Clay v. Independence Mutual Insurance Company

359 S.W.2d 679
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 10, 1962
Docket49012
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 359 S.W.2d 679 (Clay v. Independence Mutual Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clay v. Independence Mutual Insurance Company, 359 S.W.2d 679 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

Proceeding by the superintendent of insurance against Jack J. Wille and Priscilla F. Jennings, partners doing business as *681 Time Insurance Agency (hereinafter “Time”), to recover premiums and unearned commissions claimed due the superintendent as receiver of Independence Mutual Insurance Company, a corporation (hereinafter “Independence”), on policies written by Time in Independence prior to the receivership, and to recover attorney’s fees. From a judgment for the superintendent for $7,520.77 the partners in Time have appealed. We have jurisdiction because a state officer as such is a party.

On May 11, 1959 the superintendent of insurance, acting under § 375.560, 1 sought and procured an order of the circuit court authorizing him to take charge of the property, assets, records, books and papers of Independence, and to receive its premiums and other income until final decree; temporarily enjoining Independence from further transaction of business, and ordering it and its officers, employees and agents immediately to turn over to the superintendent all of its property, assets, etc., in or under its or their possession or control. The basis of the action was that the surplus funds of Independence were exhausted and impaired ; that the company was insolvent and in such a condition that its further transaction of business would be hazardous to policyholders, creditors and the public.

Time represented Independence under a written agency agreement dated October 16, 1958. Time was given power to bind the company for various kinds of insurance and was bound to forward monthly reports of all premiums on business becoming effective prior to the last day of the preceding month and to pay the balance shown therein, whether collected or not, not later than 45 days after the end of the accounting month. Out of premiums collected Time was to retain certain commissions. By Paragraph 4 Time agreed that all premiums it received on business of the company should be held by Time “as a Trustee of the company until delivered to the company.” Time was to “refund ratably to the Company commissions on cancelled policies * * * at the same rate at which such commissions were originally retained.” Time agreed “to start cancellation proceedings immediately upon instructions from the Company,” and that “any business written [t]hereunder [might] be cancelled by the Company.” In May, 1959 Time had on its books four or five hundred policies written for its insureds in Independence. On May 11, 1959 Time cancelled two policies by previous orders of Independence. On May 12 Time had on hand and in its possession $3,300 or $3,400 of premiums collected from insureds in Independence. On every policy issued Time had collected some money but not all premiums had then been paid in full on all policies issued. Time had not remitted these premiums, less commissions, to Independence. They were not all due as of May 12, because of the 45- to 60-day time lapse between the date a policy was written and the date the charge therefor appeared on the monthly report. On May 12 Wille and Jennings had no actual knowledge of the action of the circuit court the previous day. On May 12 the partners in Time determined to cancel every policy written by Time in Independence, because they were dissatisfied with the claims service, accounting procedures and underwriting of Independence. Time had not been requested by Independence to so cancel. On that date Jennings started a cancellation program by having an office girl start “pulling files” on policies in force in Independence, and by sending out notices of cancellation of 56 policies (12 or 15% of the total number of Independence policies on the books of Time). While some of Time’s insureds asked Time to cancel their policies with Independence “it would be safe to say that most” of the 56 insureds whose policies were attempted to be cancelled on May 12 had not asked Time to cancel and that “in most instances” Time cancelled on its own accord. The first notice of any proceedings against Independence received by the partners of Time was a newspaper article printed May 13. Upon *682 reading the article Time ceased cancellation of policies. Time took the premiums on hand and used them to acquire insurance for the same 56 insureds for the remainder of the terms of the policies, in a different company represented by Time (Guaranty Insurance Exchange, hereinafter “Guaranty”). Time paid the premiums on the substituted policies with the money previously collected from the same insureds and not yet transmitted to Independence. The replacement policies in Guaranty were written (typed) May 14 or 15, 1959, effective May 20. The premiums on these new policies were paid by Time to Guaranty in July. The partners in Time considered the .$3,300 or $3,400 on hand not due Independence; that they were holding it for payment of Time’s account with Guaranty; that the only amount they owed Independence was the amount of the premiums less the credit due for cancellations ($207.25). It was Wille’s practice, when it was known that insureds were “unhappy” in Independence and the insured would qualify for admittance in another company, to “cancel them out of one and put them into another.” He considered this “the agent’s prerogative” and that “by virtue o<f the cancellations and rewriting into Guaranty, the funds no longer then were held in trust for Independence, but then became the funds held in trust for Guaranty,” for the payment of Time’s account with Guaranty.

On June 2, 1959, following a hearing, the circuit court entered its order, judgment and decree continuing and making permanent its order of May 11; permanently enjoining Independence from further transaction of business and permanently dissolving Independence on that date; vesting title in fee simple absolute in the superintendent to all property, assets, evidences of debt, records, books and papers of Independence for the use and benefit of creditors, policyholders and stockholders and others interested in the assets; terminating and can-celling all policies of insurance issued by Independence and directing that its business and affairs be liquidated, settled and wound up pursuant to court order under the statutes.

By letter dated October 9, 1959 the superintendent demanded payment by Time of the sum of $3,329.33 representing premiums collected by Time on policies written in Independence, but not remitted. Time’s answer was that the net balance due the company was $207.25, calculated as follows : $3,494.57, the balance due May 5, less credit claimed due Time for April and May items of $3,287.32 [the cancellations]. Time’s letter further stated that Time had uncollected premiums on policies in the course of financing in the sum of $232.55.

On February 26, 1960 the superintendent, as receiver for Independence, not satisfied with this explanation, filed the instant proceedings by motion in the case against Independence, naming Wille and Jennings as defendants, asking the court to order defendants to pay the receiver $3,329.33 for premiums collected but not remitted, plus interest, and $750 attorney’s fees, alleging that under, the agency ■ agreement $3,329.33 of premiums 'collected from insureds of Independence were the property of Independence and its receiver, held by Wille and Jennings in a fiduciary capacity as trustees for Indpendence, for which they were accountable to the receiver.

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Bluebook (online)
359 S.W.2d 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-v-independence-mutual-insurance-company-mo-1962.