Peterson v. Farmers Mutual Insurance

124 P.2d 504, 155 Kan. 244, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 11, 1942
DocketNo. 35,433
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 P.2d 504 (Peterson v. Farmers Mutual 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
Peterson v. Farmers Mutual Insurance, 124 P.2d 504, 155 Kan. 244, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 86 (kan 1942).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This was an action based upon an alleged oral contract to renew a policy of fire insurance. The pertinent facts were developed by the pleadings. Defendant is a mutual fire, hail and tomado insurance company organized and governed by article 10 of the insurance code (G. S. 1935, 40-1001 et seq., as amended by G. S. 1941 Supp. 40-1027).

In his original petition, which was filed on August 21, 1940, plaintiff alleged that he was the owner of a quarter section farm in [245]*245Shawnee county on which was a barn and other buildings which had been insured by defendant under a policy which expired on April 23, 1940. A copy of that policy was attached to plaintiff’s petition.

Plaintiff alleged that on April 10, 1940, about two weeks prior to the expiration of the policy, one Paul M. Lyttle, defendant’s agent, solicited plaintiff to renew the insurance for an additional year from the date of its expiration; and agreeably thereto plaintiff signed an application for such insurance and delivered it to Lyttle—

“And entered into an agreement with said agent of the defendant that said policy of insurance should be renewed or reissued upon its expiration for the further period of one year in consideration of the amount of the premium for such insurance which plaintiff agreed to pay and said agent of the defendant agreed to accept at wheat harvest time of the year 1940.”

It was further alleged that on May 14, 1940, plaintiff paid said Lyttle the sum of five dollars to apply on the insurance premium, but no renewal policy was issued by defendant, and plaintiff’s barn was burned on May 16, 1940.

Plaintiff alleged that notice and proof of loss were furnished in accordance with the terms of the policy which had expired and which defendant through its agent- had agreed to renew. Judgment for $1,100 for the loss of the barn was prayed for.

The policy attached to the petition under which the barn had been insured for the previous year, designated exhibit A, and which was attached to the petition to show the kind of policy contract plaintiff allegedly had bargained for, covers seven pages of the abstract, some terms of which may require attention as we proceed.

In compliance with a motion of defendant to make his petition definite and certain, plaintiff amended it by alleging that his written application for renewal insurance had been delivered to Lyttle and that plaintiff had no copy of it, and that the agreement between plaintiff and Lyttle about the renewal of the insurance had been oral, and that their further agreement that payment of the premium would be made and accepted at harvest time was oral also. Plaintiff further amended his petition by alleging that the terms of his written application for renewal insurance were as shown in the exhibit A attached to plaintiff’s petition.

These amendments having been made to plaintiff’s petition, defendant interposed a general demurrer which the court sustained on April 19, 1941. With leave of court plaintiff filed a third amend[246]*246ment to his petition in which he alleged that at the time defendant executed the policy as shown in exhibit A and at the time the oral contract for renewal of the insurance was made between plaintiff and defendant’s' agent Lyttle, defendant was authorized to enlarge its corporate functions as prescribed in section 1 of chapter 253 of the Laws of 1937, G. S. 1941 Supp. 40-1027; that the policy, exhibit A, was a standard farm insurance policy such as used by stock fire insurance companies authorized to do business in Kansas; that the policy exhibit A had been executed prior, to the payment of the premium in full, that the unpaid balance had been carried upon open account by Lyttle as agent for defendant, and that plaintiff had paid the balance of the premium on exhibit A (the expired policy) after it had been issued, and that—

“The defendant is estopped to deny the authority of said agent to accept payments for the renewal of said policy upon the same or a similar basis.”

Plaintiff also alleged that in reliance on the agreements of Lyttle, as defendant’s agent, plaintiff had failed to procure other insurance on the property concerned for the period covered by the oral contract of renewal, to wit, April 23,1940, to April 23,1941.

Plaintiff also alleged that the statute of 1937, G. S. 1941 Supp. 40-1027, as construed by commissioner of insurance, enabled mutual insurance companies to extend their corporate business to the same scope as stock insurance companies, and that the form of standard farm policy* issued by defendant had been approved by that officer. Plaintiff also alleged—

“That since the compliance of the defendant with the provisions of section 40-1027 [of G. S. Supp. 1941] and its authorization to do business thereunder, the defendant is in fact an insurance company operating for profit and is no longer doing business as a mutual fire and tornado insurance company within the contemplation of the laws of this state exclusive of said section 40-1027.”

Defendant filed a motion to strike some recitals from the third amended petition as inconsistent with certain of its allegations of fact, also because of their redundancy as conclusions of law. The trial court sustained that motion, and thereafter defendant filed a demurrer to the third amended petition on the ground that it did not state a cause of action. The trial court sustained that demurrer and plaintiff appeals. The correctness of that ruling is the sole question open to our review.

Appellant first propounds the legal question whether the favored position of a mutual insurance company conferred by statute and [247]*247repeatedly -sustained by this court still exists when such mutual company has accumulated a bona fide net surplus of $100,000 and is thereby authorized to enlarge and expand its corporate business as authorized by the statute of 1937 (G. S, 1941 Supp. 40-1027).

We think this question must be answered in the affirmative. The purpose of the statute of 1937 was to enlarge the corporate powers of such mutual insurance companies as had conducted their corporate affairs so successfully that they had accumulated a surplus of $100,000. The statute nowhere intimates that the other corporate powers and privileges theretofore conferred by statute on mutual companies were to be curtailed in the slightest degree. In Reser v. Southern Kansas Mutual Ins. Co., 150 Kan. 58, 63, 91 P. 2d 25, it was said:

“Mutual fire insurance companies which were originally founded as a matter of legislative policy to enable farmers to obtain insurance at low cost have always been regarded as favorites in Kansas law. After flourishing for a generation, whether they are now fundamentally different' from other fire insurance companies may fairly be questioned; but if not, the legislature alone can change the state’s policy toward them. Their favored status has been written too deeply and too frequently to change that policy by judicial decree. (Lohr v. Farmers Alliance Ins. Co., 144 Kan. 776, 778, 62 P. 2d 837.)”

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Related

Lallak v. Farmers' Mutual Insurance
257 P.2d 933 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 P.2d 504, 155 Kan. 244, 1942 Kan. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-farmers-mutual-insurance-kan-1942.