Mechling v. Philadelphia Life Insurance

53 Pa. Super. 526, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 214
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 185
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 53 Pa. Super. 526 (Mechling v. Philadelphia Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mechling v. Philadelphia Life Insurance, 53 Pa. Super. 526, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 214 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The plaintiff brought this action to recover the amount which he had paid in advance, as the first annual premium, on a policy of insurance upon his life issued by the defendant company, upon his application for the same dated October 29, 1909. The ground upon which the plaintiff based his alleged right to recover was that one Billmier, acting as agent for the company, had at the time the application was made agreed that the amount of the annual premium paid would be returned in thirty days, unless the defendant within that time loaned the plaintiff the sum of $40,000 upon a mortgage of his real estate, and that defendant having failed to advance the said sum of money the plaintiff was entitled to have [529]*529returned the premium which he had paid upon the policy of insurance. The plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment in the court below and the defendant appeals.

The application of this plaintiff for insurance upon his life, dated October 29, 1909, clearly indicated that it was the intention of the plaintiff that the policy should issue forthwith. That paper contained these material statements, “I hereby agree to be examined forthwith by an authorized medical examiner of the company, and to accept the policy when issued”; and “I hereby agree that all representations and agreements made by or with the company or the agent taking this application are reduced to writing herein and made a part of this application and the policy issued hereunder.” The plaintiff upon the same day paid to Billmier, the agent, the sum of $343.85, the amount of the first annual premium on the policy. Billmier forwarded this written application to the general office of the defendant company at Philadelphia. The plaintiff testified that he was examined by the medical examiner of the defendant company in the office of Billmier, at Pittsburg, the same day upon which he signed the application. There was no reference in the application to any agreement with Billmier which made the issue or acceptance of the policy conditional upon the grant of a real estate loan, or which called for the return of the premium by the company unless such a loan was made. In so far then as the matter of life insurance was concerned, the application showed only that the transaction was the usual one, contemplating the payment of the premium for the first year, and the immediate issue of the policy. The facts thus presented to the defendant company by the written application of this plaintiff, the plaintiff having paid his premium to Billmier, who was concededly authorized to receive it, and having submitted himself to and been approved by the medical examiner of the .company, clearly indicated that the plaintiff was entitled to have his policy at once, and the company accordingly, [530]*530on November 4, 1909, issued the policy and sent it to Billmier for delivery. The plaintiff having paid the premium and the policy having been issued and sent to Billmier for delivery, without condition, to the plaintiff, completed the contract, and the company became bound even if the physical possession of the policy was not by Billmier delivered to the plaintiff: 25 Cyc. 718; 1 Cooley’s Briefs of the Laws of Insurance, page 449; Rose v. Mutual Life Insurance Co., 240 Ill. 45. This, so far as the evidence discloses, was all that the defendant company knew about this insurance transaction until April 9, 1910, when the plaintiff wrote to the home office at Philadelphia, stating that Billmier, acting for the company, had contracted that the premium paid upon the life insurance policy should be returned, if the loan was not made within thirty days, and demanded a return of the life insurance premium. Those authorized to represent the company at once wrote the plaintiff stating that Billmier was without authority to make any such contract or any contract relating to loans. It may here be observed that at the time the defendant was informed that the plaintiff asserted the right to have the insurance premium returned, the latter had already enjoyed the advantage of the insurance upon his life for over five months.

There is no doubt that, at the time plaintiff paid the insurance premium, he received from Billmier a receipt in the following form, viz.:

“Pittsburgh, Oct. 28th, 1909.
“Mortgage for $35,000.
“ Received of Frederick M. Mechling,
“Three hundred forty-three 85-100th dollars, on account premium of $5000.00 fife insurance in Phila. Life Insurance Co. to be returned in 30 days if mortgage is not accepted by Phila, Life Ins. Co.
“ Geo. G. Billmier,
“ Geni. Agt,”

[531]*531This receipt the plaintiff retained, making no reference to it in the application for insurance to be forwarded to the company, which he signed. The evidence as to the scope of the employment of Billmier and his authority to represent this defendant company which was presented in this case is identical with that passed upon by the Supreme Court in Burns & Reilly Real Estate Co. v. Philadelphia Life Insurance Co., 239 Pa. 22. It was in that case held that Billmier was without authority to represent the company in any matter relating to the making of loans and that he had no authority to make any representations for the defendant company with respect to such loans. It was also held that the retention of the premiums paid upon policies of insurance, under applications precisely similar to that involved in the present case, did not justify the submission to the jury of the question of knowledge upon the part of the company that a collateral agreement had been made for the return of the premium, nor was it any evidence of a ratification of the collateral agreement of which the company had no notice. If, therefore, the covenant of Billmier upon which the plaintiff in the present case relies is considered in the light of an undertaking to loan money, or if the money was not loaned then to refund the premium paid on fife insurance, the decision of the Supreme Court in Burns & Reilly Real Estate Co. v. Philadelphia Life Insurance Co., 239 Pa. 22, determines that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, for it was there said: “It must be assumed that in dealing with Mr. Billmier concerning the real estate loans, the Burns & Reilly Real Estate Co. dealt with him as an individual, and not as the general agent of the insurance company, for he had no authority to make any representations of the defendant company with respect to such loans.”

When Billmier, in December, 1909, settled with the defendant company for this premium, retaining the major part as his commission and paying to the company the small balance, the acceptance of that sum by the company, without knowledge of the collateral contract into [532]*532which Billmier had entered with the plaintiff, did not, in the circumstances under which the company acted, constitute a ratification of that collateral contract: Daley v. Iselin, 218 Pa. 515; Pollock v. Standard Steel Car Co., 230 Pa. 136. If the plaintiff paid this money as a premium of insurance, as his application to the company represented it to be, then he received what he bargained for. If he paid it to secure a mortgage loan, without disclosing that fact to the defendant company, then he dealt with Billmier as an individual, and to him he must look for reimbursement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Pa. Super. 526, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mechling-v-philadelphia-life-insurance-pasuperct-1913.