Continental Casualty Co. v. Erion

57 S.W.2d 1025, 186 Ark. 1122, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 296
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1933
Docket4-2862
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 57 S.W.2d 1025 (Continental Casualty Co. v. Erion) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Casualty Co. v. Erion, 57 S.W.2d 1025, 186 Ark. 1122, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 296 (Ark. 1933).

Opinion

Butler, J.

Action on an alleged oral contract of insurance ; trial and judgment in court below for the plaintiff.

Among the errors assigned and argued here by the appellant is that the trial court erred in refusing to grant its motion for a directed verdict in its favor. The reasons assigned are: (1) The agent, who it is claimed made the oral contract, was merely a “soliciting1 agent” and there was no competent substantial evidence that he had apparent authority to hind the appellant by his alleged act; (2) there was no premium paid and no consideration for the contract; and (3) that by the express agreement of plaintiff, if any valid agreement had been made, it ceased to exist before the date of the injury -for which liability is claimed.

The trial court submitted to the jury the question of the agent’s apparent authority by instructions which are correct if based upon substantial evidence. We discover no essential conflict in the testimony, and as to all the material facts it may be said that the evidence is undisputed.

One Collins was the agent of the appellant to solicit and obtain applications from railway employees for insurance against accident and sickness and to transmit such to the appellant’s home office for its acceptance or rejection. This was the extent of his authority, and in the face of the application he was designated as a “soliciting agent” in this way; at the head of the application was a statement that the blanks were to be filled in and signed by “the soliciting agent,” and in the blank left for the signature appeared the name of Collins.

On September 8, 1931, Collins solicited and obtained the signature of the appellee, who at that time was a railroad employee,'to an application for insurance and told him that the insurance would be effective and begin on that date. The application was received at the home office of the appellant on September 14, 1931, and after some investigation it declined to issue its policy, but wrote Collins on September 18, following that waiver of claim for a certain ailment which it knew appellee at one time suffered be obtained, and stated that, upon the receipt of the signed waiver, “the matter of the policy issue will have our. further attention.”

In the meantime (September 10th) appellee had been “laid off” by the railroad company and while working at Ms home had suffered an injury (September 18th) to his leg which caused him to enter a hospital for treatment some days later, where he was when Collins got appellant’s letter. This letter and the unsigned waiver he returned with the notation “applicant is now in the hospital with an injured leg. ’ ’ After receipt of the unsigned waiver and the information relating to appellee’s condition no further action was taken and no premium was demanded or received. In this connection it may be stated that accompanying the application was a written instrument signed by the appellee to his employer directing it to pay out of appellee’s wages the monthly premiums as they became due. The first premium payment was to be deducted out of his October wages. In this order the following stipulation was made: “I understand and agree as to the duration of my said insurance: (1) that after my policy takes effect the payment of each installment of premium shall continue it in force as stated in “Period Schedule” appearing below, all such periods to be computed successively from the date of the policy; (2) that the failure to pay any installment of premium for- any reason whatsoever shall terminate my said policy as of the expiration of the period from the wages of which such installment was to have been paid, except as it may be continued in force by reason of premium previously paid; (3) that if I shall cease to be in the service of the employer to whom this order is directed, this insurance shall terminate at once without notice, except as it may be continued in force by reason of premium previously paid.”

On September 29 appellee made proof of his disability and demand for the disability benefit. It appears that at a prior time appellee had a policy with appellant company under which he had received payment for disability benefits, but which afterwards he had allowed to forfeit for failure to pay the monthly premiums. Replying to appellee’s demand, appellant called attention to this fact and advised him that there was no insurance outstanding. Appellee wrote in reply that he was not claiming on that policy but on “a new contract” made by Collins, its agent, on September 8th.

In support of his contention, appellee argues (a) that in the correspondence last above mentioned there was an effort to deceive and an indication that Collins had authority to make the agreement that insurance should be in force on and after September 8, and as a further indication of this it is argued that a previous policy bore the same date as the application. These further proved facts are urged as evidence that in making the agreement Collins was acting within the apparent scope of his authority, namely, (b) that in settlement of a previous claim he had received from Collins a draft drawn on appellant for the amount of the claim less a due premium; (c) that he knew what authority Collins had from what he said, and that while in the hospital he had been told by Collins that the insurance was in effect; (d) that the order on the railway company for deduction from wages for insurance premiums had been retained by appellant; (e) that while in the hospital he had been given by Collins the form for his preliminary notice of disability; and (f) principally, that the form of the requisition of appellant to the Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Arkansas and the latter’s license issued thereon was sufficient to submit to the jury the question of the apparent authority of Collins to contract for and bind the appellant by the act in question.

Giving to these facts their greatest weight and indulging in every legitimate inference reasonably deducible from them we cannot see anything which would fairly sustain appellee’s view.

(A) For the sake of brevity we refrain from setting out the correspondence relative to the present demand of the appellee as we cannot see how any fair interpretation of this correspondence can be construed as an effort on the part of the appellant to deceive him, or how it could have deterred him from asserting whatever rights he might have had, as it has developed he was in possession of the knowledge of all the facts known by the appellant and of others of which at the time appellant did not know, and conld not he expected to have known.

(B) That in the consummation of a previous transaction Collins had drawn a draft upon the appellant for the sum due, as agreed upon by the insurer and the insured, appears to us to have in it no element which would lead a reasonable person to believe that he had authority to do any act which bore no relation to this transaction. Neither could the fact that a previous policy bore the same date as the previous application indicate that in a subsequent transaction Collins would have the authority to make an oral agreement that the insurance should be in force from the date of that application.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 S.W.2d 1025, 186 Ark. 1122, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-casualty-co-v-erion-ark-1933.