Beswick v. National Casualty Co.

226 S.W. 1031, 206 Mo. App. 67, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 222
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 20, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 1031 (Beswick v. National Casualty 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
Beswick v. National Casualty Co., 226 S.W. 1031, 206 Mo. App. 67, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 222 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

Plaintiff’s suit is on a contract of accident insurance. The case was tried by the court -without a jury and judgment was for the defendant. Plaintiff has appealed.

Louis Cox was -defendant’s local agent to solicit and secure insurance. According to defendant’s own evidence,, he was furnished with application blanks to be signed by persons desiring insurance, and attached to each of said application blanks was a printed receipt furnished by the company to be filled out by the agent and delivered to the applicant. The General Manager of defendant, and the latter’s witness, testified to this and that the agent had authority to fill out the receipt, detach it from the application and deliver it to the applicant. Said receipt blank was as follows:

C (___
Received of-an application for a Policy in the National- Casualty Company, and the sum of $ — being payment in advance to carry the policy to-.
(Signed) -.

It is expressly agreed, that should the said Company decline dr fail to issue a Policy herein in twenty days from the date hereof, the amount of payment actually made shall be returned to said applicant by the person signing this receipt!

Applicants will please notify the Company at Detroit, Mich., should the policy not be received in ten days from the date hereof. ’ ’

Plaintiff was solicited by the agent Cox on October 3, 1917, and the latter told plaintiff that his insurance would be in effect as soon as he signed the application and the note for the annual premium. Thereupon plaintiff agreed to sign the application and execute to the agent his note for the said premium, and the agent filled out the blanks in the application and receipt. The plain *69 tiff then signed the former and the agent signed and detached the letter and delivered it to the paintiff. As thus filled ont and delivered, said receipt read as follows:

October 1, 1917.

Received of H. T. Bes wick an application for a Policy in the National Casualty Company, and the sum of $23 being payment in advance to carry policy to October 1, 1918.

(Signed) Louis Cox.

It is expressly agreed, that should the said Company decline or fail to issue a Policy hereon in twenty days from the date hereof, the amount of payment actually made shall be returned to said applicant by the person signing this receipt.

Applicants will please notify the Company at Detroit, Mich., should the policy not be received in ten days from the date hereof.”

The note for the annual premium given by plaintiff to the agent was, on the same day, October 1,1917, cashed at the bank and the agent, after retaining the portion due him as commission, sent the remainder to the Company along with the application. Said note was due on or before sixty days after date and plaintiff paid it off on October 13, 1917.

The policy did not come within the ten days, and on October 14, 1917, plaintiff, as requested in the receipt, wrote to defendant but got no reply, nor was any policy received within the twenty days specified in the receipt.

The defendant Company received the application, approved the insurance and issued a policy thereon, but instead of dating it October 1, 1917, dated it November 1, 1917. According to defendant’s evidence, the application was finally passed upon on November 1st and the policy was issued on that day and yet according to its evidence, the application was not received by the Company until November 5th, which would have been the Company approving the insurance and issuing the policy five days before the application was received. There is no question but that the policy was dated November 1, *70 1917, instead of October 1, 1917, and here is where the controversy comes in: Plaintiff was accidentally injured on the 18th of October, 1917, and when he gave notice thereof to the Company, it declined to pay on the ground that the insurance was not in force at that time and did not go into effect until after that time.

It is true that, ordinarily, an agent having authority merely to solicit life insurance and collect premiums, but who does not issue nor countersign policies, is not authorized to make contracts of insurance. [Rhodes v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co., 156 Mo. App. 281, 284.] And it is furthermore true that an application for insurance is a mere proposal on the part of the applicant and a contract does not come into existance until the proposal has been accepted by the Company. [Edwards v. Business Men’s Ace’d. Assn., of America, 221 S. W. 422, 425; National Fire Ins. Co., v. Patrick, 198 S. W. 1050, 1053; Rogers v. Equitable Mut. Life, etc., Assn., 103 Iowa, 337; Anderson v. Mut. Life Ins. Co. of N. Y., Poe 726; Bowen v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America, 144 N. W. 543.]

But does the case at bar come within the purview of the foregoing rule and the above named cases'? Here the agent, according to defendant’s testimony, had authority to fill out and; deliver a receipt the blank for which was prepared by the insurance company for such use, and the blank as thus prepared shows that, by filling it out, the agent could specify the date to which the policy could be carried, which necessarily would fix the date when such insurance should begin. The agent not only told plaintiff that the insurance would begin on the date the application was signed and the note .given, but he filled out the receipt for the annual premium and specified the date to which such payment would carry the policy as being October 1, 1918, which necessarily meant that the year of insurance would be from October 1, 1917, to October 1, 1918. He also cashed the note on October 1, 1917, thus treating the insurance contract as an existing fact. In the Rogers case supra, 103 Iowa, 337, 341, the court say: ‘‘ There are cases in which recovery has *71 been sustained for losses occurring before the policies issued, but they all turn on a different state of facts. In such cases the contract of insurance was complete without the policy, and the policy ivas to issue in pursuance ,iof such a contract.” (Italics ours). In the Patrick case, supra, 198 S. W. 1050, 1053, the court say: “There is no evidence that the insurance applied for should be effective from the date of the application.” The court further held that the facts in that case under proper pleadings might have authorized the finding that the soliciting agent had authority to contract with the applicant that the insurance should be effective from a certain date, and if the application was accepted under such an agreement or understanding the company might be es-topped from denying such a contract.

Certainly the plaintiff, seeing the receipt, the blank for which was prepared and furnished by the Company, and which was so prepared that the agent could specify the date to which the insurance should extend, would understand that the agent had authority to agree that the insurance should begin on that date; and where an agent has apparent authority, his acts will bind the company. [Shook v.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 1031, 206 Mo. App. 67, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beswick-v-national-casualty-co-moctapp-1920.