of the fact that such agents have not procured a certificate of authority as required by sec. 209.04. To hold that such was the effect of sec. 209.04 would render sec. 209.05 nugatory and of no effect whatever, because this later section could never be given effect if no one could be held to be the agent of the insurance carrier under sec. 209.05 unless he had in fact secured a certificate of authority from the insurance corporation under sec. 209.04.

[567]*567The purpose of the legislature in enacting sec. 209.04 was to punish the agent who acted without authority, not to penalize the insured who in good faith relied on the apparent authority of the one who solicited the insurance, delivered the policy, and collected the premium therefor. This intent is made manifest by sec. 201.44, which prohibits the issuance or delivery of a policy of insurance by any one except a resident agent who holds the certificate of authority required by sec. 209.04. This section provides for the punishment of the agent who disobeys the statute. It also provides that “this section shall not prevent any insurance placed in violation thereof taking effect.” Sub. (4), sec. 201.44. The intent to protect the interests of the policy-holder is made still more manifest by the provision that any person who does not possess the required certificate of authority shall be personally liable upon the policy “to the same extent as the company issuing the same.” Sub. (5), sec. 201.44.

3. Even if Mr. Kamps could be considered the agent of the insured for the purpose of procuring the policy, as appellant contends, that would not relieve the defendant corporation of liability because sec. 209.05 makes the solicitor the agent of the company regardless of whether he solicits insurance “on behalf of any insurance corporation or person desiring insurance.” Under this statute “a person who delivers the policy and receives the premium, though acting as a broker, is also agent for the company.” Welch v. Fire Asso. 120 Wis. 456, 461, 98 N. W. 227.

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Bluebook (online)
225 N.W. 174, 198 Wis. 561, 1929 Wisc. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witt-v-employers-liability-assurance-corp-wis-1929.