Bickers and Judd v. Pixton

15 Tenn. App. 222, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 149
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 10, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Tenn. App. 222 (Bickers and Judd v. Pixton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bickers and Judd v. Pixton, 15 Tenn. App. 222, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 149 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The complainants, Bickers and Judd, filed the original bill in this cause to recover from the defendant, Pixton, upon a $176.05 promissory note alleged to have been made and delivered to them by said defendant. Defendant filed an answer showing among other defenses that the note as made and delivered by him was payable only to Bickers and had after delivery and without his consent been materially altered by the addition of the name of complainant, Judd, as a payee.

Thereupon the complainants by leave of the Court filed an amended bill in which they admitted that the note had been altered as defendant claimed and that no recovery could be had upon it, but alleged that the alteration had been innocently made. In said amended bill they sought to recover upon the original consideration which they alleged was the premium upon a policy of insurance issued by the Volunteer State Life Insurance Company upon the life of the defendant. The defendant set up two defenses, i. e., (1) That in applying for the policy and giving* his note for the first year’s premium it was a condition that the same should not be binding upon him unless and until he examined, approved and accepted the policy; that before the policy was issued he notified complainant, Bickers, that he cancelled his application; that nevertheless Bickers delivered the policy to him, but upon examining it he did not approve it or accept it but returned it to Bickers, etc., and (2) that the note in question was given in satisfaction and extinguishment of the premium — the original consideration sued upon.

The Chancellor did not find the facts with reference to the first of these defenses, but did find them with reference to the second. He recognized that the alteration had been innocently made, but after citing Grocery Co. v. Marshall, 131 Tenn., 270, 174 S. W., 1108, and Bank v. Yowell, 155 Tenn., 430, 294 S. W., 1101, he found that the note originally sued upon had been accepted by the complainants in payment, extinguishment and satisfaction of the first year’s premium *224 of said policy, which he held was the original consideration sued upon. He then entered a decree dismissing complainants’ suit at their cost. They have appealed to this Court and have assigned errors.

The Volunteer State Life Insurance Company has its home-office in Chattanooga. One J. W. Bishop was its general agent at Chattanooga and surrounding territory. Bishop had a number of men soliciting insurance for him upon a commission basis. Two of these men were complainants who worked as a “team.” Complainants, when they would procure a person to apply for insurance, would frequently take from said person a promissory note payable to them for the first year’s premium. Then when the company would acéept the risk (agree to issue the policy) they Avould endorse the note and deliver it to Bishop, who would endorse it and sell it to a bank. Bishop would pay the insurance company its part of the said premium and would then pay complainants their part — said payments being made by crediting complainants’ account with him until the next regular period for settlement with them. Defendant, of course, knew nothing of this system of doing business.

The defendant was in the employ of the Tennessee Electric Power Company at Guild, Tennessee, which is near Chattanooga.

On August 9, 1927, complainants Avent to Guild, Tennessee, to solicit applications for life insurance. They called upon defendant. At that time the defendant had made application and had been examined for a policy in the New York Life Insurance Company, and his application was then pending, but complainants testified that defendant told them that he had not obligated himself to accept a policy from said Nevr York Life Insurance Company, so they solicited him to apply for a policy in the Volunteer State Life Insurance Company. He signed an application for such a policy and executed the note sued upon in the original bill. One of his contentions is that he signed the application and executed the note AVith the understanding and agreement with complainants that if upon examining the policy upon its issuance he decided not to take and accept it he could return it to complainants and get his note back. The complainants deny that any such agreement or understanding existed. They say that he signed the application and executed the note in the usual way and Avithou't reservation.

The application which defendant signed contained the following:

“It is agreed (1) that there shall be no liability hereunder until a policy shall be issued, and delivered to me, while in continued good health, and the first premium thereon actually paid during my lifetime, provided however, that if said premium is paid in full to the Volunteer State Life Insurance Company’s agent at the time of making this application, and if said Company’s Medical Director *225 shall approve this application without change, then the insurance (subject to the provisions of the policy applied for) shall be effective from the date of the medical examination,” etc.

Said application was of course on one of the company's printed forms. Said form had attached to it a form of receipt which wa3 filled in by the complainants, was detached by them and was given by them to the defendant at the time he signed the application and gave the note on said August 9, 1927. Said receipt had printed on one end of it the following:

“Upon payment of the premium, this receipt must be completed and given to the applicant. Where settlement is not made in full, this receipt must not be detached.”

The body of the receipt was as follows:

“No Other Form of Receipt For Advance Payment of Amount of Premium will be recognized by the Company.
“Received of W. G. Pixton, who has applied to The Yolunteer State Life Insurance Company for $7,600 insurance on the Income for Life Age 60 plan, the sum of One Hundred Seventy-Six^ 05/00 Dollars, the amount of the first Annual premium on such policy; the said payment being made subject to the terms and conditions of Agreement No. (1) contained in said application, as shown on the reverse side hereof.
“O. E. Bickers, Agent,”
“Guild, Tenn., Aug. 9, 1927,”

On the reverse side of the receipt was the following:

“It is agreed (1) that there shall be no liability hereunder until a policy shall be issued, and delivered to me, while in continued good health, and the first premium thereon actually paid during my lifetime, provided, however, that if said premium is paid in full to the Yolunteer State Life Insurance Company’s agent at the time of making this application, and if said Company’s Medical Director shall approve this application without change, then the insurance (subject to the provisions of the policy applied for) shall be effective from the date of the medical examination,” etc.

While complainants were at Guild on August 9, 1927, they arranged for defendant to be examined by a physician. Either on the afternoon of August 9, 1927, or on the morning of August 10, 1927, the complainant turned in to Mr.

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Related

First National Bank of Sparta v. Yowell
294 S.W. 1101 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1927)
Columbia Grocery Co. v. Marshall
131 Tenn. 270 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Tenn. App. 222, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bickers-and-judd-v-pixton-tennctapp-1930.