Lanowah Investment Co. v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance

162 S.W.2d 307, 236 Mo. App. 1062, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 190
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 162 S.W.2d 307 (Lanowah Investment Co. v. John Hancock 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
Lanowah Investment Co. v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance, 162 S.W.2d 307, 236 Mo. App. 1062, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 190 (Mo. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

*1065 On Behearing.

BLAND, J.

— Tbe following portions of tbe opinion of Cave, J., delivered on tbe original submission of tbe ease are adopted by tbe court on rebearing:

“This is a suit by plaintiff to collect a commission for a premium paid on an insurance policy issued by tbe defendant to one J. 0. Price. Tbe case was tried to a jury, resulting in a verdict for tbe plaintiff in tbe sum of $300, and after tbe overruling of. defendant’s motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, tbe cause was duly, appealed to this court. For convenience tbe parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.
‘! Tbe plaintiff first filed a petition making tbe John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, a corporation, the sole defendant, and thereafter filed an amended petition joining one Carlos F. Schuster, who was general agent in Western Missouri for tbe insurance company, as a defendant. Thereafter, tbe plaintiff dismissed as to Carlos F. Schuster, and tbe ease was-tried against tbe John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company as tbe sole defendant.
“Tbe defendant filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s amended petition' on tbe -ground that said amended petition does not alleges facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.'.Tbe demurrer was overruled and tbe defendant filed answer consisting of a general denial and specifically denying that tbe plaintiff is a corporation authorized under tbe laws of Missouri to transact any business of writing insurance’or acting as an insurance broker. .
“It is now urged that the court committed error in overruling tbe demurrer. In substance tbe petition1 alleges tbe following: Tbe incorporation of plaintiff as a Missouri corporation; tbe incorporation of tbe defendant and its license to engage in general business of writing life insurance in the State of Missouri;- that one Carlos F. Schuster is the general agent of tbe defendant in this part of Missouri; that tbe plaintiff through its agent, H. B. McMurtrie, solicited one J. O. Price for a policy of life insurance to be placed with tbe defendant, and that during tbe months of August and September, 1938, tbe said McMurtrie called and discussed tbe type and kind of insurance which would be desirable for tbe said J. 0. Price; that Price desired to take a ten-year income type of policy, but was-not' able to do so'at that time; that Price did sign an application for a five-year term policy in the sum of $20,000 and bad a physical examination by a physician for tbe defendant; that thereafter Price left Missouri for tbe State of Florida and in due time tbe five-year term policy was issued by the defendant and delivered by -mail by plaintiff to Price in Florida; that upon failure of Price to pay the premium tbe defendant insisted that tbe premium be paid or the policy returned; that on discussing tbe matter with the defendant through its agent, Carlos F. Schuster, tbe said Schuster suggested that-they forward the-information-concern *1066 ing the negotiations leading up to the issuing of the five-year policy- and that it was in the mind of Price to concert the term policy into an income type of policy, to the general agent of the defendant at Jacksonville, Florida; that Schuster further suggested that it was a recognized custom of insurance business, observed by the defendant, that in cases where such information was forwarded from one agent to another, for the receiving agent to handle the matter as a courtesy, and that there would be no requirement for the plaintiff to split the commission with the Florida agent; that the plaintiff, resting upon the assurance made by the defendant, permitted the information to be forwarded by the defendant to its agent at Jacksonville, Florida; that pursuant to this act, an agent of the defendant in Florida wrote a policy which was in the principal sum of $20,000, the endowment type of insurance to mature in ten years; that the policy was issued on the physical examination made upon the application written by the plaintiff, and that Price was never contacted by any agent of the defendant in Florida, except the agent to whom the information had been forwarded; that the yearly premium on the policy issued to Price was $2400, and that it had been paid to the defendant; that the first-year commission due to the plaintiff under the oral agreement under which it works with the defendant as a broker is 20 per cent of the first year premium and 3 per cent of all renewal premiums; that the commission now due is $480, and that demand has been made and payment refused.
'‘In support of its contention that the demurrer to the petition should have been sustained, the defendant argues that the petition shows on its face that the policy on which the recovery of commission was asked is not the policy for which plaintiff secured an application, and that the policy actually written was written by an agent of the defendant in the State of Florida.”

However, the demurrer was waived when defendant pleaded over but regardless of this “we do not think there is any merit in this contention because the petition in substance alleges that the policy written in Florida was based on the application and physical examination secured by the plaintiff. ’ ’

It is also alleged that the petition fails to sufficiently allege the terms of the agreement, which the plaintiff had with the defendant, and which would entitle him to a commission.

The defendant next contends that its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained because (a) the evidence did not prove a contract for the payment of any commission; (b) that if any contract was made, concerning the commission on the Price policy, it was with Schuster individually and not as agent of the defendant; (c) that there was no proof that the policy written by the Florida agent was secured by reason of the information received from Schuster’s office in Kansas City.

The record disclosed that the defendant filed a written statement *1067 with the Department of Insurance of Missouri certifying that it appointed Carlos F. Schuster of Kansas City, Missouri, “agent for the transaction of its authorized business of insurance in the State of Missouri for the term ending March 1, 1939,” and based upon that information the superintendent of insurance licensed the said Schuster as defendant’s agent in Missouri. The contract between defendant and Schuster designated him as defendant’s “general agent” for said company in twenty-four counties in western Missouri, including Jackson and Buchanan counties. Schuster, himself, testified that he was defendant’s general agent in the above territory, and the letterheads used in corresponding with the plaintiff were “John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, Boston, Massachusetts, Carlos F. Schuster, General Agent, 814 Commerce Trust Building, Kansas City, Missouri.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W.2d 307, 236 Mo. App. 1062, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanowah-investment-co-v-john-hancock-mutual-life-insurance-moctapp-1942.