Inter-Southern Life Insurance v. Coffee

251 S.W. 365, 159 Ark. 52, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 30, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 251 S.W. 365 (Inter-Southern Life Insurance v. Coffee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inter-Southern Life Insurance v. Coffee, 251 S.W. 365, 159 Ark. 52, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 10 (Ark. 1923).

Opinions

Wood, J.

This action was instituted by the appellant against the appellee to recover the sum of $1,000, the amount of the policy of insurance which appellant alleged it had been compelled to pay to Mrs. Ransomi. The. appellant alleged it issued its policy and mailed the same from its home office at Louisville, Kentucky, to its agent, Coffee, at Clarksville; that with the policy was inclosed a receipt which reads as follows: "Policy No. 87363 for Isaac H. Ransom has been received by me while in sound health, is as represented, and is satisfactory.

"Insured. 1920
"Date policy delivered..”
"Also inclosed with the policy was the following direction to the agents: ‘Agents must have this receipt dated and signed by policy owner and mailed immediately to home office’.”

Pasted to the policy was a green slip which provided:

"This policy shall not take effect until it shall be personally received by the applicant and satisfactory settlement of the first premium has actually been made, all within the lifetime and during good health of the applicant. If the applicant is not in good health at the time the policy is received, it should be held subject to the company’s order, and notice to that effect immediately sent to the company at its home office in Louisville, Ky.”

The appellant alleged that Coffee, in violation of his contract as agent and contrary to instructions as above set forth, tore from the policy the notice as above set forth, and failed and refused to present the receipt as set out above; that the agent knowingly and fraudulently failed to present the receipt to Ransom, because such agent knew at the time that Ransom was suffering from a fatal sickness; that bv such negligence and fraudulent conduct on the part of Coffee he permitted a valid contract of insurance to be consummated imder which the appellant was compelled to pay the sum above mentioned. for which it asked judgment.

The appellee, in his answer, admitted that he was appellant’s agent under a contract 'which became effective on the 13th day of August, 1920, which contract was signed by the appellee and Fred W. Bailey, State agent of the appellant for Arkansas. He admitted that, on the 13th day of July, 1920, Isaac H. Ransom made application to the appellant for a policy of insurance upon his life, and denied the other material allegations of the complaint.

The testimony for the appellant tended to prove that the manager of its Southwestern Department, which embraced in its territory the States of Arkansas ■and Oklahoma and seventeen counties in Tennessee, was Fred W. Bailey, with office at Memphis, Tennessee. He testified that he was general manager of all local agents in Arkansas, so far as producing business is concerned. He gets all the local agents and manages them. He made the contract with appellant, subject to the approval of Ms company, which contract the company approved. This contract, among other things, provided: “The agent agrees that he will not deliver a policy of insurance where he has reason to believe that a change has occurred in the applicant’s health or other conditions have arisen that would affect the desirability of the risk, but that he will return the policy to the home office and await instructions.” The appellant also had a contract with agents in the Arkansas territory, Baker and Kavanaugh, which contract was a duplicate of that of the appellee. Bach of these agents was furnished a rate book which contained, among others, the following instruction: “A. If any unfavorable change has taken place in applicant’s health, occupation, surroundings or family history since he was examined,, the agent must not accept premium and deliver policy, but must promptly return policy to home office,” etc.

The appellant issued two postcard receipts with each policy, one of which was to be returned to the State agent at Memphis, and the other to the home office at Louisville. The form of the receipt is as above set forth. It was the duty of the local agent to have the receipt dated and signed by the policy owner and to mail the same to the home office. The appellant issued a policy upon an application of Ransom, which was taken by its agents, Coffee and Kavanaugh. Kavanaugh was directed by the manager at Memphis to go to Clarksville and assist Coffee in securing applications. Witness was asked why Kavanaugh would be working with some new man and in what particular he gave the new man instructions, and answered, “Nothing other than he familiarized himself' with our various policy forms and how the rates were figured and the settlements made— how we filled out applications and what disposition was made of them when they were filled out, and what -disposition was made of the policy, and the way it was delivered when the policy was issued.” He was asked the. following question: “Did Mr. Kavanaugh have any authority to direct Mr. Coffee in regard to what his contract of agency was or meant?” and answered, “No, he didn’t have any authority. He just showed him the way that we done it — the way we handled business.” The only object of Kavanaugh’s work with Coffee was to assist Coffee in producing business.

The policy insuring the life of Ransom for $1,000, hi-s wife being the beneficiary, was mailed from the office at Memphis. The application was secured on the 13th day of July, 1920. At that time Ransom was engaged in the coal.mining business, a hazardous occupation, and on that account the appellant did not issue the particular kind of policy 'called for in his application, but instead mailed to its agent, Coffee, a different kind of policy from that applied for, with directions to deliver the same to Ransom. Pasted in the policy when it was mailed out was the notice set out above. The appellant never received the postcard receipt above mentioned which was to be signed by the insured and sent to. its manager. At the time the application was procured Ransom was in good health, but before the policy was received by the appellee for delivery Ransom was stricken .with typhoid fever. Coffee did not deliver the policy in person to Ransom and take a receipt therefor, but instead gave the policy to one Mardis, an employee of Ransom, and directed him to deliver the policy to Mrs. Ransom. Coffee knew at the time that Ransom was sick.

It was shown on behalf of the appellant that Coffee said he tore off the green slip pasted to the policy and had not had the receipt card signed, giving as his reason that he was not going to permit Mrs. Ransom to forge Ransom’s name on the card when Ransom was sick. It was also proved that at the end of a lawsuit the appellant had to pay Mrs. Ransom the amount of the policy, which the appellant here seeks to collect from the appellee.

Kavanaug’h testified on behalf of the appellant that lie lived in Memphis; that-he had the same contract with the appellant that Coffee had. He worked with Coffee in Johnson County to produce business -for both of them. He was not giving Coffee any instructions. Sometimes he was sent out of the Memohis office, and other times went of his own accord. Bailey, the manager, suggested that witness go over to Johnson County — that he could get business over there. -Witness’ and Coffee’s names were signed to the application.

The appellee testified that he had'a conversation with Bailey about the agency.

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Related

Inter-Southern Life Insurance v. Ransom
232 S.W. 754 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 365, 159 Ark. 52, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-southern-life-insurance-v-coffee-ark-1923.