Shepherd v. Union Central Life Ins. Co.

74 F.2d 180, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3904
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 1934
Docket7345
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 74 F.2d 180 (Shepherd v. Union Central Life Ins. Co.) 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
Shepherd v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 74 F.2d 180, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3904 (5th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.

E. D. Shepherd, Sr., sued the Union Central Life Insurance Company for a breach of contract in that the company terminated in February, 1933, his contract as its genei*al agent for a large territory in Texas which was by its terms to run till June, 1939. The company pleaded in justification a provision of the contract reading: “This contract may be terminated on thirty days notice in writing, except as provided in Article 7, at the option of the party of the second part (Shepherd); or at the election of the party of the first part (the Company) if the party of the second part shall fail to perform any of his agreements as herein expressed, or shall fail to conduct the business, or secure an amount of insurance, satisfactory to the Company,” alleging that it was dissatisfied at his conduct of the business and at the amount of insurance he was securing. The court on hearing the evidence directed the jury to find a verdict for the company, and Shepherd appeals, contending that the quoted provision of the contract should be construed so as to require reasonable grounds for dissatisfaction and that none were shown; or if actual dissatisfaction though unreasonable be sufficient, that the jury might have found that it was not real but was pretended for an ulterior end.

The contract is lengthy. It appoints Shepherd as the company’s general agent for ten years from June 13, 1929, unless previously terminated, to organize the territory assigned, to procure applications for life insurance, deliver policies, collect premiums and perform other duties, in twenty-eight counties of Texas; but the right is reserved to establish other agencies therein, or to withdraw such portions of the territory as Shepherd “fails to organize and operate to the satisfaction of the said party of the first part.” The compensation is to be wholly by commissions on first premiums and on renewal premiums to the number of nine. The right to the commission on renewal premiums is to survive a termination of the *181 contract (article 7), but otherwise it is terminable as provided in the clause above set out. No right under the contract is assignable except with the company’s written consent. This contract was the fourth of the sort made with Shepherd, who had had this territory for twenty-five years -when this one was signed, and had been highly successful up to that time. Very clearly the company did not thereby bind itself absolutely for ten years but reserved the right to withdraw any of the territory which was not organized or operated to its satisfaction or to terminate the whole relation, except as to commissions on renewals, if Shepherd should fail to keep any of his express agreements, or should fail to conduct the business in a manner, or to secure an amount of insurance, satisfactory to the company. The express agreements are not in question. The contract was terminated only because the company professed a dissatisfaction with Shepherd’s conduct of the agency and with the amount of insurance produced in 1931 and 1932.

The first question is whether Shepherd can contend that there was no reasonable cause for dissatisfaction, thus making the court the judge of the sufficiency of his performance, or is the company’s conclusion final ? Contracts in which one party makes satisfaction on the other’s part a condition of success in performance have been frequently before the courts. Thus where there is a sale in which the article sold is to satisfy the buyer after examination or trial, there is only a sale on approval. No great loss results to the seller if the article is returned to him, and the courts have never hesitated to enforce the contract literally. When a thing is to be specially made for another and particularly when labor and material are to be expended on another’s property to that other’s satisfaction, the injustice done by a captious rejection or by the unremunerated retention of the improvement upon a profession of dissatisfaction has led courts to a greater caution. If the contract aims at a definite mechanical or financial or other result, or at operative fitness, of which other persons can judge as well as the eontractee, and especially if the tests of performance are fully sot out in the contract so as to be certainly applied, the leaning is to hold in spite of a stipulation for satisfaction that performance is successful if it attains the intended result and fulfills the contractual tests, and dissatisfaction professed notwithstanding is treated as unreal or fraudulent. If, however, the contractee has stipulated for a satisfaction of his own fancy, taste, sensibility, or judgment in a matter involving such things, he is entitled to be satisfied, and the fancy or taste or judgment of others cannot be substituted. 13 C. J. 675. We apprehend that in all cases parties have the right to contract as they see fit on this point and are to be held to their contract whether judicious or rash, so long as the discontented party acts in good faith and is really dissatisfied. When the thing or the service contracted for is one as to which satisfaction as a mental state would naturally be desired and insisted on, as in a contract for a portrait, a suit of clothes, personal services, a business association, or the like, it is not improbable that such satisfaction, to be judged of alone by the person to to be satisfied, is really intended by both parties and dissatisfaction, though good reasons be not given, may easily be real. But if a fixed result is aimed at and tests are set up which are fulfilled, it is much less likely that a reference to satisfaction is intended literally, especially when the results would be hard and unjust, and in such circumstances a professed dissatisfaction without any good reason seems necessarily unreal and pretended. In the light of these principles we have no hesitation in holding this contract to stipulate literally for a continuing satisfaction on the company’s part with the operation of the agency and its results. The express agreements about keeping records, making accountings, and the physical handling of the business, which are not here in question do not exhaust the field. A very important part of the company’s business was placed for development and management .into Shepherd’s hands, and whether as circumstances changed his methods were wise, his efforts sufficient and the results what they should be were questions of most refined business judgment. Not only are the immediate results to be considered, but the substantialness of the foundations for future business, the progress of the good will of the company in the territory, a well-trained and satisfied soliciting personnel, and many other things could enter into the judgment. A most confidential relationship was set up, a business association somewhat suggesting the relationship of partners. It can be readily understood that assignment of the contract should be prohibited, that Shepherd should stipulate for a release on 30 days notice without any reason on his part, *182 and that the company should stipulate for a termination of it if dissatisfied with the operations or results, without having to convince either Shepherd or a jury that it ought to he. dissatisfied. We may well suppose that a ten year contract would never have been signed by either party without such stipulations for its termination. Under them, if the company was really dissatisfied, it had the right to end the relationship, whether its dissatisfaction seemed reasonable to Shepherd or not.

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Bluebook (online)
74 F.2d 180, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 3904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-v-union-central-life-ins-co-ca5-1934.