Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Kramer

1917 OK 235, 165 P. 179, 65 Okla. 165, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 15, 1917
Docket5782
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1917 OK 235 (Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Kramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Kramer, 1917 OK 235, 165 P. 179, 65 Okla. 165, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 46 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

WEST, C.

Plaintiff in error attached to their brief a motion to dismiss appeal in this cause, because the case-made fails to contain any final judgment of the court rendering judgment for defendants. The record shows verdict, motion for new trial, and judgment overruling motion for new trial, and provides for an appeal, giving the time to make and serve case-made and providing for a supersedeas. Under the law announced in the case of Roof v. Franks, 26 Okla. 392, 110 Pac. 1098, and Phillips v. Oliver, 53 Okla. 168, 155 Pac. 586, this court has jurisdiction to review, vacate, or modify an order overruling motion for new trial, where there is a verdict in a case tried to a jury, notwithstanding a judgment has not been entered on the verdict, and motion to dismiss will be overruled.

This is a suit instituted by the Aetna Life Insurance Company, plaintiff in error, which will hereafter be designated plaintiff, to recover from Kramer Bros., defendants in error, who will hereinafter be designated as defendants, money alleged by plaintiff to be due it on account of premiums collected by the defendants. The plaintiff alleged that 'the defendants were acting as its agents under a verbal appointment made by O. H. Verschoyle, a general agent of the plaintiff. Defendants denied that they were the agents of plaintiff, and alleged that they were acting as agents or brokers for Verschoyle & Co., general agents of plaintiff, in the matter of soliciting and collecting the insurance in controversy, and that they had settled in full with Verschoyle & Co.

There are only two issues presented by the pleadings and argued in the brief by plaintiff: First. As to whether or not defendants were, as a matter of law, agents of the plaintiff at the time complained of. Second. As to the misconduct of the trial judge in directing certain remarks to witness of plaintiff while on the stand. We will now consider the first question presented by the pleadings and evidence. Plaintiff contends that, as a" matter of law, the defendants, Kramer Bros., were the agents of the plaintiff under and by virtue of the statutes of the state regulating insurance companies, and particularly section 3431', Revised Laws of the State of Oklahoma of 1910, which is as follows:

“Sec. 3431.' Who Deemed an Agent. Any person who for compensation solicits insurance on behalf of any insurance company, or transmits for a person other than himself an application for a policy of insurance to or from such company, or offers or assumes to act in the negotiating of such insurance, shall be an insurance agent within the intent of this article, and shall thereby become liable to all the duties, requirements, liabilities and penalties to which an agent of such company is subject.”

In order to properly ascertain the force of this section and the intent of the Legislature in passing the same, it is necessary to consider in connection therewith at least a portion of the article of which this section is a part, and particularly section 3434, which is as follows:

“Sec. 3434. Resident Agents for Foreign Companies — Exceptions. Foreign companies admitted to do business in this state shall make contracts of insurance upon lives, property, or interests herein, only through lawfully constituted and licensed resident'agents: Provided, that this section shall not apply to direct insurance covering the rolling stock of railroad corporations, or property received for. shipment from one state to another while in the possession or custody of railroad corporations or other common carriers.”

It will be noted that by the provisions of the above sections there is a concurring ob *167 ligation on the part of an insurance company doing business in the state and agents soliciting risks for it: First, upon the company to procure and pay for a license for its agents, which license is a written authority of such agents soliciting and procuring risks, and prohibiting companies from making contracts of insurance upon lives, property, or interest except through lawfully '• constituted and licensed resident agents, and upon agents to have this license before soliciting risks for insurance companies, and fixing personal liability upon an agent if he assumes to act without such license.

It is our view that the statutes relied upon by the plaintiff do not support its contention, and were enacted by tñe state, not for the protection and regulation of the intercourse of insurance companies and their agents, or to fix their contractual relations, but for the protection of the insuring public. An insurance company doing business in the state certainly could not violate the statute by failing to procure and pay for a license for its agents, and accept risks from unlicensed agents, and then invoke the provisions of the same law to establish the fact of the agency, and to fix the contractual relations of its agents to itself. As between the insured and the company, the defendants were under the statute quoted, as a matter of law, the agents of the company; but as to the relations of the insurance company and its agents the state is not or was not concerned, and their relations would depend upon contract. We therefore cannot say, as a matter of law, the status of the insurance company and their agents as between themselves is fixed by statute, but, on the contrary, we think it is regulated by contract. Welch, Insurance Commissioner, v. Maryland Casualty Company et al., 47 Okla. 293, 147 Pac. 1046. The issue as to whom defendants were representing, whether plaintiff or Versehoyle & Co., at the time the insurance was solicited and collected for by defendants, was sharply drawn and fairly submitted by the trial court, and the jury by their verdict found that the defendants were the agents of Versehoyle & Co., and we are therefore bound by such finding.

The last assignment Qf error complained of being the misconduct of the trial judge in directing certain remarks to the witness of plaintiff while upon the stand, and in the presence of the jury, is in our opinion the most serious urged. It is difficult to state in this opinion the language of the court complained of, which should be considered in the light of its context, the principal part of which may be found in ease-made, pages 51-53, inclusive, and is as follows:

“The Court: J-ust answer the questions; we are running this business; and confine yourself to the points in controversy.
“Mr. Moss: I don’t think that is proper, if the court pleases.
“The Court: I think that is true; but where you have a witness that knows more than the attorneys on both sides of the case—
“Mr. Moss: We except to the remarks of the court.
“Mr. Lyons: Mark that Exhibit A.- (The same is so marked for purposes of identification.)
“Q. Is that the signature of Versehoyle & Kahle? A. That is the signature of Ver-sehoyle & Kahle. ‘ That was on Versehoyle & Co.
“The Court: Wait there a minute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 235, 165 P. 179, 65 Okla. 165, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-life-ins-co-v-kramer-okla-1917.