McCormick v. Life Insurance Corporation of America

308 P.2d 949, 6 Utah 2d 170, 1957 Utah LEXIS 124
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1957
Docket8593
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 308 P.2d 949 (McCormick v. Life Insurance Corporation of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCormick v. Life Insurance Corporation of America, 308 P.2d 949, 6 Utah 2d 170, 1957 Utah LEXIS 124 (Utah 1957).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice.

This is an action on a contract to recover commissions for subscriptions and sales of stock in defendant Life Insurance Corporation of America, referred to as Licoa.

In September, 1952, the defendant Licoa was in the process of changing from a mutual to a stock company. It entered into an agreement with plaintiff, Mathew J. McCormick, allowing him exclusive rights to sell the stock in the company and to receive a 20% commission on said sales.

McCormick and salesmen employed by him sold stock totaling $275,880 for which was received and delivered to the company:

Cash $142,729.86
Personal notes 32,961.71
Real estate mortgages and contracts 41,180.00
Subscription notes 59,008.43

The latter class of obligations contained a provision that the only remedy for default was to retain the amounts already paid in as liquidated damages. Plaintiff was paid commission on only $123,600 of the above total.

During February and March, 1954, some of the real estate mortgages and contracts and all of the subscription notes were can-celled by the company without any attempt to enforce them. Nor was McCormick given any opportunity to do so. The company refused to pay plaintiff any further commissions, wherefore this suit was instituted.

The trial court ruled that plaintiff was entitled to recover additional commissions of $22,842 on the $152,280 upon which commission had not been paid, allowing only 15% instead of the 20% allowed by the contract, for reasons presently to be discussed. However, plaintiff was permitted to keep the full 20% on the commissions he had already collected.

From that judgment defendant appeals on the following grounds :

(A) That the plaintiff is not entitled to commissions on the cancelled obligations because they were in default;

*173 (B) That because our statute 1 prohibits paying more than 15% for promotional and organizational purposes, the defendant should be entitled to recover back, or offset, amounts in excess thereof paid at the 20% rate; and

(C) That the court erred in refusing to consider testimony concerning other expenses claimed to be chargeable to organization and promotion and thus required to be figured in the 15% allowed for that purpose by statute.

The plaintiff’s cross appeal, contending that he is entitled to the full 20% commission, not only on what he had already collected, but on all sales and subscriptions he had obtained, is disposed of in discussing appellant’s points.

(A) Notwithstanding the fact that the subscription contracts were in default, and the only remedy they gave the company was to cancel the stock and retain the amount of liquidated damages, it was nevertheless the company’s duty to exercise good faith and reasonable diligence in attempting to enforce the obligations before cancelling them. There was evidence that they cancelled them without any such effort and used the subscribers as prospects to solicit other stock subscriptions. The rule is well settled that if the failure of completion of the contract results from the fault or neglect of the principal, it is nevertheless responsible to the agent who rendered the service of procuring the contract. 2 There being substantial evidence to support the finding of the trial court that the company violated its duty to the plaintiff, the judgment in that regard will not be disturbed.

(B) Of more serious import is the problem presented by the statute which limits the amount to be expended for organizational purposes to 15,%. There is no dispute about the fact that this contract for 20% was in violation of the statute. The disagreement is as to the effect thereof and the rights of the parties under it.

While the plaintiff does not gainsay- the rule that generally -the parties to an illegal contract cannot enforce it,,- but .the court will leave- them as it finds them, 3 h.e claims *174 to come under an exception thereto as stated in Sec. 599 of the Restatement of Contracts :

“Where the illegality of a bargain is due to
(a) facts of which one party is justifiably ignorant and the other party is not,' or
(b) statutory or executive regulations of a minor character relating to a particular business which are unknown to one party, who is justified in assuming special knowledge by the other party of the requirements of the law, the illegality does not preclude recovery by the ignorant party of compensation for any performance rendered while he is still justifiably ignorant, íjc ^ * »

In justification of his contention that he is entitled to full recovery under the doctrine just set forth, plaintiff points out that he was a salesman imported from California; that he had very limited experience in connection with such promotions; was without legal training; and particularly was unacquainted with Utah insurance laws and had no knowledge of the statutory restriction in question; whereas, he was dealing with officials of the company, Mr. Cleo Bullard, its president, Mr. Harry Pugsley, its attorney, and Mr. Ashby Thatcher, another officer, who had been Insurance Commissioner for several years, all of whom were experienced in such matters and either knew, or should have known, the law, and have been acting advisedly in offering him the 20% contract. Parenthetically we state that there is no claim of bad faith in this regard on the part of these officers. They all appear to have acted upon the assumption that conversion from a mutual to a stock company did not require compliance with the code for organization of stock companies.

Defendant’s invocation of the so-called general rule that contracts in violation of law are void and unenforceable, and plaintiff’s interjection of the just discussed exception, suggests the advisability of taking a critical look at the rule. Survey of the authorities reveals that when contracts involve gambling, immorality or violation of laws purposed to the protection of health, morals or welfare, the law, as a matter of policy, regards the contracts as void and refuses to take cognizance thereof or to grant any relief. However, arbitrary refusal to grant relief under contracts merely in violation of statute often brings about such incongruous results in giving advantages to wrongdoers and penalizing the relatively innocent that the courts have carved out so many exceptions to the so-called “general rule” that it can hardly be properly so denominated. 4

*175 The actual fact is that the courts look at the over-all picture of each such questioned contract and determine upon the facts of the individual case whether the ends of justice demand that relief be granted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
308 P.2d 949, 6 Utah 2d 170, 1957 Utah LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-v-life-insurance-corporation-of-america-utah-1957.