Knight v. Ætna Life Ins.

34 F.2d 805, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1522
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 1, 1929
DocketNo. 14898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 805 (Knight v. Ætna Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight v. Ætna Life Ins., 34 F.2d 805, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1522 (E.D. Pa. 1929).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

Besides a blanket criticism of the statement of claim in the respect of its failure to serve the purposes of the bill of particulars, which was familiar to the old practitioners, there are two objections raised to the statement of claim. One is that no cause of action is disclosed, and the other is in effect that an action against three defendants jointly has been brought to enforce three claims, one of which is a claim against one of the defendants, another a claim against another of the defendants, and the third against the third defendant, each of which is a separate, independent claim against one of the defendants, and none of which is a elaim against all of the defendants jointly.

A very broad outline fact statement will shorten the inquiry into the particular question raised. Each of the defendants is a corporation, and as such authorized to do one branch of the general insurance business, in that the business of one company is to insure lives, that of another to insure against the consequences of accidents and deaths, and another to do what has come to be known as an automobile insurance business. One policy holder often has need of protection in two or more of these several branches of insurance. It is, of course, good business policy for those in the insurance business to be in a position to give to a prospective policy holder every form of policy of which he may stand in need.

Out of this situation has grown a method of reaching this result. The method adopted in many instances is for a strong insurance company in some branches of the business to cause to be organized a number of corporations to cover together the whole field, all of which companies are brought under one control, and managers are obtained, who act for all of them, so that any branch of the insurance business can be taken care of through the same management. All of these companies thus come to have a common manager, a common office, and practically act as a unit.

The plaintiff is a broker. It is his business to get in touch with those in need of any kind of insurance, and these prospective policy holders become what are called the clients of the broker, who come to the broker to have the insurance of which they are in need placed. Having such a customer or client, the broker goes to an insurance company and places with it the insurance, or upon occasion divides the insurance up among several companies. It thus is to the interest of the insurance companies to make business,friends of [806]*806such brokers, because through them they secure valuable business.

There likewise has grown up what has come to be an established practice of allowing to such brokers compensation for their services, which takes the form of what is called a commission, and which is really a sharing between the insurance company and the broker of the premium which is paid by the insured. Insurance policies are usually limited to a term, and, if continued, are continued through what are called renewals. Premiums are thus paid periodically. This has introduced the custom of paying a broker’s commission of a certain percentage of the initial premium paid, and a further allowance out of the premiums paid on all renewals.

This plaintiff avers that he thus placed insurance for one of his customers or clients, and thus earned as his compensation the eustomary commission, which was to be measured by the initial premium paid, and by premiums thereafter paid on renewals. His complaint is that the insurance company, after the insurance had been placed through his efforts as broker, has sought to deprive him of a part of his commissions, by denying him any share in the premiums on renewed policies.

Out of the fact situation as thus outlined we think that a cause of action may properly arise, and the question thus becomes narrowed to whether it is averred in accordance with the established practice. The averment of the statement of claim is in substance that the plaintiff placed insurance in the aggregate sum of $1,000,000, represented -by policies issued to one John Williams, following the general practice above outlined. The fact averment is that one Remington, who was the general manager of each and all the different companies, notified the insured that, because of the commission which they were paying to the plaintiff as his broker, the business was unprofitable to the companies, and for this reason they had decided to cancel the policies then in existence, and to refuse to issue renewal policies, unless the insured would dismiss his broker and place his insurance directly with the companies, without the intervention of a broker. The insured was under compulsion to comply with this demand, and his insurance was thereafter continued and renewed by the company, and the compensation which the companies had agreed to pay the broker was thereafter denied. The legal basis for the averment of the promise of compensation is the general well-established practice upon which the defendants and other insurance companies had been conducting business for many years, whereby an implied promise of the insurance company to pay the broker this established and eustomary commission arose.out of the act of the broker in offering the business to the companies and its acceptance by the company. There is thus an averment of an implied promise by the insurance companies to pay the broker a compensation, payment of which it is averred has been refused. Out of this a cause of action arises, which we think is sufficiently averred.

The next question is whether the promise thus declared upon is joint, or whether it is the several promise of each of the companies with which the insurance was placed. There is in the statement of claim the averment that the “defendants are affiliated corporations of Hartford, Conn., doing business in Philadelphia,” the further averment that the “defendants in the conduct of their business with plaintiff acted as a unit,” and a further averment that the “local manager” with whom the insurance was placed was a common agent of all the defendants. We do not find in these averments any averment of a joint promise, either express or implied, of all of these defendants. So far as disclosed by the statement of claim, the fact situation is that the defendants, for the promotion of the business in which each was engaged, employed a manager, who acted for each of them, and the only inference which can be drawn therefrom is that each company promised to pay the broker’s commission on the business placed with each company. The inference would not be justified that they all promised to pay the aggregate commissions earned, or that each made itself responsible for the commissions payable by the others. This means that the implied promise averred is not averred to have been a joint promise, which could be enforced in a joint action against all.

The final objection raises the question of sufficient particularity in the statement of claim. There is the definite averment that the compensation of the broker is measured by a percentage of the total premiums paid, and that the aggregate of commissions so earned is $10,000. If there were but one insurance company concerned/ 'the statement of claim would come to no more than the averment that the broker had placed insurance with the company represented by policies issued and renewed in the aggregate sum of $1,000,000, the earned broker’s commission on which was $10,000. If the claim were made specific, there would be set out the several policies which had been issued and renewed, with the premiums paid thereon, and [807]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 F.2d 805, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-tna-life-ins-paed-1929.