Boswell v. Security Life Insurance

26 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 385
CourtHamilton County Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 26 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 385 (Boswell v. Security Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hamilton County Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boswell v. Security Life Insurance, 26 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 385 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Gorman, J.

Plaintiff in error asks for a reversal of the judgment of the court of common pleas in this proceeding. The trial court at the close of the evidence arrested the case from the jury or instructed a verdict for the defendant in error, which was the defendant below.

The plaintiff below brought an action to recover $250,000 damages upon three alleged causes of action, which were pleaded in the alternative, for a breach of a contract entered into between the parties whereby the plaintiff in error had been appointed the exclusive managing general agent for the defendant company for the purpose of soliciting life insurance for the defendant in the states of Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and Tennessee. The first draft of the contract provided that the time of the agency was indeterminate or indefinite; shortly afterwards the contract was amended so as to limit fh’é per id d [386]*386of plaintiffs agency to twenty years from October 30, 1901. The breach of the contract is alleged to have occurred on Jam uary 1, 1912, and it was sought to recover the damages which the plaintiff alleged he sustained for the unexpired period of the contract — nine years.

The contract consisted of several distinct paper writings, but it will not be necessary for the purpose of this decision to set out these contracts in full, but merely to refer to those portions thereof which are involved in this litigation.

In substance the contract provided that the plaintiff, Boswell, was to act as the agent of the defendant in the states above named for a period of twenty years from October 30, 1901. He was to have the exclusive right to appoint agents and sub-agents in the territory, and was to receive as commissions upon all policies of insurance secured by him, or upon all insurance written by him or his sub-agents a graduated amount, being 70% on some policies, 60% on others, 50% on others, 40% on others, 30% on others, and 20% on others, of the first year’s premium collected on the insurance produced by him and his sub-agents. He was also to receive upon all renewal premiums paid to the company upon policies produced by him and his agents 8% during the life of the policy on the condition that $100,000 of insurance produced under the contract remained in force.

The contract stipulated that the plaintiff should not act directly or indirectly as the agent of any other life insurance company during the period of time that he was to act as agent for the defendant company. The contract further provided that it should remain in force so long as its conditions and requirements were fulfilled.

While the amended petition of the plaintiff sets out three causes of action, it appears to .us that there was but one cause of action, although there may have been more than one breach of the contract. The action was to recover damages for a breach of contract, and it is immaterial how many breaches of the contract there may have been, there could be but one cause of action, and we do not think that the practice indulged in by the plaintiff in this case, in setting out three alleged causes [387]*387of action, is one to be encouraged, as this appears to ns to be merely a splitting up of the cause of action, and not a case of separate causes of action. However, this is not a material fact to be determined in the decision of this proceeding in error.

Among other things, the contract provides that the payment of the plaintiff commissions as agent is to be on the following terms and conditions, which are agreed to by the parties hereto. Then follow some fifteen separate paragraphs or provisions of the contract. The second paragraph provides that the plaintiff shall devote his entire time and best energies to the service of this company, and shall have the exclusive right to appoint agents in said district. The fourteenth paragraph or stipulation provides that so long as its conditions and requirements are fulfilled this contract shall continue in force. And the fifteenth paragraph or clause of the contract reads as follows:

“It is one of the conditions of this contract that there shall be produced by said second party from the territory included in the terms of this contract, accepted and paid for new business of the following amounts, to-wit, during the year 1902, from the state of Ohio $1,000,000; from the state of Kentucky $500,-000; from the state of West Virginia $150,000; and that each calendar year thereafter accepted and paid for new business shall equal or exceed the following amounts, to-wit, in the state of Ohio $1,500,000; in the state of Kentucky $750,000; and in the state of West Virginia $250,000; or in lieu thereof $2,500,-000 from the entire territory. The termination, however, of this contract for any cause, shall in no event terminate or cancel the renewal interest of said second party as provided in paragraph fourth hereof.”

After the state of Tennessee was added to the territory of the plaintiff it was stipulated that he should produce in each calendar year after the first, during the life of the contract, $400,000 worth of accepted and paid for new business in that state, making the total amount which the plaintiff was required to produce of new business after the first year $2,900,000.

It is in evidence that down to January 1, 1912, the date of the alleged breach of the contract by the defendant, the plaintiff-[388]*388Boswell failed to produce the minimum amount of business provided for in the contract, excepting during the two years 1909 and 1910. In each and every year in which the plaintiff failed to produce the minimum amount of business required by the contract the company waived in writing that provision of the contract which required Boswell to produce the minimum amount of business, excepting the last year, 1911, in tfhieh year the plaintiff failed to produce the minimum amount of insurance, and the defendant company did not waive in writing or otherwise the provision of the contract requiring him to produce this amount of business. During the years 1909 and 1910 the plaintiff wrote and paid for more than the minimum amount of insurance required from his territory, but it was claimed that this business was secured by him by practicing rebating.

One of the defenses set up by the company was that the plaintiff had breached the contract' by granting rebates contrary to the law of the state of New York and contrary to the provisions of the contract. .The insurance company further claimed in its answer that Boswell, the plaintiff, had breached the contract by failing to produce during the year 1911 the minimum amount of business required by the contract to be produced, and that inasmuch as the contract was to continue upon the condition that he did produce this amount of insurance, his failure in this regard automatically and ipso facto worked a discontinuance of his contract and rendered the insurance company immune to liability.

The plaintiff claimed that he was wrongfully discharged as agent on or about the 1st of January, 1912. The company denied that it had discharged him wrongfully or had discharged him at all but, as stated above, it claimed that he had breached the contract by his failure to produce during the year 1911 the minimum amount of the business, and had further breached the contract by resorting to rebating, and still further breached it by devoting a part of his time and attention to another insurance company — the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boswell-v-security-life-insurance-flactyct23-1916.