Under agency principles, an insurance intermediary operates in a dual-responsibility environment. The intermediary may owe duties to the insurer when acting within granted authority, such as collecting material facts, submitting accurate applications, binding only within authority, and communicating underwriting information honestly. At the same time, the intermediary owes professional duties to the client, including identifying insurance needs, explaining available coverages, warning about gaps, and exercising reasonable care and skill. The intermediary is not merely a third party to the contract; the role depends on the legal and practical relationship between insurer, insured, and intermediary. Option B is incorrect because an intermediary cannot issue policies on any risk at personal discretion; authority is limited by insurer contracts, underwriting rules, and binding authority. Option C overstates the intermediary’s function because no broker can guarantee that every possible exposure is covered unless the policy wording clearly provides it. The best answer is therefore balancing duties to both sides while avoiding conflicts, misrepresentation, and unauthorized commitments. References/topics: Insurance and the Intermediary; law of agency, intermediary duties, insurer authority, client duty of care.
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