Mesloh v. Lafayette Life Insurance

207 P. 754, 111 Kan. 409, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 262
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 10, 1922
DocketNo. 23,780
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 207 P. 754 (Mesloh v. Lafayette Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mesloh v. Lafayette Life Insurance, 207 P. 754, 111 Kan. 409, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 262 (kan 1922).

Opinion

The opinion- of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The action was one to recover on a contract for life insurance applied for by Herman Mesloh. The plaintiff moved for judgment on the pleadings, a stipulation relating to certain facts, and the opening statement of counsel for the defendant. The defendant moved for judgment on the pleadings, the stipulation, and the opening statement of counsel for the plaintiff. The motion of the defendant was denied, the motion of the plaintiff was allowed, judgment was rendered accordingly, and the defendant appeals.

Fred Fleer, a soliciting agent of the company, took Mesloh’s application. The application was subsequently approved, and the policy was written. The policy was sent to a. state agent of the' company, and by him to Fleer, for delivery, but before it was delivered Mesloh died. The application signed by Mesloh was dated September 1, 1918, and contained the following provision:

“I hereby agree . . . that the company shall incur no liability until this application has been approved by it at its home office, the policy delivered during my good health, and the first annual premium thereon shall have been paid by me: Provided, That if the first annual premium be paid at the time of making this application, the insurance shall be in 'force from the date of the approval of the application by the company at the home office.”

[410]*410The application also contained the following statement by Mesloh: “I have paid the first premium of $108.85 to Mr. Fred Fleer.”

The petition stated that the first annual premium was paid and satisfied at the time the application was signed, but that the plaintiff was unable to state how. The payment was either in cash, or by agreement to pay at some later date. The plaintiff was unable to state whether the agreement was oral or in writing, but if a promise was given in settlement and payment of the premium, the time when such promise required payment in cash was January 1, 1919. The opening statement of counsel for plaintiff did not clarify the matter of payment. With the jury in the box, and the burden resting on the plaintiff to proceed with the production of evidence of payment, counsel was unable to specify what his evidence would be, and said:

“I think the evidence will show it was either done by note or by cash or by some oral arrangement, the evidence will show just exactly the method, but I think the evidence will show clearly that the first annual premium was actually settled in some way on the date the application was taken, . . .”

The defendant’s answer undertook to state the facts:

“The defendant alleges that it is informed and believes, and therefore alleges the fact to be, that at the time such application was taken, and after the same had been filled out and signed, the said Herman Mesloh told the said Fleer that he was unable to pay the premium at that time, but that it would be necessary for him to first sell property belonging to him, and realize the money necessary therefor. That thereupon it was agreed that the said Mesloh would raise the money necessary and would send the same to one Brettman, a relative of the said' Mesloh, and that the said Fleer would deliver the policy, when it came, to the said Brettman, who would have the money therefor. That such arrangement was satisfactory to the said Fleer, and the application was sent to the company. The defendant alleges that the said Mesloh did not send such money to the said Brettman, or any part thereof, and that on that account the said policy was never delivered to the said Mesloh, or to Brettman, or to any one else.”

The facts were amplified in the opening statement for the defendant :

“Now, gentlemen, there is no doubt in the world but what the evidence will show exactly what happened at the time this application was taken.
“There were only three persons present, Fred Fleer, Mr. Brettman, a cousin of Herman Mesloh’s, and Herman Mesloh, who is now dead.
“Now the arrangement that was made, as the evidence will substantiate to you, is simply this: Mr. Fleer, after they had agreed upon the amount of insurance, filled out the application for insurance, and filled out all blanks, assuming that Mr. Mesloh would pay him for the insurance, which is the hope of all agents, that a man will pay for his insurance at the time they [411]*411write the application, and he filled out the blank that ‘I have paid the first premium of $107.85 to Mr. Fred Fleer.’ And Mr. Mesloh, in signing the application, said to himj ‘I cannot pay the first premium, I have got to sell some stock before I can pay the money.’ If he had been able to pay the money at that time, the company has, and Mr. Fleer had, a receipt which the company calls a binding receipt, to be given to Mr. Mesloh if he paid the first premium, in which receipt it is stated that, the applicant having paid the first annual premium, this insurance will be effective from the time your application is approved by the home office. But Mr. Mesloh said he did not want to pay the premium at that time, and the arrangement made was this: Mr. Herman Mesloh said, ‘I will have to sell some stock, I am going in the army,’ I think he said shortly or the next day, 'and I will send the money, after I sell my stock, up to Mr. Brettman,’ who was his cousin and lived up in or near Deshler, Nebraska. And that arrangement was made, and Mr. Fleer was to deliver the policy to Mr. Brettman and ge,t the money at the time the policy was delivered; that was the arrangement.
“Now the policy got to Mr. Worth¡ who was state agent, living at St. Joe, Mo., along around the 22nd, 23d, or 21th of September. Mr. Fleer was out on the road at the time, and by the time Mr. Worth could get the policy to Mr. Fleer, and Mr. Fleer down to Deshler, Mr. Herman Mesloh was dead. I think he died the 5th of October.
“Mr. Fleer inquired of Mr. Brettman, who said no money or anything else had ever been paid to him on account of the policy. Now there is the case. It was simply where a man had applied for insurance, and never completed the transaction by paying his premium, ...”

The court held the defendant was bound up to the time it discovered it could not get the money from Brettman, and rendered judgment for the face of the policy, with interest, less the unpaid first annual premium, with interest.

The district court erred. The applicant agreed the company should be under no liability until the first annual premium was paid, and the first annual premium was not paid.

For present purposes it may be conceded Fleer had all the authority the board of directors of the company would have possessed if it had been dealing directly with the applicant. The applicant entered into an arrangement respecting payment of the premium, which was perfectly satisfactory to Fleer, and, under the concession, to the company. The arrangement was partly oral arid partly in writing, and was to this effect: The applicant was to obtain money with which to pay; payment was to be made in money when the policy was delivered to Brettman; meanwhile, there should be no liability on the part of the company. It is elementary law in this state that there could be no payment unless what was done extinguished all right of the company to collect premium for the [412]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 P. 754, 111 Kan. 409, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mesloh-v-lafayette-life-insurance-kan-1922.