Insurance Co. of North America v. Parr

44 F.2d 573, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3410
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 1930
DocketNos. 2981-2983
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 44 F.2d 573 (Insurance Co. of North America v. Parr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. of North America v. Parr, 44 F.2d 573, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3410 (4th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

GRONER, District Judge.

These are appeals from judgments of the District Court in three eases in which the appellees, respectively, were plaintiffs, and the appellant defendant. The parties plaintiff were not the same in each suit, and for this reason alone three separate actions were instituted, but the same questions are applicable in all three, and therefore for clarity, the appellant will he hereinafter spoken of as the company and appellees as plaintiffs. The trial court gave judgments against the company, for breach of contract to pay commissions, in an aggregate amount of $13,881.23.

[574]*574Plaintiffs were, from 1914 to 1929, the agents and representatives of the company for the purpose of securing and writing insurance in Baltimore City. The respective obligations of the parties are embraced in a written contract in effect.during the entire period. Plaintiffs claim to have earned commissions during each year of the period in question which have not been paid. The claim grows out-of a clause of the contract providing for 5 per cent, contingent commissions on the net profits of the whole agency business for each calendar year — which were paid — - and further providing that “should a larger contingent commission than five per cent, be granted to the agents in any other large city, then in that case the Baltimore Agents,are to receive the same amount of contingent commission.” Plaintiffs claim an additional 5 per cent, for each of the years in suit because of the payment by the.company of 10 per cent, to its Boston agents. Company insists that a proper construction of the contract will not justify plaintiffs’ claim' to additional commissions, and in addition asserts that any rights of action for commissions prior to 1925 did not accrue within three years of the date of the filing of the suits and therefore are barred by the Maryland three-year statute of limitations. The District Court sustained the replication to the plea of the statute of limitations, and this is assigned as error.

Since the bar of the statute was again invoked in the trial on the merits, and the question then presented, in our opinion, incorrectly decided, we do not .think it necessary to pass upon the alleged error of the lower court in sustaining the replications, but since a part of the claim asserted in the third suit is admittedly not barred by the statute, it becomes necessary to pass upon the main question, and this involves a construction of section 1, subsection 7, of the contract. This subsection we have quoted above. In it the company agrees to put plaintiffs on the same basis as to contingent compensation as agents in “any other large city.” The company, insists that the clause has no applicability for the reason that the higher rate of contingent commission provided therein was intended and understood to apply only in case certain fire insurance companies, then acting together under a voluntary association known as the “Eastern Union,” should grant to agents in some other large city a higher rate of contingent commissions than 5 per cent., and also, because the Boston agents, who are alleged to have received 10 per cent., were not in fact agents of the company in Boston, but were in fact managers of the defendant’s Boston department. The District Court, in a very well considered opinion filed in the case [44 F.(2d) 567], rejected both contentions — holding the challenged provisions of the contract not susceptible of the construction claimed in behalf of the company, and that the words “the agents in any other large city” were intended to refer only to the company’s agents, and to prevent discriminatory treatment between the company and its agents, and likewise held that giving consideration to all the evidence, there was no marked difference in the status, with relation to the company, of the Boston agents and the Baltimore agents. In his opinion discussing this phase of the ease, Judge Coleman said:

“The court thinks that the differences are differences of form and not of substance. If we look to the scope of territory, the authority, both general and special, the relative size of the business, the powers, such as the power to adjust losses, and innumerable other powers, the court is forced to the conclusión that the difference is one largely of name, and the actual difference is not one that should put the Boston agent in a different classification.”

In respect to both questions, we are of opinion that the District Court was clearly right. The ground on which the company seeks to build its case is that the written contract in suit was a standard form of contract used by fire insurance companies who were members of the Eastern Union; that this standard form had been agreed upon between the companies and their Baltimore agents, and that while the contract as drawn did not include the Eastern Union as a party, a copy was required to be filed with it; that the purpose of the contract was to correct abuses in the fire insurance business, and to create uniformity between the companies and the agents, especially in the matter of compensation, and that having been adopted in Baltimore, it was intended to be put into effect in the other large centers of population; and that its provisions were to apply only in those communities in which it was adopted. It was never adopted in Boston for the reason that such an agreement between the companies and the agents there was found not to be practicable, and companies and agents were left free there to make their respective contracts. The company therefore insists that the true interpretation of the contract with relation to extra compensation is to be had by reading into, the clause in question language which will make it appear that addi[575]*575tional compensation is permissible only where the Eastern Union; that is to say, the voluntary association of insurance companies, granted to agents in large cities in which the “Union” operated greater compensation than 5 per cent., but it seems to us this reasoning is more sophistical than sound, and is not supported either by the contract itself, or through extrinsic evidence introduced to explain its provisions. The contract is between the company and plaintiffs, and all of its vital parts embrace only' agreements between these two. The obligations which the agent undertakes are set out at length, and the commissions which he shall receive are fixed, as is also the promise of the company to pay them. Tho references in the contract itself to the Eastern Union are wholly unrelated to the question of compensation or commission, and the extent to which the Eastern Union figures is more particularly with relation to tho method of conducting the business, the establishment of ethical standards, and provisions restraining its members from competing in the respective local fields over the heads of their respective agents, so that it seems to us very clear that it would bo a forced conclusion to hold that the provision in the contract agreeing to pay tho agent addition,”)! compensation is effective only in the event all other companies embraced in the “Union” should grant higher compensation to their agents in some other large city. The contract seems to us very clearly to import an obligation on the part of the company to pay its Baltimore agents a higher rate of contingent commissions whenever it contracted to pay a higher rate to its agents in any other large eitv, and that any other construction would do violence to the plain language of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F.2d 573, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-of-north-america-v-parr-ca4-1930.