Dyche v. Bostian

229 S.W.2d 25, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 407
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1950
Docket21289
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 229 S.W.2d 25 (Dyche v. Bostian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyche v. Bostian, 229 S.W.2d 25, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 407 (Mo. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

229 S.W.2d 25 (1950)

DYCHE
v.
BOSTIAN et al.

No. 21289.

Kansas City Court of Appeals. Missouri.

February 6, 1950.

*26 W. F. Woodruff, Lucian Lane, Kansas City, for Bostian, trustee.

R. Carter Tucker, John Murphy, Wm. H. Wilson, J. Gordon Siddens, C. Thos. Carr, Kansas City, for Mass. Bond. & Ins. Co.

BROADDUS, Judge.

The question presented here is whether a policy of workmen's compensation insurance issued by the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company, respondent, to the employer, appellant, was in effect on November 7, 1946.

On November 7, 1946, James J. Dyche, claimant, while employed by H. Kelley, doing business as H. Kelley and Sons, as a carpenter foreman, fell from a rafter on a house being built by Kelley at 8218 Grand Avenue, in Kansas City, Missouri, and sustained severe injuries. The employer was within the Workmen's Compensation Act. Mo.R.S.A. § 3689 et seq. On January 25, 1947, said Dyche filed a claim for compensation with the Division of Workmen's Compensation, Department of Labor and Industrial Relations. Thereafter the employer filed an answer denying generally claimant's allegations, and respondent, named in the claim as the insurer, filed its answer denying that it had any policy or policies of insurance covering any liability of the employer in effect on the 7th day of November, 1946.

After hearings, the Referee made an award in favor of claimant, allowing for medical aid $1,040.20 and for permanent partial disability $20 per week for 60 weeks. He also found that "the contract of insurance between the employer and the insurer herein dated March 5, 1946, was in full force and effect and had not been canceled at the time of the injury." The award was against both employer and insurer.

Insurer filed its application for a review before the full Commission, which made an award in favor of claimant and against the employer alone in the exact amount allowed by the Referee, but found that the employer's liability was not insured and that respondent was not the insurer of said employer at the time of the accident. An appeal was duly taken from the final award of the Commission to the Circuit Court, which court entered judgment affirming the final award of the Commission. From this judgment the employer duly appealed to this court.

After the appeal to this court was taken the employer, H. Kelley, was adjudicated bankrupt and William B. Bostian, Trustee in Bankruptcy, was, by stipulation of all parties, substituted for H. Kelley, doing business as H. Kelley and Sons, as appellant herein.

The policy involved herein is styled "Standard Workmen's Compensation and Employer's Liability Policy No UX333357." It is dated March 5, 1946, and was to remain in force for a period of one year unless canceled.

The testimony was that a letter apparently dated October 24, 1946, was sent by Mrs. Kelley to Mr. Frank Altman, of Altman-Singleton and Company. Mr. Altman was local agent for respondent-insurer and had originally written the workmen's compensation policy here involved and also a public liability policy for H. Kelley. The letter requested cancellation of both policies.

Mr. Altman testified that he received this letter requesting cancellation on October 25, *27 1946; that when some one in his office brought the letter to him he said he thought it was a mistake and, he, Altman, didn't want the policies canceled, and that he would get in touch with Mr. Kelley; that on the day he received the letter, October 25, 1946, he called Kelley's office and talked with Mrs. Kelley and told her he thought it was a mistake; that they should keep the policies and that he, Altman, was not going to cancel them until she talked to her husband to be sure that he wanted to cancel them.

Mr. Altman further testified that four to seven days later he again called and talked with Mrs. Kelley and said "please let me know whether you want to cancel as the premium will continue to accrue;" that on a later date Mr. Willer, his bookkeeper, advised him that either Mr. or Mrs. Kelley had called and said Mr. Kelley did not want to keep the policies, to go ahead and cancel them, and Altman then told Willer to send them in immediately because he, Altman, did not want the premium to accrue, and he, Altman, had held the policies on his own volition to try to get Kelley to continue them; that both policies were sent in for cancellation on November 7, 1946, by his bookkeeper to insurer's branch office located in the Scarritt Building, in Kansas City, Missouri.

The letter by which the policies were sent was introduced in evidence as claimant's Exhibit 13. It bears the date of November 7, 1946 and was addressed to "Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company, Scarritt Building, Kansas City 6, Missouri," and signed "Altman-Singleton and Company, by Emmett Willer." It stated:

"Re: UX-333357 and MCS-39094-H. Kelley & Sons Please cancel the captioned policies, enclosed herewith, at the request of the assured, as of October 25, 1946, and please obtain for us at your earliest opportunity audit bills up to that date. These policies were returned to us on that date but we have been unsuccessfully attempting to keep them in effect."

The stamp "Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company, Received November 8, 1946, Kansas City Branch," appears on the face of the letter. As stated, the accident to claimant, Dyche, occurred on November 7, 1946.

Mr. Altman further testified that he did not cancel the policy here involved but sent it to the branch office of respondent to be canceled, and that the confirmation notice concerning cancellation received by his office from the respondent was dated sometime after November 8, 1946.

Mrs. Kelley testified that after she wrote Mr. Altman a letter requesting cancellation he telephoned her and asked her not to cancel the policies and requested that she talk to her husband and reconsider the matter, saying he would hold the policies in his office; that she had several conversations with Mr. Altman about the matter, and that she finally told him that they could not afford to carry the policies; that on the day after the accident she called Mr. Altman to find out if the policies had been sent in for cancellation; that Mr. Altman called her later and told her that the policies had been stopped at the branch office of respondent and that he then sent her a form of report of accident which she filled out and returned to him.

Mr. Fritz K. Downey, Assistant Manager of respondent's branch office, was produced as a witness in its behalf. He testified about a letter written by the local manager of respondent to its agent, Altman-Singleton and Company, asking the agent to get the insured to comply with certain safety recommendations; that upon receipt of that letter some one in the agent's office wrote a note in long-hand on the bottom stating: "The policy is being returned for cancellation" and sent the letter back to the branch office, where it was received on October 28, 1946.

Mr. Downey further testified that the policies were returned by the agent to the branch office with this letter, but that there was nothing in the letter, itself, and no staple or clip marks on it to indicate that the policies were enclosed or attached. This letter was not identified or offered in evidence. He was then shown Exhibit 13, the letter dated November 7, 1946, and testified that it certainly looked like that was the letter from the company's agent telling the company to cancel the policies. As to *28

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
229 S.W.2d 25, 1950 Mo. App. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyche-v-bostian-moctapp-1950.