Fass v. Atlantic Life Ins. Co.

89 S.E. 558, 105 S.C. 107, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 199
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 30, 1916
Docket9413
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 89 S.E. 558 (Fass v. Atlantic Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fass v. Atlantic Life Ins. Co., 89 S.E. 558, 105 S.C. 107, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 199 (S.C. 1916).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

The action is for $30,000 damages for a breach by the defendant of a written contract betwixt the parties. The jury found for the plaintiff $3,200.

The contract was made November 7, 1905; the plaintiff served under it until February 7, 1913, on which day the defendant advised the plaintiff that the contract was then “terminated.” By the contract the plaintiff became the defendant’s “general agent” in five counties of the State “for the purpose of canvassing for applications for insurance on the lives of individuals, securing, appointing, and developing agents, and of performing such other duties in connection therewith as may be required by the officers of said company.” Let the contract be reported.

There was testimony on both sides. The defendant, asked for the direction of a verdict, but the motion was refused.

Two allied and conglomerate issues are made by the appeal, to wit:

“(a) That the contract offered in evidence and on which plaintiff based this suit was a contract at will and therefore determinable at will, and according to its expressed terms the renewal commissions under it viere to cease upon the determination of the contract, which, being true, the company had a legal, as well as a moral, right to discharge plaintiff at will and without incurring any damages thereby.
“(b) Because there being no time stipulated in the contract during which same was to run, under the law it was conclusively presumed to be a contract at will, and the plaintiff’s agency being one not coupled with an interest the defendant had the legal right and equitable right at any time to discharge him at a will.”

*117 So that there are three apparent issues: (1) Was the plaintiff’s agency without couplement to an interest? - (2) If there was no such couplement, was the plaintiff therefore subject to discharge at any time? (3) Were the renewal commissions, by the express terms of the contract, to cease at its determination ? The appellant asserts the affirmative of these issues. We shall not consider them in order, but we hope fully.

1. The contract is voluminous, and we assume is a standard one and was prepared by the insurance company. The following are the meager facts disclosed by the contract and by the service under it, which is the testimony:

The contract fixed a day for the commencement of the agency; it fixed by words no day, no cause, and no procedure for the termination of the agency. The plaintiff served under the contract for eight years, and betwixt him and the president there was in that time much friendly correspondence, hereinafter referred to. The contract was betwixt the plaintiff and the South Atlantic Life Insurance Company, and the service was for that company. About the end of the service, that is, in October, 1912, the South Atlantic and the American National Life Insurance Company were merged, and the child of the union was the defendant here. It does not appear if the plaintiff knew of or was consulted about the setting him to service with a new principal. But within four or five months after the union, that is, on February 7, 1913, the first vice president of the new company advised the plaintiff that his contract with the South Atlantic “is hereby terminated from and after this date.” The plaintiff asked for an explanation of the letter, and the record does not show that any was given. Nor does the record disclose any good reason in the jury’s view for this summary discharge of the plaintiff; and the argument at bar after the verdict suggests none, except the exercise of an arbitrary right by the defendant. Of the 19 articles of it, only the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nine *118 teenth, and chiefly the nineteenth, are relevant to the issue here made, which is concretely the plaintiff’s right after his dismissal to have “renewal commissions” out of the renewal premiums to be paid by policyholders in the years to follow the first year of the life of the policy.

2. The words of the contract make no provisions about an arbitrary time for its termination, nor about any cause for its termination, by either party to it; thereabout it is silent. We shall focus attention upon this contract and none other now.

There are four distinct paragraphs in the nineteenth article, though not so indicated. The first has reference only to “commissions on the original cash premium for the first year of insurance.” The provision there is expressly that a commission on such premium shall only be paid to the agent during his continuance as agent. Manifestly the agent could not receive the cash premium, unless he was at the time in continued service. Then followed a separate and second paragraph; it provided for compensation “in addition to the first year’s commission above specified.” That paragraph has reference to “renewal commissions;” that is, commissions on renewal premiums paid by the insured from year to year.

The third paragraph of the article declares how long the “renewal commissions” shall continue to be paid; that is, for the varying periods before specified in paragraph 2. Then there follows immediately in the same paragraph these words:

“Provided, the general agent remains in the service of the company for the entire period so specified, but in no event to continue beyond the period of such service, except as herein expressly provided.”

And the next or fourth paragraph recites the exception, which is not relevant. The above quoted words of the third paragraph are those relied upon by the appellant to indicate that the parties expressly agreed that a living agent should *119 not receive renewal commissions unless he shall remain in the service of the company.

1 If the contract had provided that the renewal commissions shall cease (1) when the agent quit service of his own will, or (2) when he should be discharged by the company for good cause, or (3) when he should be discharged by the company without cause and at the company’s will, then there would be an end of it; the agent’s renewal commissions would be gone. We think the words found in the contract necessarily mean the same thing as those of the supposed case.

The controverted words of the third paragraph plainly stipulate that the agent shall not have renewal commissions beyond the period of his service. The words do not stipulate how and why his service máy be terminated. The jury has in effect found that they were terminated simply at the will of the company and without cause.

2 But if the law provided for such a termination at will of such an agency, then the law is read into the contract; and whether the agent knew that was the law or not, he is bound by it.

3 We think the plaintiff was a mere agent, and the law is plain that a principal may discharge at the principal’s will an agent set to do a particular piece of work. There is an exception, long ago noted and discussed by Chief Justice Marshall in Hunt v. Rousmanier, 8 Wheat. 174, 5 L. Ed. 589.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 S.E. 558, 105 S.C. 107, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fass-v-atlantic-life-ins-co-sc-1916.