Mooney v. Home Insurance

72 Mo. App. 92, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 135
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 Mo. App. 92 (Mooney v. Home 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
Mooney v. Home Insurance, 72 Mo. App. 92, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 135 (Mo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Gill, J.

This is a suit on an insui’ance policy for $1,000 covering plaintiff’s dwelling in the village of Halt, G-rundy county. The policy was issued in December, 1895, in pursuance of a written application therefor made through one Oowhick, a local agent at G-alt. The premium agreed to be paid was $15 a year, or $75 for the entire five years the policy was to run. Plaintiff seems to have been unable to meet the first payment of $15 when the policy was issued but paid to the agent only $1 at the time, and gave his ninety-day note for the $14 payable to the said agent, and for the remainder of the premium made an installment note to the company whereby he agreed to pay $15 on the first days of December, 1896, 1897, 1898, and 1899. Plaintiff also failed to pay the note of $14, which had been given for the first or cash installment, and was in default on that account at the date when the building was burned in June, 1896.

Because of this default on the part of the assured the defendant denied its liability and contended that the policy was avoided under and by virtue of the fol[95]*95lowing stipulation contained in both the written application and policy: “But it is expressly agreed that this company shall not be liable for any loss or damage that may occur to the property herein mentioned while any installment of the installment note given for premiums upon this policy remains due and unpaid; or while any single payment, promissory note (acknowledged as cash or otherwise) given for the tvhole or any portion of the premium, remains past due and unpaid.”

In reply to this defense the plaintiff set up that the company by its policy had in terms acknowledged receipt of the first or cash installment, and that it was therefore estopped to deny such receipt, or that at all events defendant had received all of such premium to which it was entitled, and therefore had no right to claim a forfeiture of the policy.

The cause was tried before the court without the aid of a jury, resulting in a judgment in plaintiff’s favor and defendant appealed.

I*reRtoNPay:in“1’ On the undisputed facts of this case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. It is clear that the assured failed to pay the first installment of the premium as he agreed — that at the date of the fire the note given for the first, or cash payment was “due and unpaid;” and then, giving force to the condition of the policy quoted in the foregoing statement, plaintiff’s right to indemnity under the policy was suspended, or had become forfeited. Dircks v. Ins. Co., 34 Mo. App. 31.

—{.receipt: The clause of the policy reciting that “The Home Insurance Company of New York in consideration of ‡15 paid, and the payment of installments when due on an installment note of $60 due as follows: “$15 on the first each of Decembér, 1896,” etc., does not estop the company from alleging and proving that said cash payment was [96]*96not paid. As held by us in case just cited, an acknowledgment of the receipt of the premium in the policy does not estop the company from showing that such premium has not been in fact paid. It is evidence tending to show such payment but not conclusive. There is no reason for treating such acknowledgments different from other receipts. “The recital in the policy of the receipt of the premium is prima facie evidence of the payment, but only prima facie. Like all other receipts it is open to explanation.” 2 May on Ins. [3 Ed.], sec. 359.

The policy in suit as well as the written application therefor seems to recognize that although payment in cash be acknowledged on the face of the instrument, yet a note may be taken for such acknowledged cash; and then it is provided, in plain and unambiguous terms contained in the application, that if such note “be not paid promptly when due, then said policy shall be suspended, inoperative, and of no force or effect until such installment or promissory note is paid.” Even to admit then that the policy in suit on its face acknowledges the receipt in cash of the first yearly premium, yet the proof shows that such premium was not paid in cash (except to the extent of $1 only) but that a note was given by the assured due in ninety days and that at the date of the loss such note was past due and unpaid. According to the contract then existing between the parties the policy was then inoperative and. of no force or effect.

ageñtTdefe^se!0 But it is contended by plaintiff’s counsel that the note given by the assured to cover the first yearly installment (and which in terms was payable to Cowhick, the agent) is a matter in which the defendant has no concern — that this was a business arrangement between the assured and the agent and that as to the defendant the plain[97]*97tiff was not in default. It might be well said in answer to this contention, that it is of no consequence whether the proceeds of the $14 note and the whole-title and interest therein belonged to Cowhick, the agent, or to the defendant company, since it is clear that it was given for and on account of the acknowledged cash payment, or first year’s premium, and the-clause in the application and policy applies as well and in effect declares that if the plaintiff failed to pay the same promptly at maturity then the policy should become void. Under the terms of the contract the policy was to become inoperative and of no force if the plaintiff failed to pay such note whether the same be the property of the insurer or its agent. This forfeiture clause wás clearly intended to work as a security for the prompt payment of the premium or the note given therefor. It may have been equally the desire and intent of the company to protect the agent as well as itself.

But the position of plaintiff’s counsel can not be maintained because of another aspect of the case. The note given by the assured to the agent for and on account of the first yearly premium was not shpwn to be the property of the agent. The first installment, or so-called cash premium, belonged to the insurance company. It is true that ordinarily this agent collected the first or cash premium and deducted therefrom his commission, accounting to defendant for the remainder. But in this case the agent’s commission did not amount to so much as the face of the note or first installment. Nor did the agent claim this note as his individual absolute property. He testified that if the entire premium for the five years had been collected he would have been entitled to fifteen per cent of the $75 or $11.25, but if only a yoart thereof was collected [98]*98then his interest or compensation was proportionately reduced&emdash;in other words that he was, at most, entitled to retain of the amount he should actually collect, fifteen per cent thereof. Neither is there any evidence in this ease to show that this first installment was by the company charged against the agent. In short, the proof shows without dispute that the plaintiff’s obligation to pay the first or cash installment was a chose in action belonging to the defendant, and at most the agent had only such interest as his commission would amount to.

-: -: waiver. There is nothing here tending to establish a waiver of defendant’s rights to insist on the payment of the first installment at the time required by the note given therefor.

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Related

Finney v. American Central Ins. Company
41 S.W.2d 1063 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1927)
Farmers Bank v. St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Co.
95 S.W. 286 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
Mooney v. Home Insurance
80 Mo. App. 192 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 Mo. App. 92, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mooney-v-home-insurance-moctapp-1897.