Forristal v. Security Insurance

12 P.2d 790, 136 Kan. 73, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 9, 1932
DocketNo. 30,660
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 P.2d 790 (Forristal v. Security Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forristal v. Security Insurance, 12 P.2d 790, 136 Kan. 73, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 18 (kan 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

This action was brought by Leo Forristal against Security Insurance Company of New Haven, Conn., to reform and enforce an insurance contract. Plaintiff prevailed, and defendant appeals, contending that the contract was not open to reformation, that the plaintiff had no right to such relief and that the trial court erred in the admission of evidence and in the instructions given to the jury.

The plaintiff was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in a crop of wheat. His mother, Helen Forristal, was the owner of 102 acres of land on which the wheat was planted. The plaintiff made [74]*74an agreement with his mother to the effect that she would furnish the land, the seed and certain machinery, and that he would plant, harvest and thresh the crop, and that each would be entitled to receive one-half of the wheat grown on the land. On May 12, 1928, the defendant, through its agent, H. A. Nelson, solicited the plaintiff to take out insurance on the wheat crop, as against destruction by hail, and after considerable negotiations about the way in which the entire crop might be insured, he advised them that it could be done in the name of Mrs. Forristal, who was the owner of the land and of one-half of the crop. The agent, after being informed that plaintiff owned one-half of the crop, prepared the application, which was signed by plaintiff’s mother alone. The application covered the insurance of the whole crop and a note was given by her for the premium, which was accepted by the defendant in payment of the insurance on the entire crop. On May 18,1928, a hailstorm occurred in that locality which completely destroyed the wheat. The defendant settled with and paid Mrs. Forristal her loss of one-half of the crop, but declined to pay the plaintiff for the loss of the part that he owned because of the fact that his mother alone had signed the application for insurance. Plaintiff then brought this action, asking first for a reformation of the contract of insurance so that the same will cover and include the wheat hereinbefore described, belonging to this plaintiff, and protect the same against hail in accordance with the oral agreement and pursuant to the intention of said parties when the hail insurance contract was made. On the trial the court ruled that the policy or contract was subject to reformation, and upon reforming the contract a trial of the case followed and the jury found upon sufficient evidence that plaintiff was entitled to recover his loss, amounting to 1803.13. Judgment was rendered for that amount, from which this appeal was taken.

Defendant contends first that the court was not warranted in reforming the contract, that a party could not be added or substituted for the one appearing on the face of the contract, that the contract was intentionally made in the name of plaintiff’s mother and was not so made by mistake, accident or fraud, and that the plaintiff cannot have it reformed and recover on another contract which they did not intentionally make.

There is evidence that the intention of the parties was to insure the whole crop of wheat owned by both plaintiff and by his mother. The agent was informed that plaintiff owned a definite interest in [75]*75the property which was included in the contract, and undertook to write a policy covering the whole crop. When the agent asked the plaintiff to insure his wheat, plaintiff said he had thought of insuring it with another, but “I believe I will change companies, and when you write my mother’s insurance you write my insurance in the same policy, and I will stand for half of the note.” I then asked Nelson if that would be all right, and he said “Yes,” adding, “The superintendent of his company said that in case of a family affair, it wasn’t so bad.” Shortly afterwards the agent of the insurance company called on plaintiff and asked him how much insurance he wished to take on his wheat, and plaintiff replied:

“Well, Henry, it looks pretty good, and I believe it will stand $12 an acre, but whatever you write on mother’s you write that much on mine. We are farming this 50-50. I own half and she owns half.”

Then the agent visited Mrs. Forristal and prepared the application for insurance. She asked him if Leo’s name was in the application, saying that Leo’s name ought to be on there because they were half and half in the wheat, and the agent told her that it was not necessary. At the trial the agent testified that it was the intention to cover all the wheat on the land that Leo was working, that of Leo as well as that of his mother. The insurance was paid for all of the crop and later a policy was written by the central office covering all of the wheat. While the interest of plaintiff in the wheat was severable and separate, and should have been so written, the insured plaintiff evidently relied on the superior knowledge and experience of the agent, who advised plaintiff that it was a proper way to insure his share of the wheat. It is also apparent that the agent was acting in the belief that the contract as written would cover the whole crop and be a protection to both plaintiff and his mother, inasmuch as it was a family affair. Apparently it was a mutual mistake and free from any fraudulent purpose. There is no doubt as to the intention of the parties in making the contract and we see no obstacle in reforming it so as to conform to the understanding and agreement of the parties. It is said that plaintiff was not a party to the contract, that his name did not appear either on the face of the application or the policy subsequently issued, and that the application and policy were purposely made in the name of his mother as the parties intended they should be written. The parties were mistaken as to the proper way to express in writing the agreement they had made, but there was no mistake as to the insurance [76]*76contract being intended to cover the wheat of both plaintiff and his mother. Nor was there any mistake in the amount of the premium demanded and paid, which was an amount sufficient to pay insurance on the plaintiff’s interest as well as that of his mother. The mistake was that the contract as written did not fully express the meaning and intention of the contracting parties.

“Under the law of reformation of instruments, the contract and not the false instrument is the controlling thing, and the evidence of the contract is made to do what it is designed to do, show what the contract was.” (Casten v. Kreipe, 125 Kan. 182, 187, 264 Pac. 55.)

The fact that a written contract omits the name of a contracting party and mistakenly asserts the name of another does not bar the remedy of reformation. In Stewart v. Falkenberg, 82 Kan. 576, 109 Pac. 170, it was held that a chattel mortgage in which the wrong name of the mortgagee was written in the instrument might be corrected by inserting the name of the real party in accordance with the intention of the parties, and that the reformation could be accomplished in the same action in which it is sought to be enforced. (See, also, Pfiester v. Insurance Co., 85 Kan. 97, 116 Pac. 245.)

The early case of Snell v. Insurance Co., 98 U. S. 85, was quite similar to the present case, where a partner in the firm of Snell, Keith & Taylor applied for insurance on a stock of cotton belonging to the partnership, of which Samuel L. Keith was a partner.

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Bluebook (online)
12 P.2d 790, 136 Kan. 73, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forristal-v-security-insurance-kan-1932.