An agent’s primary duty to the insurer is to provide all relevant material facts. Insurance underwriting depends on accurate disclosure of facts that would influence the insurer’s decision to accept the risk, reject it, modify terms, impose exclusions, charge additional premium, or require risk improvements. Material facts may include occupancy, prior losses, construction, protection systems, use of vehicles, business operations, liability hazards, renovations, vacancy, or any other fact relevant to the risk. Option B is too narrow and potentially inappropriate; an insured’s finances may be relevant in limited circumstances, but they are not the agent’s primary duty in ordinary underwriting. Option C is improper because placement should not be based on personal relationships with insurers. Option D is also incorrect because the amount of liability coverage should reflect the client’s needs and insurer availability, not a blanket obligation to quote the maximum. The agent’s duty to the insurer is grounded in honest, complete, and timely disclosure within the agency relationship. References/topics: Insurance and the Intermediary; material facts, agency duties, underwriting disclosure, utmost good faith.
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