Norman M. Morris v. Federated Mutual Insurance Company

497 F.2d 538
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 1974
Docket73-2669
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 497 F.2d 538 (Norman M. Morris v. Federated Mutual Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norman M. Morris v. Federated Mutual Insurance Company, 497 F.2d 538 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:

Following amicable termination of his employment Morris, a former insurance solicitor employee of Insurer, Federated Mutual Insurance Company, a direct writing company, brought this suit seeking to recover over $12,000.00 in back salary, retirement funds and an amount due on a contract settlement. Insurer counterclaimed alleging that Morris owed the company for losses incurred under policies written without company authorization and chargebacks for commissions paid to Morris on cancelled policies or unpaid premiums. While the parties agreed in a pretrial stipulation that Morris was entitled to back pay and retirement funds worth over $6,000.00, 1 Morris found this amount offset by the District Court’s final judgment in favor of Insurer. When the dust had cleared, Morris was not only left with empty pockets, he was indebted to his former employer to the tune of approximately $12,000.00. 2 Concluding that the District Court improperly allowed recovery by Insurer for chargebacks and incurred losses and disallowed renewal contract payments, we reverse.

Morris had worked as a straight commission salesman for Insurer from April 1966, until December 1, 1970. 3 He was a high producer with a gross of a half million in premiums and net commission in the neighborhood of $48,000.00. On December 1, 1970, he began working under a new sales agreement by which he would receive a fixed salary for $17,500.00 plus commissions on new business only. Morris thereafter voluntarily terminated his employment with Federated Mutual on January 31, 1971.

In June 1970 prior to converting over to a salaried employee on December 1, *540 Morris at Insurer’s behest had contracted with it to transfer all of his existing accounts (commercial and P.I.D.) to a new agent in return for $7,532.00 to be paid over a five year period. This transfer agreement occurred prior to and is separate from his December new employment contract.

Chargebacks

When Morris assumed his new employment status as a salaried agent he was to receive no further commissions for policies written by him before December 1, 1970. Insurer in its counterclaim contended that while Morris would receive no commissions for his old business Insurer had the right under the new employment contract to deduct from Morris’ salary (not just commissions on new business) the appropriate portion of all premiums credited to him prior to December 1, 1970 but which from nonpayment by policy holders, cancellations, etc., were not retained by Insurer. These adjustments are called charge-backs and were standard procedure under Morris’ former commission employment contract. Morris disclaims any chargeback liability after December 1, 1970, asserting that under his new employment contract he was to receive neither commissions nor chargebacks from policies written before December 1, 1970.

The District Court found that appellant owed the appellee over $4,000.00 in chargebacks for returned or unearned premiums arising from business written before December 1 (see Item (i), note 2, supra.). While making no mention of the new employment contract, the District Court, presumably crediting Insurer’s evidence as to the intention of the parties, held that the new December 1970 contract did not alter the former requirement of an adjustment.

As with the June 1970 renewal transfer agreement, the conversion by Morris from a commission to a salary contract was not his idea or necessarily to any advantage to him. On the contrary it was initiated by the company in November of 1970 as a part of its high-level management plan to disengage from the sale of unprofitable casualty lines of insurance in the Miami area. Morris’ conversion contract was embodied in a “New Sales Agreement” which in letter form merely stated that “[y] our annual salary will be $17,500.00, plus new business commissions . . .” Although this was a written contract, evidence was introduced by both parties undertaking to recite the substance of words spoken in the formulation of the new agreement in an effort to demonstrate what the respective positions of the parties were when the agreement was signed. On this Morris argued that as an integral part of the agreement it was intended that he would not be held liable for chargebacks on old business when he was relinquishing any right to future commissions from his old business. Insurer countered with the contention that it was intended that Morris continue to be bound by the former employment contract and the salary merely paid him for servicing the existing policies (and any renewals) of the discontinued lines of insurance. Thus the new agreement was merely a written modification of the existing contract.

The cardinal rule under Florida law for construction of a contract is to ascertain and give effect to the mutual intentions of the parties. Shuford Development Co. v. Crysler Corp., 5 Cir., 1971, 449 F.2d 429, 432; Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Florida East Coast Ry., 5 Cir., 1968, 399 F.2d 854, 856. In doing so the Court must attempt to place itself in the respective positions of the parties to determine their intent when the contract was signed. The process includes consideration of all surrounding circumstances including the language of the agreement and actions of the parties during negotiation.

In interpreting Morris’ employment contract, which contains no expressed terms regarding chargebacks, we consider the agreement as a whole in the setting of the parties but without regard to what each side’s witnesses de *541 scribed the intention to have been. At the outset, the agreement is entitled “New Sales Agreement” with no reference to being a modification of an existing employment contract. The agreement provides that Morris “will be placed under a salary and new business commission basis for the sales in Bro-ward and Dade Counties in Florida.” No mention is made that Morris will lose commissions from old lines of business. To the contrary, the structure is to distinguish sharply between old business and new business. For old business the commission system is out altogether. For servicing old business including renewals of it, the sole compensation is a salary. The only business subject to commission is new business written after December 1970.

Additionally, there is even less basis for concluding, as Insurer insists, that while denominated a “new” employment contract it was really meant to be a sort of adjunct to the former employment contract. This contract in its main part (para. 3) prescribed that the employee will be compensated in accordance with the “Premium Plan of Compensation” which was attached. Except for a single rare case, 4 the method of compensation prescribed is that of commissions on new and renewal business. 5

Out of a system of commissions as the source and measure of compensation comes the appropriateness of debits when premiums are lost or reduced.

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Bluebook (online)
497 F.2d 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-m-morris-v-federated-mutual-insurance-company-ca5-1974.