Ehrlich v. Ætna Life Insurance

88 Mo. 249
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 88 Mo. 249 (Ehrlich v. Ætna Life Insurance) 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
Ehrlich v. Ætna Life Insurance, 88 Mo. 249 (Mo. 1885).

Opinion

Black, J.

This suit grows out of a contract made by plaintiff and the defendant dated the sixteenth of September, 1880. By the terms of the contract, plaintiff was appointed the general agent of the'defendant for [253]*253this state, Jackson county excepted, to procure applications for insurance, receive the premium thereon and on the renewals thereof and to collect renewals on existing policies. It seems the defendant had before been engaged in the insurance business in this state, but had withdrawn therefrom and by this contract it sought to re-enter the state for business. For the services of himself and his agents, the plaintiff was to have specified commissions on the premiums collected. Among the stipulations contained' in the contract are the following, viz: “ This contract is to continue in force and effect so long as the agreements made by said plaintiff are fully complied with. Should plaintiff fail to comply with any of the conditions or obligations of this agreement, it may be terminated by said company without delay. The books and records of the office at St. Louis are the property of the company. The plaintiff on his part among other things agrees to devote his entire time and energy to the business of the company and to no other, and employ a sufficient number of agents to canvass the said territory named, and to see that the company is represented therein by efficient active agents ; that he will account to said company on or before the tenth day of each month, or at any other time when required, for all premiums received by him or his agents; that he will furnish each year $250,000 of new insurance during the term of four years from the date of the contract, or pay seventy-five cents for every $1,000 of that amount which he fails to furnish; if lie furnishes more than that amount in any one year he is to have credit for the excess on the next year, and if in the four years he furnishes more than the aggregate for those years then he is to have the money thus paid refunded.”

The petition sets out at length the contract, and alleges a compliance with its terms, and states that on the twenty-seventh of February, 1882, the defendant, without his consent, appointed another agent for the [254]*254.territory and informed him that it had cancelled the contract, declined to send him renewal receipt for collection and required him to turn over the books, etc., to such other person. The defendant denies in its answer that plaintiff complied with the terms of the contract, but alleges that he made breach of the agreement on his .part before noted, because, of which it cancelled the contract and notified the plaintiff to turn the books, etc., over to another person.

The evidence of plaintiff conduces to show that he .appointed the requisite number of agents, had ah office •and kept a clerk there at St. Louis, and generally complied with the terms of the contract, save that he did not at all times make his reports monthly and sometimes made two or three in one. Of this he says the company sometimes complained ; and sometimes they said nothing; they called his attention to his negligence and he said he would do better, when perhaps he did the same thing, but when it came to the wind up, he held strictly to the contract. Prom his cross-examination, it appears that during the time of his agency he was engaged in buying some eight or twelve policies in the (Robe Insurance Company of New York, which was in liquidation, from which 'he made, he says, less than $1,000. In March, 1881, he was in New York a.week on business for others. He also transacted some business by correspondence for Mr. Parsons, for which he received six hundred dollars. He seems to have informed the defendant of this trip and the officers at once made complaint of his absence. Notwithstanding these complaints he went to the Minnesota lakes and remained therefrom thirteenth of July until third of September. He also took some part'in the organization of a riding school, blit this, he says, was only to give the use of his name to another party, and that it consumed little or none of his time. The total amount of insurance ta ken, that is, the amount of the policies, was $30,CKJ0, and he [255]*255procured uo new insurance, after October, 1881. After several demands lie remitted to the company $172.50 in December, 1881, because of his failure to get the $25(3,000 of new insurance for the first year ending September 16, 1881.

1. The first question is, did the acceptance of this check operate as a waiver of all prior breaches of which the defendant had knowledge? The court instructed that it did. Ordinarily a waiver is a question of intention, and a fact to be determined by the triers of fact. This amount was due the defendant regardless of the other stipulations of the contract. It could not be said because the defendant accepted the premiums arising from a policy issued upon an application'procured by the plaintiff, that it, therefore, waived all breaches of the contract in failing to devote his time and attention to the business. Indeed the defendant appears to have been making complaint of this want of attention. Nor did the acceptance of that check operate as such a waiver, but we do not see how the defendant could thereafter claim any right to cancel the contract because of a failure to pay that particular demand at an earlier day. The authorities cited by the respondent do not support the proposition contended for. The second instruction given at the request of the plaintiff should have been refused and the defendant’s first was properly refused.

2. Upon the stipulation that the plaintiff “agrees to devote his entire time and energy to the business of said company and to no other,” and the evidence before detailed, with the evidence of a witness that life insurance business was very dull in the summer months, .the court told the jury that the “ plaintiff was required to devote only his entire time and energies during business hours to the business of defendant, and no other during those periods the jury may find from the evidence the business of life insurance as provided for in the agreement could be transacted.” Mr. Wharton in his treatise [256]*256upon the Law of Agency, section 274, says : “We cannot expect permanently from an agent that vehement and exhausting action which we can only expect occasionally from the principal. The most we have a right to expect is that degree of diligence which is usual among faithful, capable and industrious business men doing the same kind of work. When we appoint an agent this usage qualifies and shapes the agency.”

This contract must have accorded to it a reasonable interpretation. It cannot be said to mean that plaintiff was bound to work twenty-four hours each day. He still had the usual and accustomed hours for rest, recreation and social duties and pleasures. He continued to be a member of the society and community in which he lived and moved with liberty to discharge the reasonable demands made upon him as such. He could not, of course, do any business for others to the neglect of the business of the defendant, or to its detriment. He agreed to devote his time and energies to the business of the defendant. This he was bound to do with that degree of diligence and attention which is usual among industrious business men engaged in a like business and pursuing no.- other avocation.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Mo. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ehrlich-v-tna-life-insurance-mo-1885.