Boren v. Beacon Life Insurance Company

1962 OK 142, 372 P.2d 593, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 1962
DocketNo. 39542
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1962 OK 142 (Boren v. Beacon Life Insurance Company) 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
Boren v. Beacon Life Insurance Company, 1962 OK 142, 372 P.2d 593, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 402 (Okla. 1962).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Vice Chief Justice.

On May Sth, 1958, Dale Boren, a resident of Chickasha, Oklahoma, suffered a heart attack and died there. This appeal involves an action to recover on a so-called “credit life” insurance policy written on his life by W. Marvin Aeree, Chickasha’s First National Bank President, in the amount of $5,000.00, as agent of the defendant in error (hereinafter referred to as defendant) when Boren, President of Boren-Malone Company, a book and school supplies distributor, visited the Bank a few days earlier on April 29th.

When, on that date, Boren sought a loan of $5,000.00 from the Bank, Aeree (who had never discussed life insurance with Boren before) called Boren’s attention to his (or his company’s) substantial indebtedness at the Bank, and told him:

“You ought to cover some of this with credit life which we will be glad to write for you up to the limits of whatever we can write in each company we represent.
⅜ -⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
<* * * j have several contracts with several companies and I can write you up to $31,000.00, * *

When Boren assented to taking $10,000.00 of such insurance, and Aeree assented to Boren’s borrowing $5,000.00 from the Bank, Boren thereupon executed his promissory [595]*595note to the Bank for that amount; Boren deposited the $5,000.00 to the Boren-Malone Company’s account in said bank; Aeree wrote the subject policy in the same amount, on triplicate forms at his disposal, as well as another policy for a like amount on the University Life Insurance Company; and Boren paid the premium on each policy. Then Aeree handed Boren the original of the subject policy, and in accord with an arrangement, or practice, that had apparently existed between him and defendant for some time, Aeree deposited the premium money, Boren had paid him, in defendant’s account at said Bank, attached a copy of the deposit slip to one of the two carbon copies of the policy, placed these two attached papers in an envelope addressed to defendant’s office in Oklahoma City, and mailed it the same day.

Under the referred to arrangement between Aeree and defendant, he had customarily deposited in defendant’s said bank account, each month, all premiums he collected on its policies that month, and at the end of the month, defendant mailed him a check in an amount equal to 60% of the total of said premiums, as his commission for writing the policies that had become effective.

Under this arrangement, it was apparently not required that a separate application for each policy precede, or accompany, it to defendant’s office, before the policy became effective; and, no such requirement was complied with as to the Boren transaction, although paragraph 2 of Acree’s “Agency Agreement” with defendant, dated November 23, 1955, provided, among other things, that: “The Company reserves the right to accept or reject any application submitted.”

A few weeks before he wrote the Boren policy, Aeree apparently had a disagreement with the defendant company about insuring one “W. E. Walker.” As a result, Cel E. Roso, Secretary of the Company, wrote Aeree, under date of April 14, 1958, referring to a suggestion made by the Company’s President, Mr. Gilham, to Aeree, a week earlier, that he procure an agency from another company, and stating that, in view of said suggestion, “ * * * we felt that you would voluntarily terminate your business with us.” The letter went on to say that “As this was not the case * * * ”, the defendant company wished to exercise its right, under the Agency Agreement’s above quoted provision, and reject certain named individuals’ “policies”. After listing the premiums, Aeree had received from these individuals and deposited to defendant’s account in the Chickasha Bank, the letter asked that he debit its said bank account with the total thereof, and added: “We also wish to advise you that we are terminating your contract and are exercising our right under the agency agreement to reject any further policies you may send us.”

Thereafter, on April 26, 1958, Aeree had a meeting with Gilham in Oklahoma City, where it was agreed, in brief substance, that defendant would continue, or “revive”, its contract or agreement with Aeree, and that he would sufficiently increase the proportion of regular life policies, to credit life policies, he had been writing for defendant “to give us a sufficient spread, * * * ”. As evidence of the fact that, as a result of this meeting, a severance of the agency relationship between defendant and Aeree had been averted, Aeree took back with him to Chickasha, a fresh lot of defendant’s “supplies”.

It will be remembered that it was on April 29, 1958, or the third day after this meeting, that the above described transaction with Boren occurred. For all that appears in evidence, the hereinbefore mentioned copy of the subject policy, with deposit slip attached, mailed to defendant from Chickasha, was not received, or at least, seen by anyone, in defendant’s Oklahoma City office until the following Monday, May 5, 1958.

When this mailing came to Mr. Gilliam’s attention, he wrote Mr. Aeree a letter, dated that day (May 5th), referring to the [596]*596subject policy, and one Aeree had written on another named individual, as appearing “quite Hazardous.” The letter further stated:

“So we can have some idea as to the type of risk we have on these two particular people, I am wondering if you would be so kind as to complete the inclosed forms on them.”

By a letter Aeree addressed to defendant on the same date (and which is thought to have passed the above-quoted letter in mail transit) he informed it of Boren’s death that “morning”.

A letter dated May 6, 1958, Aeree addressed to Gilham, as defendant’s President, in answer to Gilham’s above-quoted letter read, in part as follows :

“In reply to your letter of May 5, I am returning questionaires on M. L. Peterson and Dale Boren, filled out to the best of my ability and as of the date of the policies.
“In regard to Mr. Boren, Of course, you know by now that he died of an heart attack yesterday morning. This is one that certainly could not be predicted by anyone. * *

The “form” referred to in Gilham’s letter, which was filled out (posthumously) and returned to Gilham, in Acree’s last-quoted letter, was as follows:

“BLForm #68 APPLICATION TO
BEACON LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
“1. Full name of proposed Insured Dale Boren
(a) If married woman, Maiden Name
“2. Address_Chickasha, Oklahoma_
Street City
“3. Date of Birth: Month December Day 1 Year 1900 Age 57
Race white Sex male.
“4. Place of birth Ellis County, Texas_
City State or County
“5. Exact height and weight: approx. 6 ft. in. 210 lbs.
“6. Occupation President, Boren-Malone Company, Chickasha, Oklahoma
“7. Is applicant in good health at present ? Yes.
(a) If not, explain :_
“8. Has proposed insured ever:

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1962 OK 142, 372 P.2d 593, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boren-v-beacon-life-insurance-company-okla-1962.