Aetna Life Ins. v. Kansas City Electric Light Co.

171 S.W. 580, 184 Mo. App. 718, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 619
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 580 (Aetna Life Ins. v. Kansas City Electric Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Life Ins. v. Kansas City Electric Light Co., 171 S.W. 580, 184 Mo. App. 718, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 619 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

Plaintiff issued to the defendants a policy of indemnity insurance which covered a term of three years. At the expiration of twenty-seven and one-half months the policy was canceled by the ■assured, which right was accorded defendants by the policy. Plaintiff claimed a balance due on the premium earned during the time the policy continued in force, and brought this suit to recover $1843.70 as such balance.

The answer admitted the issuance of the policy to the defendants, although the name of one of the defendants does not appear in the policy as shown in the record. The answer further set up that under a special agreement made at the time the policy was issued and accepted, the premium to be paid in case of cancellation was that actually earned at the time it was canceled; and that when the policy was canceled, defendants paid the premium due for the time said policy was actually in force. This agreement was embodied in a “Special Cancellation Privilege” endorsed upon the policy as follows :

“It is hereby understood and agreed that if, upon the expiration of the first policy year, the assured concludes not to carry public liability insurance, this policy may be cancelled on the request of the assured, and the earned premium shall be computed at the rate of four dollars and eighty-five cents ($4.85), for each one hundred dollars ($100) of wages expended during the period insurance' hereunder has been in force. Nothing herein contained shall be held to affect or modify any provision or condition of the policy, other than as above stated.”

Plaintiff claims that the premium earned is not governed by the above agreement, but is governed by paragraph “K” of the policy, which is as follows:

[721]*721“Cancellation. K. This policy may be cancelled at any time by either of the parties hereto upon written notice to the other party stating when thereafter cancellation shall be effective; the date of cancellation shall then be the end of the policy period, and the earned premium shall be computed and adjusted as provided in condition J hereof. If, however, such cancellation is at the request of the assured and he is not retiring from the business herein described, the compensation for the full original policy period shall be computed upon the basis of the compensation to date of cancellation, and the earned premium calculated at the customary short rates in accordance with the table printed hereon. In any case, where cancellation is at the request of the assured, the minimum earned premium stated in condition J shall be retained by the company. Notice of cancellation mailed to the address of the assured herein given shall be a sufficient notice, and the check of the company similarly mailed a sufficient tender of any unearned premium. ’ ’

The court held that under the facts of the cancellation disclosed by the evidence, the premium earned was to be determined by paragraph “K,” and rendered judgment for the $1843.70 sued for with interest from date of suit.

The policy was issued to the various named companies all of whom were collectively referred to therein as “the assured.” One hundred dollars was paid on the delivery of the policy as an estimated and minimum premium. The full premium for the three years was to be $4.60 for each $100 of “the entire compensation, whether salaries, wages, piecework, over time or allowances, earned by all employees of the assured not herein specifically excluded, engaged in the operation of the business herein stated during the period of this policy.” According to [722]*722clause “K” of the policy the compensation for the original policy period should be computed upon the basis of the compensation to date of cancellation, “and the earned premium calculated at the customary short rates in accordance with the table herein.”

The total expenditure for wages earned for the twenty-seven and one-half months was $318,557.77 and on the basis of this actual expenditure for that time, the expenditure for the three years would be $417,021.05', and the premium on that would be $19,182.97 at $4.60 per $100. According to ‘ ‘ short rate table” the rate, when the policy was cancelled at twenty-seven and one-half months, would be eighty-six per cent of $19>182.97 which is $16,497.35. The assured had paid $14,653.65. So that, if clause “K” applied, there was still due plaintiff the difference between these last two amounts which is $1843.70.

“The Special Cancellation Privilege” provided that the earned premium, in the contingency mentioned therein, should be computed at the rate of $4.85 for each $100 of wages epended during the period insurance was in force. According to this rate, as the expenditure for the twenty-seven and one-half months was $318,557.77, the amount of premium yet due, after deducting $14,653.65 already paid, would be $198.45 instead of $1843.70.

It is true as appellant claims that if the contract contains clauses of doubtful, ambiguous or conflicting meanings they will be construed most strongly against the insurer. [Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. American Zinc etc. Co., 154 S. W. 827, 1. c. 829; Matthews v. Modern Woodmen of America, 236 Mo. 326.] But are the two provisions hereinabove quoted so ambiguous, doubtful, or conflicting’ as to require the application of this rule? Effect must be given, if possible, to all parts of the instrument. Different portions are not to be deemed conflicting if they can be harmonized and both upheld. If they apply to different situations [723]*723or circumstances, then each should be applied to the situation it was designed to meet and neither robbed of its force and effect.

The rate is to be determined under paragraph “K,” if the policy is cancelled at any time by the assured and the latter is not going out of business. If, however, at the expiration of the first policy year, the assured decides not to carry public liability insurance and the policy is canceled, then the rate is to be figured under the other provision.

There was no showing that defendants decided not to carry public liability insurance, and the option to discontinue the policy at the end of the first year was not exercised at the time the special cancellation privilege required.

Although there was some evidence that one of the defendants — either the Consolidated Electric Light and Power Co. or the Standard Electric Light Co. — had ceased business because its franchise had expired, yet there was no showing when this occurred, whether before or after the expiration of the three years the policy had to run. If any of the companies went out of business, this was a matter ■ peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendants, and should have been alleged and proved. [Kitchen v. Railway, 59 Mo. 514, 1. c. 519; State ex rel. v. Schar, 50 Mo. 393; State v. Schott, 128 Mo. App. 622, 1. c. 635.] However, the evidence showed that the other companies remained in existence and continued in business and were so at the time of the trial; that the Kansas City Electric Light Company furnished the reports of wages paid upon which the premiums were based, so that there was not a “retiring from business” on the part of the assured within the meaning of the policy.

On the cross-examination of one of plaintiff’s witnesses defendant asked him if certain payments [724]

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 580, 184 Mo. App. 718, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-life-ins-v-kansas-city-electric-light-co-moctapp-1914.