Gulf Live Stock Ins. Co. v. Love

181 S.W. 766, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1230
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1915
DocketNo. 11.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 766 (Gulf Live Stock Ins. Co. v. Love) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Live Stock Ins. Co. v. Love, 181 S.W. 766, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1230 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

CONLEY, C. J.

This is a suit by appellant insurance company against J. J. Love and J. T. Stark on nine promissory notes dated April 2, 1912, eight of said notes being for the sum of $200 each, and the ninth for $154.35. Each note is payable to the Gulf Live Stock Insurance Company at Orange, Tex., with 10 per cent, per annum interest thereon from date, and providing for the usual 10 per cent, attorney’s fee. The first one of said notes is payable on June 15, 1912, and the other eight are due and payable respectively on the 15th day of each succeeding month after June 15, 1912. Plaintiff, appellant here, filed suit on all of the notes, on April 19, 1913. The defendants J. J. Love and J. T. Stark filed answers June 4, 1913, setting up the following defenses:

The defendant Love, in substance, pleaded that during the years 1911 and 1912 the plaintiff company was doing a live stock insurance business, that is, it was issuing policies of insurance upon horses, mules, and other live stock, insuring the owners of same against loss of said animals by death, and was collecting premiums for said policies; that he (the defendant Love) was the general agent or general manager of said company, whose duty it was to appoint subagents in the different counties in the state, which subagents, together with this defendant, secured applications for insurance upon the live stock of different parties, and the premiums for said policies were paid to the agent securing the insurance, a commission for which was retained by the agent and by the general agent, and the balance of the premiums was turned over to the plaintiff company; that there was to be a monthly accounting between the plaintiff company and the defendant Love of the amounts of premiums collected by him and his subagents for the preceding month, and that the said agents had until the 15th day of the succeeding month in which to pay the amounts collected and to make said report; that defendant Love, as the general agent, was required to and did give a bond to the plaintiff to secure the plaintiff in the payment of premiums so collected, which premiums were by the subagents returned to the defendant Love and accounted for to him, and he (defendant Love) in turn accounted for the same to plaintiff company, and the bond was given to secure said premiums collected by the defendant Love as general agent; that some time during the year 1912, about May 15th, the plaintiff company removed the defendant Love from his said office, and appointed another general agent in his stead, and required the defendant Love to execute the notes herein sued on, in the total sum of $1,954.35, which the plaintiff company then estimated to be the amount of the defendant Love’s indebtedness to the plaintiff company upon the bond, as general agent, that is to say, that the same represented the amount of premiums upon policies outstanding written by the subagents of the defendant Love, and which had not been turned in; that it was agreed between plaintiff company and the defendant Love that said premiums, when collected, were to be turned over to the treasurer of the plaintiff company, and defendant’s liability upon the above mentioned bond was thereby to be extinguished and canceled, and the said notes herein sued on were then to be returned to the defendant Love and canceled; that soon after the new general manager or general agent was appointed, and acting for it, and with .the acquiescence and knowledge of the plaintiff company, said new agent represented to each and all of the subagents of the defendant that the defendant Love was no longer the agent of the plaintiff company, but that the agent had been appointed, and that the *768 amounts so due on all outstanding premiums were not tb be paid to the defendant Love, which representations were made in writing, and that the defendant, on this account, was prevented from collecting the sums then due by such subagents, except that the subagents or some of them did pay to the defendant $200 of said amount, which the defendant Love paid to the plaintiff company, and which should have been applied upon the indebtedness of the defendant Love to the plaintiff company; that the defendant Love also secured a note for $100 from a subagent in Harris county, which was turned over to plaintiff company and accepted by it as a credit upon the indebtedness of the defendant Love, and that he also secured several notes of Ad Van Kalckstein, in the sum aggregating $50, which he turned over to the company, and which was accepted by it as a credit upon the indebtedness; that soon after giving by the defendant Love of the notes herein sued on to the plaintiff company the stockholders of the plaintiff company sold out the entire capital stock of said company to John C. Tracey, and transferred the entire assets of the company to him; that he (George C. Foreman), the new agent, began winding >up the affairs of the company and began canceling the insurance policies which the defendant Love had secured for the company, and which cancellation required the return of the premiums by the insurance company to be insured; and that the plaintiff company canceled all of the policies so written by the defendant Love and returned the premiums on the policies then outstanding to the parties insuring their live stock, and this defendant claimed that by reason of the cancellation of such policies and the return of the premiums the consideration for said notes wholly failed. The defendant claims as a credit in the event he was held liable on said notes the amounts hereinbe-fore set forth, to wit, the total sum of $350. He also further alleged in his answer that he was required to execute a bond to the plaintiff for the proper conduct of his business as general agent and as security for the collection of the premiums on the live stock insurance policies, and that upon said policy the defendant J. T. Stark, together with O. E. Slade and M. A. Watson, were sureties; that at the time a new agent was appointed in defendant’s place and stead to conduct the business of the plaintiff company there was outstanding in the hands of various subagents over the state certain sums of money estimated by the plaintiff and the defendant Love to be about the sum of the notes executed by the defendant Love to plaintiff, and they further represented to the defendant Love that, if he would make the notes which are sued on herein, such notes would never be held as a charge against him, but would be canceled and returned to defendant as soon as the matter of collecting the premiums had been straightened up with the defendant and the subagents of this defendant; and that, in view of the representations made to him and in order to adjust the matter of the bond, he executed the nine notes sued on, the first eight of which were for the sum of $200 each, and the last for the sum of $154.35. The defendant alleged further that the notes were never to become a claim or obligation, but were simply to be held until the premiums or such part of them as could be collected were collected, and that the said notes were never to take the place of said bond, but that the bond should be and remain the obligation of the company, and was and is the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant Love, and that, if there is any liability from the defendant Love to the plaintiff, which he denied, the same is upon the bond, and not upon the notes. He prayed that he go hence without day and recover his costs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 766, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-live-stock-ins-co-v-love-texapp-1915.