State Investment Co. v. Cimarron Insurance Co.

326 P.2d 299, 183 Kan. 190, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 338
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 7, 1958
Docket40,934
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 326 P.2d 299 (State Investment Co. v. Cimarron Insurance Co.) 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
State Investment Co. v. Cimarron Insurance Co., 326 P.2d 299, 183 Kan. 190, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 338 (kan 1958).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

This was an action by a finance company against an insurance company for the recovery of unearned premiums on some *191 thirty canceled insurance policies which it financed. From a judgment in plaintiff’s favor, defendant appeals.

The pertinent facts follow: State Investment Company, appellee (hereinafter referred to as plaintiff or finance company), is a McPherson corporation engaged in the business of financing individual purchases of insurance policies. Cimarron Insurance Company, appellant (hereinafter referred to as defendant or insurance company), is a Kansas insurance corporation. The Hammond Insurance Agency at all times pertinent to this action acted as defendant’s agent to receive and accept applications for insurance and to collect premiums in the Kansas City, Missouri area.

All of the policies in question were issued by the defendant through the Hammond agency. The policy premiums were financed by the plaintiff. In each case the financing plan worked as follows: Plaintiff furnished Hammond with -its financing forms, and upon sale of a policy Hammond certified that it had issued the policy, forwarding an executed premium payment agreement, together with the certificate, to the plaintiff. Ry the terms of the premium payment agreement the policyholder, in consideration of the premium payment by the finance company to the insurance company, assigned to the finance company any unearned premiums to which he might become entitled under the financed insurance policy. That assignment was contained in the following words:

“In consideration of the payment by the payee-hereof to the insurance companies of the premiums for which this note is given, the undersigned hereby assigns to the payee any unearned premium to which he may become entitled under the insurance policies financed by reason, of this note, as hereinafter provided.”

Upon receipt of the payment agreement and certification from the insurance agent, plaintiff then sent a notice to the insurance company, asking it to verify the issuance of the policy and to agree to pay to the finance company the return or unearned premiums in the event of cancellation. The notice to the insurance company read in part as follows:

“You will take notice of the agreement with the assured . . . and your acceptance of this Installment Payment arrangement with the assured shall be construed as acknowledgment of our contract, and you hereby agree that in the event of any cancellation which will require surrender of any policy without unearned premium, for which the note is given, that you will first deduct the unpaid balance and remit that amount direct to the undersigned.”

*192 It was further provided that the gross premium would be mailed upon receipt of the insurance company’s acknowledgment of the agreement. The insurance company then signed and returned the following acknowledgment to the finance company:

“Acknowledgment to The State Investment
Company McPherson, Kansas
“As per your notice to us in regard to premium payment agreement on policy (ies) as above indicated, we hereby accept the obligations of that agreement in your behalf, and we will protect your interests by paying to you all return premiums and losses to the extent of the then existing balance due you on this policy (ies).
“Please remit full gross premium to [agent] upon receipt of this acknowledgment. “[Cimarron Insurance Co., Inc.]”

The testimony indicated that the finance company considered the unearned premiums security for its loans, so that in the event the policy purchaser did not make proper payments to the finance company the policy would be canceled and the finance company would receive the unearned premiums to pay the balance owed for financing the purchase of the policy.

It was admitted that plaintiff knew nothing about the people who purchased the thirty insurance policies. All transactions were conducted through Hammond. Hammond wrote the policies, sent the executed agreements and certifications to the plaintiff, made collection of installment payments and remitted them to plaintiff. Hammond,' as agent of the defendant, also received the premium payments from plaintiff and remitted them to defendant. All the policies in question were canceled before expiration, and defendant, by means of credits on Hammond’s account, returned the unearned premiums to Hammond.

Plaintiff was unable to collect from either defendant or Hammond the return or unearned premiums on the thirty policies, and brought this action against the insurance company for recovery of the return premiums to the extent of the unpaid portions of its loans. Plaintiff alleged that it paid the financed portion of the insurance premiums in reliance upon defendant’s agreement contained in its “acknowledgment.” Defendant, in its answer, specifically denied that the persons named as policyholders in plaintiff’s petition signed, executed or delivered promissory, notes to the plaintiff, and denied the genuineness of the signatures appearing on any notes held by plaintiff. This denial was verified. Plaintiff, in reply, alleged that defendant was estopped from denying the sufficiency or execution *193 of the notes held by plaintiff, since it recognized the validity and sufficiency of the notes by executing the “acknowledgment”; that thereafter and in reliance thereon, plaintiff paid the premium loans to defendant and that defendant had not returned or tendered to plaintiff the amount of money so received by it.

No testimony was offered to establish the validity of the notes or the execution or genuineness of the signatures appearing thereon, with the exception of the so-called Quickway note and one small note.

After trial to a jury a general verdict was returned for the plaintiff. In answer to special questions, the jury found, inter alia, that the Hammond agency was the authorized agent of defendant for receipt of the proceeds of premium policy loans and that plaintiff paid these proceeds to Hammond as agent, in reliance upon its agreement with defendant as set out in the notification and acknowledgment. It found further that defendant owed the return premiums to plaintiff and the insured upon cancellation of the policies, and that defendant had credited these return premiums to Hammond for distribution to the persons entitled thereto.

Defendant contends that as a stranger to the insurance policies plaintiff’s only claim to the unearned premiums on cancellation of the policies was by assignment from the insured, which assignment is found only in the notes or premium payment agreements from the insured to the plaintiff; that defendant put in issue the question of the valid execution of those notes by verified denial in accordance with G. S. 1949, 60-729, which placed on the plaintiff the burden of establishing the validity of the instruments. With the exception of the Quickway note, on which defendant admits plaintiff is entitled to recover $513.48, defendant contends that plaintiff failed to establish the validity of the notes on which its right by assignment rests and therefore it cannot recover.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
326 P.2d 299, 183 Kan. 190, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-investment-co-v-cimarron-insurance-co-kan-1958.