Harding v. Modern Income Life Insurance Co.

593 S.W.2d 568, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2603
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1979
DocketNo. KCD 30339
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 593 S.W.2d 568 (Harding v. Modern Income Life Insurance Co.) 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
Harding v. Modern Income Life Insurance Co., 593 S.W.2d 568, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2603 (Mo. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

WASSERSTROM, Chief Judge.

Suit to recover damages for fraud. The jury awarded plaintiffs $7,459.20 actual damages and $4,500.00 punitive damages. The trial court, however, entered judgment in favor of defendant notwithstanding the verdict or in the alternative granted a new trial. The basis for the trial court’s entry of judgment in favor of defendant was that plaintiffs’ cause of action had become barred by the statute of limitations. With respect to the alternative grant of a new trial, the trial court held that the verdict directing instruction was incorrect in that one of the alternative submissions did not constitute actionable fraud, and the damage instruction was incorrect because it was based upon MAI 4.01 instead of MAI 4.03.

The evidence taken most favorably for the plaintiffs shows the following facts. Plaintiff Harold Harding is a farmer with an eighth grade education. On September 20, 1966, Robert VanHoutan, an agent for Future Security Life Insurance Company, came to plaintiffs’ farm and upon encountering Harding on his way back from performance of chores asked him if he would be “interested in making some money.” Harding did become interested and gave VanHoutan permission to return in order to discuss his proposition with Harding and his wife. Soon thereafter VanHoutan did return with another agent, Charles Sorg, and those two agents together with the plaintiffs had a meeting at plaintiffs’ house around the dining room table.

In the course of that conversation, Van-Houtan and Sorg told plaintiffs that “Pathfinder Contracts” being offered by them would make plaintiffs money; that the contracts would put plaintiffs’ five children through college; that plaintiffs would have to pay on the contracts for only five years and that plaintiffs would have all of their money back by ten years and after that plaintiffs would get $30,000 annually per contract; that plaintiffs’ money would be invested in gypsum mines, motels and resorts; that the contracts were investments; that Future Security was a profit sharing company and that if plaintiffs would get in on the ground floor of the new company they would make all kinds of money and' share in 35% of the profits of the company. The agents did tell plaintiffs that they would be buying insurance but added that the insurance “was a sideline.” Plaintiff Harold Harding testified he would not have purchased the contracts had he known that they were insurance only.

In reliance upon the agents’ representations, plaintiffs purchased five Pathfinder Contracts, one being for each of their children. The agents produced certain forms for signature, which were the usual type of application forms for life insurance, and plaintiffs did sign the five applications.

[570]*570In the latter part of . 1966 or the early part of 1967, Sorg delivered five Pathfinder Contracts issued by Future Security to plaintiffs, which were in fact ordinary life insurance policies with endowment and dividend features.1 At about the same time, plaintiffs also received five copies of a “Certificate of Participation” by which Future Security acknowledged that plaintiffs had a “beneficial interest in the annual profits of Future Security Life Insurance Company” and that the company’s policy shall be to appropriate no less than 35% of the total divisible surplus of the company in each fiscal year to the payment of dividends to the holders of Pathfinder Contracts provided as many as 10,000 contracts were issued, but that if such volume were not attained then the percentage of profits to be so allocated shall be reduced proportionately. The Certificate also stated, “This Resolution does not constitute a guarantee that the corporation will have an annual profit in any particular year.”

In addition, plaintiffs received a “study and analysis” by Insurance Reporting Service of the Pathfinder Contract. This brochure stated in the first paragraph: “For more than 100 years, life insurance companies have issued ‘special contracts’ of one type or another.” The brochure then went on to analyze the policy terms of the Pathfinder Contract, with emphasis on the Guaranteed Annual Endowments and the sharing in the divisible surplus of the company through annual dividends after the second year. Statements were also included that the company had been able to save on advertising because of the cooperative effort of policyholders in assisting in sales to friends and neighbors, and that such cooperation had put the company in a position to earn larger profits.

Plaintiffs were also advised that they had become members of an “Advisory Board” and received a document entitled “Advisory Board Duties, Future Security Life.” This document was in effect a program by which the policy holders were to assist in the selling program of the company, a key feature of which was the holding of “booster meetings.” Harold Harding attended three such meetings, at which he was complimented on purchasing the Pathfinder Contracts, and speeches were made repeating and amplifying upon the statements which had been made to plaintiffs at their home by VanHoutan and Sorg.

At the time of taking out the Pathfinder Contracts in 1966, plaintiffs paid the initial premiums totaling $1,380.80. Again in the fall of 1967, they paid the second premiums aggregating the same sum. On neither of those payments were there any reductions by way of endowment or dividend credits. Harold Harding testified that after that second payment he became suspicious and wrote a letter of inquiry to the company, and that he sent a similar such letter about once a year thereafter. The suspicion which led to the sending of the inquiry after the second premium stemmed from the lack of dividends as had been promised by the agents and at the booster meetings. However, the record shows that plaintiffs did receive “endowment” credits for each year commencing 1968 aggregating $345.20 annually; and they received dividend credits which came to $176.90 in 1968 and increased each year thereafter until 1972, when plaintiffs ceased paying any premiums.

Harold Harding testified that he never received any response from the company to [571]*571any of his letters of inquiry until 1972. He then received a letter dated September 11, 1972, thanking him for his letter concerning the five policies, and the letter went on to state: “When the agent sold you the policies, he over estimated the progress of them.” This letter seems to supply the reason for plaintiffs’ cessation in payment of premiums thereafter.

Plaintiffs then made complaint to the Missouri Division of Insurance, which commenced an investigation in 1973. As part of that procedure, Future Security sent a letter to the Division of Insurance enclosing a form letter addressed to the President of Future Security and purportedly signed by Harold L. Harding, in which Harding purportedly acknowledged:

“Today, your representative, R. L. Van-Houtan, has thoroughly explained to me your Future Security ‘Pathfinder Contract,’ by using the Presentation Kit and Tablet Talk. * * *
“I further state that I have not been offered or promised stock in Future Security Life Insurance Company, or any other Corporation, as an incentive for the purchase of said Contract.
“I understand that this is an insurance policy on the life of the insured. The amount of dividends, or years required for this Contract to be self-sustaining cannot be guaranteed.

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593 S.W.2d 568, 1979 Mo. App. LEXIS 2603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harding-v-modern-income-life-insurance-co-moctapp-1979.