Hudson v. Philadelphia Life Ins. Co.

280 S.W. 403, 152 Tenn. 691
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1926
Docket1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 403 (Hudson v. Philadelphia Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudson v. Philadelphia Life Ins. Co., 280 S.W. 403, 152 Tenn. 691 (Tenn. 1926).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

W. C. Hudson, who will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff, sued the Philadelphia Life Insurance Company, who will hereinafter be referred to as defendant, and one W. H. Baxley, in the circuit court of Chester county, to recover damages for the alleged malicious prosecution of him before a justice of the peace for Perry county, Tenn., on eight State warrants, charging him with forgery, breach of trust, larceny, and embezzlement.

Baxley swore out these warrants against the plaintiff, and he and defendant were jointly sued on the theory *694 that, in swearing out the warrants, he was acting in his own behalf, and as agent of the defendant, and within the scope of his authority.

The defendant and Baxley filed separate pleas of the general issue to the plaintiff’s declaration, and, upon the issues thus joined, the case was tried before the court and a jury at the June term, 1924. Baxley did not appear at the trial either in person or by counsel, and the case was proceeded with ex parte as to him.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the insurance company for $4,000. The jury found in favor of the defendant Baxley and against the plaintiff.

The plaintiff did not move for a new trial as to the defendant Baxley, but accepted the verdict in his favor.

The defendant insurance company moved for a new trial in its behalf upon a number of grounds, which motion having been heard and overruled by the court, it then made a motion in arrest of judgment, which was likewise overruled. Judgment being entered in accordance with the verdict of the jury against said defendant, it appealed to the court of appeals and assigned errors. That court reversed the judgment of the trial court; sustained defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, and dismissed plaintiff’s suit. While the opinion of the court of appeals does not expressly show that it sustained the motion of the defendant insurance company for a directed verdict, it does order the plaintiff’s suit dismissed, and judgment was entered according, so the necessary effect of what the court did amounted to this.

The plaintiff has filed his petition in this court for *695 writ of certiorari seeking a review and reversal of the judgment of the court of appeals.

The defendant insurance company has also filed a petition for writ of certiorari seeking to have reviewed the action of the court of appeals in overruling a number of assignments of error made in that court challenging the correctness of the trial court’s action in admitting proof at the trial, over its objection, of certain declarations made by the defendant Baxley at the trial before the justice of the peace on said criminal warrants sworn out against the plaintiff by the defendant Baxley. Both petitions and writs having been granted, and the case elaborately and ably argued, the court will now proceed to a disposition of the questions presented.

It is necessary, to a proper understanding of the case, to make a statement showing the relation of the parties to this litigation. The defendant insurance company is a foreign corporation engaged in the business of writing life insurance, with its home office in the city of Philadelphia, and the defendant Baxley was its supervisor for Tennessee, Kentucky, and Alabama, with offices at Nashville, Tenn., and was vested with authority to appoint agents in his territory for said company, receive application for insurance, collect premiums, settle with and have supervision over the agents appointed by him. Bax-ley’s agency was designated and known as the Philadelphia Life Insurance'Agency for Tennessee, Kentucky and Alabama,” and will hereinafter be referred to as the Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency.

Under the contract between the Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency and the defendant company, either party thereto, with the approval of the other, had authority to *696 appoint agents for said agency in the territory covered by said contract; but in all cases, and without exception, tbe said Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency was responsible to the defendant company for the premiums, or its .portion thereof, on insurance policies written by such agents.

Pursuant to the provisions of its contract with the Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency, and with the approval of said agency, defendant company appointed one T. G-. Morgan as its agent to solicit applications for life insurance in certain counties in Tennessee, said Morgan thereby becoming a general soliciting agent for the defendant company in his territory. Under his contract Morgan had, subject to the approval of the defendant company, the authority to appoint sub-agents to work for him. Morgan, however, reported all business done by him or his sub-agents direct to the Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency, which was responsible to the company for the premiums on all business written by Morgan or his sub-agents.

On January 2, 1922, Morgan, with the approval of the defendant company and the Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency, entered into a contract with the plaintiff, whereby he appointed plaintiff his agent for the same territory covered by his (Morgan’s) contract. Under this appointment plaintiff reported to Morgan, and was responsible to Morgan, who was in turn responsible to the Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency for the defendant company’s portion of premiums on business written by the plaintiff.

The defendant company, under no circumstances, accepted notes for the first year’s premiums on applica *697 tions for policies written by either Morgan or the plaintiff, bnt, by the terms of its contracts and its rules, required that its proportion of all premiums be accounted for in cash; that if an agent accepted a note for a premium he did so at his own risk, and was required to account to the company in cash for its share thereof, notwithstanding the fact that a note was taken.

On the class of business written by Morgan and the plaintiff the defendant company received an average of thirty-five per cent, of the first year’s premiums, and the agent retained sixty-five per cent, as his commission. The agent was required to collect premiums at the time the applications were taken, and to remit the company’s share of such premiums, along with the applications, to the Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency at Nashville, who would transmit them, together with the applications, to the defendant company, and these premiums and applications were taken subject to the approval or disapproval of the defendant company at its home office. The usual course of business was that when an application was talien by the plaintiff it was reported to Morgan, who forwarded it, together with the company’s proportion of the premium thereon, to the Philadelphia Life Insurance Agency at Nashville, who in turn forwarded the application to the company at Philadelphia, and was responsible to the company for the premium received from the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 403, 152 Tenn. 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-v-philadelphia-life-ins-co-tenn-1926.