Hinkson v. Kansas City Life Ins.

183 P. 24, 93 Or. 473, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 180
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 183 P. 24 (Hinkson v. Kansas City Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hinkson v. Kansas City Life Ins., 183 P. 24, 93 Or. 473, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 180 (Or. 1919).

Opinion

JOHNS, J.

it appears from the corporate records of the home office of the company that the following cash payments were made on plaintiff’s policies:

Number 45,064.

December 13, 1909..................$184.10

January 6, 1911.................... 48.80

January 30, 1911....... 48.80

February 6, 1911................... 89.27

January 18, 1912....................95.75

July 26, 1912...................... 48.80

October 21, 1912................... 48.80

Number 45,065.

December 13, 1909.................$184.10

February 6, 1911.................. 89.27

January 18, 1912........ 95.75

Number 51,753.

February 25, 1911.....'.............$192.65

April 9, 1912..............,......... 51.10

Number 58,193.

December 30, 1911....... $393.20

It is alleged and admitted that “L. V. Rawlings was the general agent of the defendant corporation in Oregon.” The plaintiff testified that all of his payments were made to Rawlings and there is no claim or pretense that he ever made any payment in strict accord with the specific terms and provisions of the policy. It appears from the records kept at the defendant’s home office that the plaintiff made his last payment on policy 45,064 on October 21, 1912, which extended that policy to December 8th of the same year, and at the [485]*485same time he made payment on policy 45,065, extending it to the same date; that on policy 51,753 the last payment was made on April 9, 1912, keeping that policy in force until May 14th of the same year; and that on policy 58,193 the annual premium was paid on December 30, 1911, extending that policy to the same date in 1912.

“For failure to pay premiums” all of the plaintiff’s policies were canceled on March 20, 1914. There is nothing in the record which tends to show that the home office of the company directly notified the plaintiff at any time prior to March 20, 1914, that he was in default in the payment of any of his premiums, and so far as the record discloses, its letter of that date was the first communication which the home office mailed to the plaintiff.

The files of the insurance commissioner of the State of Oregon show that between September 25, 1909, and February 10, 1914, at different times the defendant made a number of applications for agents’ licenses authorizing representatives to do life insurance business for it in this state; that each application for such licenses is dated and signed by “L. Y. Rawlings, secretary or manager”; and that based upon these applications licenses were issued to a number of different individuals as agents of the company. It is undisputed' that Rawlings had authority to, and did, appoint all of such agents; further, that Edith P. Richardson was appointed cashier of the company by the home office and that her office was in Portland, in the same room with that of Rawlings.

Several checks issued by the plaintiff to and in favor of L. V. Rawlings were introduced in evidence for the purpose of showing payments of the respective premiums on the different policies. These cheeks were [486]*486indorsed by “L. Y. Rawlings” and “L. Y. Rawlings, General Agent. ’ ’

It is shown by the records of the home office of the defendant that the total amount of payments which the defendant admits receiving as premiums on the different policies was $1,765.59, paid on and between December 13, 1909, and October 21, 1912. It appears from the dates of such payments that extensions from time to time must have been granted by someone. The annual premium on policy 45,064; which should have been paid on December 8th of each year, was $184.10, with one month’s grace allowed, and a premium which should have been paid on December 8, 1910, was paid as follows: January 6, 1911, $48.80; January 30, 1911, $48.80; February 6, 1911, $89.27. Payments for the next year’s premium were made as follows: January 18, 1912, $95.75; July 26, 1912, $48.80; October 21, 1912, $48.80. The same payments on the identical dates were made on policy 45,065. A quarterly payment of $51.10 was made on policy 51,753 on April 9, 1912, by which that policy was extended to May 14, 1912. The plaintiff and the defendant agree as to the time and amount of these payments.

It is expressly provided in the policies that “all subsequent premiums are due and payable in advance at the home office of the company without notice”; that ‘‘ they may be paid to an authorized agent of the company on or before the date when due, but only in exchange for a receipt signed by the president, vice-president, secretary or assistant secretary, and countersigned by such agent”; that “upon failure to pay any premium on or before the date when due, or upon failure to pay. any premium note when due, this policy will become null and void, without any action or notice by the company”; and that “no agent has power on [487]*487behalf of the company to modify this contract, to extend the time of payment of the premiums, to waive any forfeiture or to bind the company by making any promise or representation, * * These powers can be executed only by the president, vice-president, secretary or assistant secretary of the company and will not be delegated. ” Yet in the face of such provisions, it appears from its own records that the defendant did accept the payment of a number of premiums after they became due and payable, and that extensions of time must have been granted the plaintiff for the payment of such premiums. He testifies that all of these payments were made to Eawlings. In 4 Words and Phrases, page 3048, it is said:

“A general agent is one who is employed to transact every business of a particular kind. * * A general agent is an agent who is empowered 1,0 transact all the business of his principal of a particular kind or in a particular place. # * A general agency exists when there is a delegation to do all acts connected with a particular trade, business or employment. * * General agency implies authority in the agent to act generally in all the business usually conducted by the principal. * * The terms ‘general agent’ and ‘special agent’ are relative. An agent may have power to act for his principal in all matters. He is then strictly a general agent. He may have power to act for bim in particular matters. He is then a special agent.”

As to policy 45,064, the plaintiff alleges that on December 8, 1912, to procure an extension to June 8, 1913, he executed his promissory note to the defendant for $184.10; that before the maturity of the note he obtained a further extension to July 2, 1913, at which time he paid the note with accrued interest, and that on December 8, 1913, another annual premium became due, which he paid four days later. Similar allega[488]*488fcions are made concerning policy 45,065.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 24, 93 Or. 473, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinkson-v-kansas-city-life-ins-or-1919.