Bryant v. Continental Casualty Co.

199 S.E. 343, 58 Ga. App. 518, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 24, 1938
Docket26907, 26929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 199 S.E. 343 (Bryant v. Continental Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryant v. Continental Casualty Co., 199 S.E. 343, 58 Ga. App. 518, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 41 (Ga. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Sutton, J.

Counsel for the plaintiff cite several New York [525]*525cases in support of their contention that the agent of an insurance company is entitled to commissions on renewal premiums paid after the termination of his employment. The New York rule, however, seems to be in the minority. The eminent Mr. Williston in his 1936 edition of his work on Contracts states in volume IV, page 2874, § 1030: “The weight of authority sustains the view that the commissions upon renewal premiums are not simply payment for securing the insurance but compensation for other services in the prosecution and preservation of the company’s business; and, accordingly, if the agent is discharged for cause, or leaves voluntarily, the company is under no further liability in respect to the renewal premiums.” In the annotations following Masden v. Travelers Ins. Co., 79 A. L. R. 469, the editors collect on page 478 authorities from many States under the statement of the general rule that unless the contract expressly provides for commissions on renewal premiums paid after the termination of employment, the agent is not entitled to such commissions. In Lochner v. New York Life Ins. Co., 200 Mo. App. 659 (208 S. W. 862), the contract expressly provided that after the termination of employment the agent would not be entitled to commissions on renewal premiums paid after the agency ceased. Many authorities were thoroughly considered in the opinion, and it was stated: “So that the decided weight of authority leads to the conclusion that, unless it is expressly stipulated or clearly to be gathered by the contract [that] the agent’s right to commissions on renewals, is to continue on renewals falling in after the term of his employment, he is not entitled to commissions received or falling in after the expiration of‘his agency. The right of the agent to commissions on renewals collected or falling in after the end of his agency can rest only on express terms in- his contract, or be necessarily drawn from an interpretation of that contract as a whole. This must be so, for the right to commissions on renewals rests, in part, on the consideration of the services by the agent to the company in keeping the policies written by him alive.” In 14 R. C. L. 869, § 42, it is said: “The most important question which arises with reference to the compensation of insurance agents is whether an agent entitled to commissions on renewal premiums is entitled to a commission on such a premium paid after the termination of his agency. Of course, where his contract of employ[526]*526ment provides that he shall receive a certain commission on renewal premiums so long as he continues to be the agent of the company, he is not entitled to commissions on renewals made after his discharge. . . The right to commissions on renewal premiums terminates at his death, discharge for cause, resignation, especially where the contract discloses an intent that the right to commissions shall not extend beyond that time.” Mr. Couch in his Cyclopedia of Insurance Law (1929 ed.), vol. 3, § 560d, states: “And, if either party may terminate the contract at pleasure, no right exists to commissions not collected before the termination of the employment, although it be done by the company, where it also appears that commissions were to be on premiums collected. . . Nor has an insurance agent any right to commissions accruing after he voluntarily, and without cause, terminates or abandons his employment or contract.” Even in Hercules Mutual Life Assurance Society v. Brinker, 77 N. Y. 435, cited by counsel for the plaintiff as a leading New York case, where the plaintiff was a general agent and collections were not to be made monthly, but annually, the majority opinion of the court was concurred in by only four judges, one of three dissenting judges writing a very strong dissenting opinion.

It does not appear that the question sub judice has heretofore been presented to the appellate courts of this State. Counsel for the defendant cite Park v. Piedmont & Arlington Life Ins. Co., 48 Ga. 601, as authority for their contention that the agent is not entitled to commissions in the present case. We do not think, however, that the point here under investigation was there decided. In that case the agents were employed to collect the premiums; and it was provided in the contract that the compensation for their services was to be twenty per cent, of all sums collected for first year’s premium insurance, and seven and one half per cent, of all sums received by them for continued renewals of policies. The agents were discharged. The decision of the court that the agents were not entitled to commissions on renewal premiums paid after the termination of the agency was bottomed on the provision that the premiums must be received by them; and inasmuch as renewal premiums were not received by them, but by the company after the termination of the agency, the plaintiffs were not entitled to commissions thereon. Irrespective of what may be said to be the gen[527]*527eral rule, we think that the present case must be governed by the express provisions of the contract properly construed as a whole. It is apparently conceded by both parties that the provision of the contract as to terms of payment for business produced by the agent was typewritten. Counsel for the plaintiff contend, that, the contract being silent as to whether or not the agent would be entitled to commissions on renewal premiums paid after the termination of employment, an ambiguity exists; and that as the provision as to compensation was in writing and the other portions of the contract printed, the written portion should prevail, and that the uncertainty should be resolved in favor of the plaintiff. Undoubtedly, where an ambiguity exists, the written portion of a contract is entitled to more weight, but in the present contract we find no ambiguity. While it does not expressly state what would be the right of the plaintiff as to commissions on renewal premiums paid to the company after the voluntary termination of his employment by the agent, neither the written portion nor any other part of the contract militates against what we believe to be the true and proper construction of the contract, viz., that for the agent to claim commissions on the renewal premiums they must have been paid during the time the agent was engaged in serving the company.

What does the contract disclose that the agent must do to obtain “15 per cent, on all renewals of the business that said agent may write, provided said business renews within 30 days from the time it is due” ? If there were no other provision, it might be gathered from such written portion that as long as renewal premiums were paid to the company the agent would be entitled to 15 per cent, thereon, if paid within thirty days from the time the premium was due, whether or not he be in the service of the company at the time. But under the other provisions of the contract, which must be construed in connection with the written portion to ascertain the real intent of the parties, can it reasonably be said that the company could claim no right to the agent’s services as to such renewal premiums or to policyholders who did not continue to pay their premiums but became delinquent? If an agent write, say, twenty-five policies, fifteen of which are kept alive by monthly renewals, can the agent forget the interest of the company as to the other ten, make no effort to collect renewal premiums from them, sever his connection with the company without giving the [528]

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.E. 343, 58 Ga. App. 518, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-continental-casualty-co-gactapp-1938.