Mid-America Corporation v. Roach

1966 OK 32, 412 P.2d 188, 1966 Okla. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 15, 1966
Docket40653
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1966 OK 32 (Mid-America Corporation v. Roach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mid-America Corporation v. Roach, 1966 OK 32, 412 P.2d 188, 1966 Okla. LEXIS 345 (Okla. 1966).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice.

Defendant in error, Anna Louise Roach, hereinafter called the plaintiff, commenced this action against the plaintiff in error, Mid-America Corporation, a corporation, as the successor in interest to Selected Investments Corporation, a corporation, and others who are not involved in this appeal. Although the original transaction involved was with Selected Investments Corporation, the plaintiff in error admitted in the trial court that it is the successor to all interests of Selected, so no distinction will *190 be made between them. Either will be referred to herein as the defendant.

In her petition, as amended, plaintiff alleged that on the 28th day of September, 1957, she and her husband, W. K. Roach, jointly borrowed $3,000.00-plus from the defendant, on their promissory note, payable in monthly installments, secured by a real estate mortgage; that in connection with such loan and by agreement with the plaintiff and her husband the defendant deducted $75.00 from the proceeds of the loan to pay the first year’s premium on a policy of term life insurance on the life of said W. K. Roach in the amount of $3,750.-00, and agreed to purchase such a policy of life insurance and to use said $75.00 to pay the first year’s premium thereon, and further agreed to pay subsequent premiums on such insurance out of a portion of the monthly payments to be made by the borrowers in excess of the amount required to be applied to interest and principal of the loan and held in escrow for that purpose, until the indebtedness be fully discharged or until the death of said W. K. Roach, whichever should occur first.

The petition further alleged that the defendant failed to procure any policy of insurance on the life of W. K. Roach and did not notify the plaintiff or her husband of that fact and did not return, or offer to return, any part of the $75.00; that all of such acts on the part of the defendant lulled the plaintiff and her husband into believing that such a policy of insurance on the life of W. K. Roach had been purchased and was in force and effect, thereby constituting a fraud upon them; that said W. K. Roach died on November 16, 1959; that all payments on the loan indebtedness have been made, with the plaintiff, who was jointly and severally indebted on the loan, having made all such payments since the death of her said husband; that if the defendant had procured such a policy of insurance and paid the premiums thereon as they became due, as agreed, plaintiff would have received the $3,750.00 proceeds of the policy and after paying and satisfying the loan indebtedness in full would have had the balance of such insurance proceeds for her own use and benefit; and that as a direct and proximate result of the defendant’s breach of contract, and fraud, the plaintiff has been damaged in the amount of $3,750.00.

The plaintiff’s evidence at the trial failed completely to show any agreement concerning the payment of premiums for the second and subsequent policy years, and did not show that the monthly payments to be made or made by the borrowers included any amount to go into their escrow account for the payment of such premiums. Otherwise, the stipulations of the parties during the trial and the evidence adduced by the plaintiff established all of the facts alleged by the plaintiff as hereinabove set forth.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant demurred thereto, and when such demurrer was overruled the defendant elected to stand on its demurrer, and judgment was rendered against it in favor of the plaintiff for $3,750.00, with interest thereon from November 3, 1959, and the costs of the action.

The manager of the defendant’s Tulsa office, where the basic transaction took place, was called as a witness by the plaintiff and testified, among other things, that when the company purchased life insurance in connection with a loan he ordinarily signed the policy as agent; that the company records indicated that $75.00 had been deducted from the loan proceeds for the payment of premium on life insurance, but did not indicate that any policy of insurance had been purchased in this instance; that $75.00 would have been one year’s premium on a level term life insurance policy in the amount of $3,750.00 with the benefits remaining the same through the life of the policy; and that when such a policy was purchased by the company in connection with a loan, the policy and premium notices were sent by the insurer to the borrowers.

*191 In its brief herein, the defendant advances only one proposition:

“The evidence before the trial court was insufficient to establish an agreement by Mid-America to pay, from payment proceeds, successive annual life insurance premiums on the life of Mr. Roach.”

and, in connection therewith, states:

“There is no question but that at the time of the inception of the loan on September 27, 1957, there was deducted from the loan proceeds of Mr. and Mrs. Roach the sum of $75.00 for one year’s premium on credit level term life insurance in the sum of $3,750.00; that no policy of life insurance was ever received by Mr. and Mrs. Roach, nor was there ever any notice to Mr. and Mrs. Roach of subsequent premiums due; that Mr. Roach died November 16, 1959; more than two years after the inception of the loan.
“Mid-America concedes there can be no question but that it would be liable to Mrs. Roach as an insurer during the one year from September 27, 1957, to September 26, 1958.”

If we disregard the defendant’s attempt to limit its liability as an insurer to a particular period of time, its concession of liability is in harmony with the general rule stated in 44 C.J.S. Insurance § 225, p. 940:

“The measure of damages for breach of the contract to procure insurance is the amount which might have been recovered under such insurance if procured as agreed.”

This rule was applied by this court in Beam et al. v. Green, 208 Okl. 10, 252 P.2d 444, which was an action by a mortgagor under a chattel mortgage against the mortgagee for damages for breach of contract to procure fire insurance on the mortgaged automobile, the premium for which insurance had been included in the mortgage indebtedness, brought after the automobile was destroyed by fire; and in Simons v. Harber et al., 116 Okl. 233, 243 P. 510, and Ward et al. v. Continental Ins. Corporation et al., 165 Okl. 20, 24 P.2d 654, which involved breach of contract by lenders to take steps necessary to validate existing fire insurance policies under the new situations involved therein, this court affirmed or approved judgments against the lenders in the amounts which would have been received under the policies if the lender had taken the steps necessary to validate them under the new situations as agreed.

Except for the contention that the plaintiff’s evidence failed to establish any agreement concerning the payment of premiums for policy years subsequent to the first policy year of the policy to be purchased under the basic agreement, the defendant makes no attempt to show why its admitted liability to the plaintiff for the amount of the policy which it agreed to purchase but did not purchase should be limited to any particular period of time.

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Bluebook (online)
1966 OK 32, 412 P.2d 188, 1966 Okla. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-america-corporation-v-roach-okla-1966.