After stating the case: If it is conceded that O. W. Carr bad tbe authority, as agent of tbe insurance company, to agree to renew the policy, we yet think it is clear that plaintiff made tbe agreement with him in bis personal and not in bis representative capacity and relied solely upon Carr’s individual promise for his protection. This is evident not only from what occurred between them at tbe time of tbe agreement but from tbe conversation they bad after tbe fire, in which tbe plaintiff charged Carr with liability for his loss and Carr admitted it and agreed to answer for it. It further appears that plaintiff has sued Carr in this action and taken judgment against him.
If the agreement with the plaintiff to renew the policy was made by Carr as agent and be was acting at the time not for himself but for and in behalf of the company, who was disclosed as bis principal, and this was understood by both parties, the company would be solely liable, if Carr had authority to act for it, as the agreement would be its own and not that of its agent. Meadows v. Smith, 34 N. C., 19; Bank v. *195 Wright, 48 N. C., 376; McCall v. Clayton, 44 N. C., 422; Potts v. Lazarus, 4 N. C., 180; Meeken v. Claghorn, 44 N. Y., 349; Silver v. Jordan, 136 Mass., 319. In sucb a case we could not even infer that Carr intended to snperadd his own liability to that of his principal without sufficient words in the agreement to warrant such an inference. Meeken v. Claghorn, supra.
If we assume that he was acting for the company, the latter, as it appears, was an undisclosed principal and in that view of the case the plaintiff may meet with another insuperable obstacle to his right to maintain his action against the company. The general principle is that when a person contracts with another who is in fact an agent of an undisclosed principal, he may, upon discovery of the principal, resort to him or to the agent with whom he dealt, at his election. When however he comes to a knowledge of the facts and elects to hold the agent, ^ he cannot afterwards have recourse to the principal. Kingsley v. Davis, 104 Mass., 178. They are not jointly liable, as the obligation is in its very nature several, unless the agent has by contract or by his conduct added his own liability to that of his principal, which is not the case here. The only question then to be considered is, has the plaintiff made such an election to hold the agent liable as will preclude his resort to the principal. There is some slight conflict of authority upon the question as to what is sufficient to constitute a binding election, as to either principal or agent, in such a case. It is generally agreed that the mere assertion of a claim against one of them without anything else of a more decisive character being done, or the bringing of a suit against either one of them, is not sufficient, but it is established, we think, by the weight of authority that if the creditor or claimant sues the agent to judgment, after a disclosure of the facts, it will be a conclusive election on his part to hold the agent liable and to discharge the principal. This principle was announced in *196 Priestly v. Fernie, 3 H. & C. (Exc.) 977, and it was approved in Kendall v. Hamilton, L. R. 4 App. Cases 504, in wbicli it is thus stated by Lord Gairns “Tbe person witb wbom be contracts may sue the agent, or be may sue the principal, but if be sues the agent and recovers judgment, be cannot after-wards sue the principal, even although the judgment does not result in satisfaction of the debt;” and convincing reasons are then given in support of the principle. It seems to have received the approval of the text writers and of the courts of this country. Pollock on Contracts (1 Am. Ed.) p. 230; 1 Addison on Contracts (8 Ed.) p. 89; Sessions v. Block, 40 Mo. App. 569; Jones v. Ins. Co., 14 Conn., 501; Kingsley v. Davis, 104 Mass., 178. In Tuthill v. Wilson, 90 N. Y., 428, the Court, referring witb approval to Priestly v. Fernie and bolding that suing the agent to judgment is a final and irrevocable election to look to him and not to the principal, says: “Tbe vendor could not enforce bis claim against both the principal, when discovered, and the agents who contracted in bis behalf. . Granting that each was liable, both were not, for both could not be at one and the same time, since the contract could not be the personal contract of the agents, and yet not their contract but that of the principal.” When, the creditor is called upon to elect as between the principal and bis agent, is a question discussed and decided in the leading case of Thompson v. Davenport, 17 E. C. L. 335 (9 Barn. & Cress, 78,) the Chief Justice (Lord Tenterden) delivering the opinion of the court.. That the plaintiff in this case, even if be did not contract witb Carr, without any reference to the company, and did not confide in him alone,, was put to bis election when be discovered the name of the alleged principal, is a proposition clearly sustained by the decision in that case. See also Curtis v. Williamson, L. R. 10 Q. B. 57; Reinbard on Agency Sec. 331. After the course the' plaintiff has chosen to pursue, we are not prepared to hold *197that he can. now recur to the alleged principal for the satisfaction of his claim.
We have not adverted to the fact that the plaintiff did not pay the premium for the renewal of his insurance at the time it was due and did not until some time elapsed after it should have been paid, nor to the fact that he gave no notice to the company after he had failed to receive a renewal policy. When he paid the premium in January 1902, he did not even ask for a new policy or a certificate of renewal. It is plain that by the terms of the policy it was contemplated that a new one should be issued at the time of renewal gr at least a certificate of some kind showing that the insurance had been continued. This matter was pressed upon our attention by the defendant’s counsel and the cases of Croghan v. N. Y. Underwriter’s Agency, 53 Ga., 109 and O’Reilly v. C. L. Asso., 101 N. Y., 575, cited to show that under such facts and circumstances there can be no liability of the company to the plaintiff. The cases seem to sustain the contention of the defendant. It is sufficient however for our purpose to hold merely that there are not sufficient facts upon which to base a claim against the defendant, the entire transaction showing a manifest intention on the part of the plaintiff to rely on Carr individually and not as the representative of the insurance company. v
This decision renders it unnecessary to discuss the contention of the plaintiff’s counsel that it was the duty of the company to notify plaintiff of the termination of Carr’s agency. As a general rule that duty does devolve upon an insurance company as was held in Braswell v. Ins. Co., 75 N. C., 8, but as we have shown, our case has not been brought within the operation of the principle of that decision. The question raised by the defendant as to the failure to file proofs is also necessarily excluded from our consideration by the reason for the conclusion to which we have come.
*198We have'not been able to discover any error in the decision of the court below.
No Error.
Hoke, J. did not sit.