Johnston v. Covenant Mutual Life Insurance

93 Mo. App. 580, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 408
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 93 Mo. App. 580 (Johnston v. Covenant Mutual Life Insurance) 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
Johnston v. Covenant Mutual Life Insurance, 93 Mo. App. 580, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 408 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

This is an action which was brought to recover back the first annual premium paid by plaintiff on a five>-thousand-dollar policy in the defendant company on the ground of fraud. The material allegations, shortly stated, were as follows:

(1) That defendant’s agents represented that it would give plaintiff, as one of a limited number to be insured, a special contract whereby plaintiff’s premium would be thirty per cent less than the usual and regular rate charged by defendant and other reliable companies. (2) That the discount to be thus given plaintiff would amount, annually, to $182.40 and would be an absolute saving to plaintiff of that [583]*583sum. (3) That at the regular rate the annual premium on the policy offered plaintiff would be $456, but that under the special contract it should be but $287.28. (4) That the written application prepared by said agents for plaintiff’s signature, called for a policy of this kind. (5) That all of said representations were false and made with the intent to deceive and defraud plaintiff. (6) That plaintiff was wholly ignorant of matters pertaining to insurance and insurance contracts, and relied exclusively on the representations of said agents. That he also relied upon them to prepare a proper application for a policy of the kind promised. (7) That said agents fraudulently omitted from the written application those provisions which it was agreed the policy should contain. (8) That the written application did not state the kind or character of policy that plaintiff was to have. (9) That plaintiff paid in advance $287.28, which was to be in full for the first year’s premium. (10) That the policy thereafter offered by defendant contained none of the provisions for which plaintiff had contracted but required that plaintiff should pay, annually in advance, the full premium of $456. (11) There was the further allegation that plaintiff was to receive a further rebate of ten per cent of premium, after the first year, the same being known as the agent’s renewal commission.

The answer was a general denial. There was a trial which resulted in judgment for plaintiff and the defendant-appealed.

The application for the policy was supplemented by what was termed an advance-dividend certificate, which was an acknowledgment by the plaintiff that defendant had advanced him $136.80, being part premiums on the policy applied for, which amount, with any additional advances stated in the renewal receipt, and indorsed thereon, and with interest added annually at five per cent, should be a lien on said policy until extinguished by the surplus apportioned thereto. If we read to[584]*584gether, as we may, the written application and the advance-dividend certificate as being each a part of the same transaction, and as constituting the entire application, wherein was set forth the provisions that the policy to be issued was to contain, then it seems to us that the provisions of the policy issued were in substantial conformity therewith.

There can be no doubt that it is true, as the defendant contends, that in the absence of fraud the written contract specifically providing for the thirty per cent advance dividends should be a lien on the policy until extinguished by the actual earnings, or otherwise paid, would swallow up and supersede all previous parol negotiations touching the same, and that if plaintiff has any standing in the case it must be on the ground of fraud practiced by defendant’s soliciting agent. But it contends further that under the application, its agent was without authority to bind it by any promises or agreements not incorporated in such application. We would be willing to concede to defendant this contention in a case where the application is not impeached or brushed aside on the ground of fraud, but if it be procured by fraud, as was found by the court in the present case, then we do not think the defendant’s contention can be upheld.

The authority of a soliciting agent of an insurance company to take applications for insurance, carries with it the legal implication of authority to fill up the application and do all things needful respecting it. And where an insurance agent is clothed with authority to represent them in all matters in procuring applications, he is then agent in all that legally concerns them. Joyce on Insurance, sec. 425; Combs v. Ins. Co., 43 Mo. 148. If the plaintiff and defendant’s agent made a parol agreement by which several certain provisions were to be inserted in the policy to be issued and the agent in writing the application for such policy inserted therein some of such provisions and omitted others therefrom, we must think that the latter was as binding as the former [585]*585because tbe application, if procured by fraud,' was not the contract of plaintiff, and the stipulation thereof to the effect that no promise or agreement made by the agent and not inserted therein was not to bind the defendant, could not he invoked by defendant to show a want of authority in its agent to enter into such prior parol negotiations with plaintiff; or, in other words, when the application was overdrawn, the stipulation fell with it, and was consequently out of the case.

The trial court specially found that the application and advance-dividend certificate were procured by fraud and deceit, and therefore if there is any substantial evidence to sustain such finding it will be conclusive on us. The plaintiff testified in substance that the defendant’s agent represented that it would issue to him (plaintiff) a special contract of insurance by which the premium thereon would.be thirty per cent less than the usual rate charged in other reliable companies; that the discount thus given would amount annually to $182.40 ■and would be a saving to plaintiff in that sum; and that at the regular rate the annual premium would be $456, but under the special contract it would be but $287.28. The defendant objected that since it appeared from the face of the petition that the plaintiff had signed the application, such testimony tending to^ prove certain parol negotiations leading up to and prior to the execution of such application could not be received. This objection was overruled, to which ruling the defendant excepted. The defendant introduced in evidence the advance-dividend certificate and then moved the court to strike from the record the testimony as parol negotiations leading up to the execution of the application and the written contract for advance dividends for the reason that all previous negotiations were merged in such written contract-. This objection was likewise overruled and to which ruling the defendant excepted.

The plaintiff further testified that at the conclusion of the negotiations between the defendant’s agent and himself [586]*586for the policy, that the latter wrote out the application and handed it to him to sign, representing that it was for a policy containing the provisions which had been agreed on, and that the defendant, relying upon such representation as being true, signed the same without reading it. The defendant’s agent, in the same connection, handed the plaintiff the advance-dividend certificate to sign representing that it was but a receipt ;. and that plaintiff, relying upon such representation as being true, also signed it without reading. The plaintiff is a scholar and the head of a school of learning which has been famous in this State for more than half a century, and, therefore, he is conclusively presumed not to be an illiterate person.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Mo. App. 580, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-covenant-mutual-life-insurance-moctapp-1902.