Pearl Assurance Co. v. National Insurance Agency, Inc.

30 A.2d 333, 151 Pa. Super. 146
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 1942
DocketAppeals, 112 and 116
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 30 A.2d 333 (Pearl Assurance Co. v. National Insurance Agency, Inc.) 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
Pearl Assurance Co. v. National Insurance Agency, Inc., 30 A.2d 333, 151 Pa. Super. 146 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This action of trespass was before us in 150 Pa. Superior Ct. 265, 28 A. 2d 334. We ordered a re-argument because the theory on which we were inclined to decide the case had not been raised or argued, and we thought it only fair to the litigants, as well as to this court, that we should have the benefit of the argument of counsel before making our decision. That argument has now been had, and we are confirmed in our opinion that the judgments should be affirmed.

We shall not repeat the facts recited in our prior opinion. Reference may be had to it. The gist of the action was the unlawful withholding, appropriation, or conversion to their own use, by the defendants — the individual defendant being the sole stockholder and owner of the corporation defendant, who personally did all the acts complained of — of premiums actually received by them on certain fire insurance policies which had been intrusted to them by the plaintiff for the «purpose of delivery, and to collect the premiums, and pay over the same, less commissions, to the plaintiff.

The defense in the court below was (1) that the corporate defendant was licensed only as an insurance broker, 1 not an insurance agent, and that while admittedly liable in assumpsit for all the net premiums, whether actually received or not, it was not liable in *149 trespass for the premiums paid to it and converted by it to its own use; and (2) as to the individual de-' fendant that he could not be held personally liable for the acts of the corporate defendant.

We pointed out that the Insurance Department Act of 1921, in classifying, for certain purposes, representatives of insurance companies into “agents” and “brokers” did not prevent an insurance broker from acting as a representative or agent for an insurance company in the collection of the premiums on a policy intrusted to him for delivery and its payment over to the company less his agreed commission. See Gosch v. Firemen’s Ins. Co., 33 Pa. Superior Ct. 496. We said, “One does not have to be licensed as either an insurance broker or insurance agent to do this. Any person, or any corporation whose .business bears any relation to insurance, or to the delivery of papers, deeds, contracts, etc. may be authorized by an insurance company to deliver a policy and collect the premium; and when so collected, the duty attaches to pay over the amount so received, less the costs, expenses, etc. incident thereto, to the insurance company. As pointed out in Transcontinental Oil Co. v. Atlas Assurance Co. Ltd., 278 Pa. 558, 123 A. 497, the purpose of Article VI (P. L. 810) of said Act of 1921 was to compel registration of the classes of individuals named, and to prohibit the doing of certain acts declared unlawful. ‘There is nothing in the statute relied upon which may be said to change the well-established rule that the insured, in making payment, may safely rest on the implied authority to receive the premium, which the company confers on the person to whom the policy has been given for delivery’. (P. 565).”

‘There is nothing inherently inconsistent between the position of an insurance broker in the placing of policies and his acting for the insurance company in collecting the premiums and remitting the proceeds after deducting his commissions.

*150 We were met, however, with the ruling of the Supreme Court in Life Assn. v. Catlin, 2 Walker 338 (1879), which held that trover would not lie to recover the amount 'of premiums oh life insurance policies received by defendant as agent for plaintiff, for which he was to receive a percentage; that the action of trover was restricted to cases where it was the duty of the defendant to turn over to the plaintiff the identical or specific goods received by him; or as respects money, the identical coin or bank notes received.

The question now before us is whether this ruling has been affected by the Acts of May 25, 1887, P. L. 271 and May 18, 1917, P. L. 241. 2 We hold that it has.

One effect of the Act of 1887, P. L. 271, abolishing the distinction between actions ex contractu and actions ex delicto, so far as relates to procedure, and providing for two forms of action, a'ssumpsit and trespass, was to abolish all procedural distinctions between actions ex delicto, and malee all damages growing out of such actions recoverable in one form of action, to be called an 'action of trespass’. This did not have the effect of confining the new action of trespass, so prescribed, to exactly the same wrongs, delicts or torts as were covered at that time by the actions of trespass, trover and trespass on the case. Any civil wrong, delict or tort thereafter arising, whether or not it could have been included within the former actions of trespass, trover or trespass on the case, is, since the effective date of the Act of 1887, supra, made remediable in an action of 'trespass.’ To rule otherwise would deny a remedy to the injured party unless an appropriate form of action existed centuries ago, 3 notwithstanding modern condi *151 tions have brought with them new and additional wrongs, delicts or torts, recognized by the legislature to be such. Our action of assumpsit was originally a form of trespass on the case for breach of a parol undertaking. See discussion in Battles v. Nesbit, 149 Pa. Superior Ct. 113, 116-119, 27 A. 2d 694. It has since become our only form of action ex contractu. There is no reason for keeping the present action of ‘trespass’ in a strait jacket fashioned in the Fifteenth Century.* ** 4

By the Act of May 18, 1917, P. L. 241, it was provided “that any person having received or having possession, in any capacity or by any means or manner whatever, of >any money or property......of or belonging to any other person, firm or corporation, or which any other person, firm or corporation i's entitled to receive and have, who fraudulently withholds, converts or applies the same, or any part thereof, or the proceeds or any part of the proceeds, derived from the sale or other disposition thereof, to and for his own use and benefit, or to and for the use and benefit of any other person, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor”, etc. Commonly known as fraudulent conversion, it is not confined to cases of conversion following a supposititious finding, or trover, and hence is not limited to cases where the duty rested on the defendant to deliver to the owner the identical property, Coin, bank-notes, etc., which he received. It applies as well to cases where property, securities, etc. were placed with the defendant with authority to deliver or dispose of them and collect or receive the proceeds for the owner, and he fraudulently withholds, converts or misapplies the *152

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 A.2d 333, 151 Pa. Super. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearl-assurance-co-v-national-insurance-agency-inc-pasuperct-1942.