Central Life Insurance Society v. Pyburn

1923 OK 867, 222 P. 683, 97 Okla. 141, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 911
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 30, 1923
Docket11171
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1923 OK 867 (Central Life Insurance Society v. Pyburn) 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
Central Life Insurance Society v. Pyburn, 1923 OK 867, 222 P. 683, 97 Okla. 141, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 911 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

JONES. C.

On (he 13th day of November, 191S, Benjamin T-I. Pyburn, made application for insurance through J.M. Dewese, the duly authorized agent of the company, plaintiff in error, defendant in the trial court, and submitted to a medical examination on the same date. On December 3, 1918, a policy of insurance was issued by the company at its home office in Des Moines, Iowa, the application and medical examination having theretofore been approved. The policy was mailed to the agent Dewese, at Bradley, Oklahoma, and received by him on December 6, 1918, and on his way to Lindsey on December 7. 1918, he learned of the death of Pyburn, and on his arrival there called C. M. Pinkerton, state manager for said company, by phone, and advised him that Pyburn had died, and that he, Dewese, had the policy, whereupon he was advised by Pinkerton that the policy would be paid, and for him to wire the company for blanks upon which to make proof of death, which ho did. The1 applicant, Pyburn, died December 5. 1918. at Lindsay, Olcla., and on December 7, 1918, the agent, Dewese. presented (he policy to Tipp Watts, of Lindsey, the former employer of the deceased, who at that time gave his check to Dewese in payment of the. first premium on said policy, which was received by the agent, placed in the bank to his credit, and he, Dewese, mailed his check to the company for the amount duo them for the first year’s premium: after about 20 to 30 days the company, plaintiff herein, mailed to Watts its draft for the full amount of said premium, refusing to accept same- At the time the application was taken on November 13th. Mr. Pyburn stated to the agent, Dewese. that he was not able to take out insurance right at the time and wished to defer the matter, whereupon the agent, Dewese, told him that he would take eare of tho payment if he would take, the insurance out at that time, and that lie, Py-burn. could pay the premium out: in monthly Installments; the agent. Dewese. further assured him that he would take care of the payment to the company, and with this agreement the application was given, followed by tbe necessary medical examination. The insurance policy was issued on December 3rd, acknowledging tbe receipt in full of payment of tbe first premium, and was mailed to the agent, Dewese, on December 3rd unconditionally, so far as tbe record discloses.

Tbe contract of agency between the company and Dewese whereby he was employed to sell insurance, contains the following provision :

“The agent may take and forward applications from responsible parties who have not paid the first year’s premium. If the application is accepted the company shall forward the policy issued upon said application to the agent, to be -delivered to applicant upon payment by the applicant of the entire first year’s premium to tbe agent. Tbe -agent shall thereupon immediately remit to the company the net premium due it when received in cash: in all other cases within not less than 60 days from the date of issuance of the policy but if unable to deliver said policy, the agent shall return same to the home office within 60 days, and shall he credited with the same, as not taken.”

And the application, the contract which is the basis of the policy of insurance, contains the following provisions:

“I hereby agree that this application, and the policy hereby applied for. taken together, shall constitute the entire contract between t)ie parties hereto. I hereby represent that all the answers made to the above questions, and those that shall be made to the medical examiner, are true, and form the basis of the contract, and that this contract shall not take effect until the application, together with a medical examination. has been approved at the home office of the society, and the first premium has been paid during my continued good health,”

These are the material facts in the case, and are uncontradicted, and are the facts upon whicli the rights of the-parties to this controversy must stand or fall.

Tho facts, as above stated, disclose that the premium was not paid at the time tho application was taken, but that an agreement was made by tbe agent, Dewese, and the applicant, Pyburn, whereby credit was extended by the agent to the applicant for the first year’s premium which was within tho scope of the agent’s authority; and was binding upon tho company.

There is seemingly conflict of authorities on this question, but we think tbe better reason and weight of authority support this principle. ,

*143 Rev. Laws 1Ü10, section 3462 (section 0723, Comp. Stat. 1921), provides:

“Any person who shall solicit and procure an application for insurance, shall in all matters relating to such application for insurance, and the policy issued, in consequence thereof, he regarded the agent of the company issuing the policy * * * and not the agent of the insured, and all provisions in the application and policy to the contrary, are void and of no effect whatever.” Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Whitehead. 73 Oklahoma, 174 Pac. 784.

Cooley’s Brief on the Law of Insurance, volume 4, page 480, says:

“(i) The actual payment of the first premium at the time of making the contract of insurance is not necessary. The company may extend a credit for a premium, and if it does so, the contract will he binding without actual payment of the premium.”

See DeCamp v. New Jersey Life Insurance Co., 7 Fed. Cas. 313, wherein the court held:

“A delivery of the policy by the agent, without exacting the premium, and upon the promise of the assured to pay in a few days, makes a binding contract from the date of delivery (which would he the date of approval in this case), subject only to the payment of the premium; and, if payment is in fact made within the time named, the insured is not bound to disclose to the insurer the fact of a change for the worse in the condition of health, which has taken place in the mean time. Nor is it material that the agent never accounts to the company for the premium so received.”

The agreement extending credit was not definite as to time, but this is not material to the issues in this case, because the law would give a reasonable time in which to make settlement, and for the further reason that the premium was promptly paid on presentation of the policy, and certainly within the time contemplated by the parties,

■Cooley’s Brief on the Law of Insurance, volume 1, page 476, says;

“If no time is fixed by an insurance company within which a proposition to'insure must he accepted, and the premium paid, the law fixes a reasonable time for tender of premium.”

See Chase v. Hamilton Mutual Ins. Co., 22 Barb. (N. Y.) 527, in which the court held that the contract wag fully completed between the parties when the plaintiff accepted the company’s terms, and paid the premium to A., and that the company was bound to issue a policy to the plaintiff, and was liable for a loss which had occurred. Held, also, that no time being fixed by the company within which the proposition was to be accepted and the money sent, the law w( uld fix a reasonable time. And that accepting the proposition and paying the premium by the plaintiff through the agent, the next day after being notified of the offer, was within a reasonable time.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 867, 222 P. 683, 97 Okla. 141, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-life-insurance-society-v-pyburn-okla-1923.