Travelers' Insurance v. Parker

47 A. 1042, 92 Md. 22, 1900 Md. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 16, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 A. 1042 (Travelers' Insurance v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers' Insurance v. Parker, 47 A. 1042, 92 Md. 22, 1900 Md. LEXIS 3 (Md. 1900).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The appellee sued the appellant in assumpsit to recover for services rendered to it, and the judgment being in his favor, this appeal has been taken from the rulings of the Court in excluding certain evidence offered by the defendant, and in granting two prayers of the plaintiff, and rejecting the defendant’s only prayer. The exception relating to the exclusion of evidence, having been abandoned at the argument, will not therefore be considered.

The declaration contains the common money counts, and also a special count based upon the following written memorandum between the parties:

Baltimore, Md., January 18, 1893.
“Memorandum of commission to be paid to F. M. Parker, account of Accident Insurance of Railway Postal Clerks.
“Upon all regular accident premiums and renewals secured by Mr. Parker between December 1, 1892, and December 1, 1893, and for which he pays the cash to The Travelers’ Insurance Co., or its authorized agents, he is to receive the following commissions, viz.: On less than 100 premiums or renewals, 20 per cent.
“ For 100 premiums or renewals, 30 per cent, or 10 per cent bonus.
“For 200 premiums or renewals, 35 per cent, or 15 per cent bonus.
“ On annuity premiums, 25 per cent and no more.
“He is to receive the regular 20 per cent when each premium is paid in full, and the additional bonus (if due him), at the expiration of the year, viz.: December 1, 1893.
(Signed) Frank M. Parker, Solicitor.
(Signed) J. F. Beard, Cashier.”

The execution of this agreement was admitted, and it was *28 agreed that the services sued for were all performed between December i, 1895, and October 1, 1896. It was further admitted that the plaintiff did, during the time covered by this suit, $6,480 worth of business, and that the defendant, if liable at all, is liable for the sum of $648, with interest, in the discretion of the jury from June 1, 1897.

The plaintiff does not claim that there was any other express contract between the defendant and himself than that above set forth, but he alleges that he continued in the service of the defendant uninterruptedly from December 1, 1892, to October 1, 1896, without any change of contract, and that by implication of law the original contract has been extended, or renewed, from year to year, so as to cover the period between December 1, 1895, and October 1, 1896, all services rendered prior to December 1, 1895, having been paid for in full.

The defendant’s first contention is that the memorandum never was a legally binding contract, for the reason that it was entirely one-sided and without consideration ; secondly, that even if a binding contract, it was terminated December 1, 1893, and a new contract was entered into between the plaintiff and John L. Shuff, the general agent of the defendant company in Maryland, under the terms of which the services were rendered to Shuff personally, until November, 1895, and after that date to P'rank H. Thomas, who then succeeded Shuff in the agency ; and thirdly, that if this substituted contract be not established by the evidence, that there was no legally sufficient evidence to entitle the jury to find that the parties to the original contract agreed to extend it over the period from December 1, 1895, to October 1, 1896.

On the first point the appellant’s argument is that Parker did not bind himself to render services for a year, or for any definite time, nor did he even agree to write any special amount of insurance, or to write any at all, unless he should choose to do so, and that no obligation of any sort is thereby imposed on him. But this position is not tenable. A very similar contract was before this Court in Jaffray v. King, 34 Md. 220, where the services of King were engaged as a sales *29 man for a definite' period at $350 per month, the contract being made through a letter from Jaffray & Co. to King, saying : “ Dear Sir. We hereby engage your services as salesman from this date, February 19th, till June 30th, next, inclusive, at the rate of $350 per month. Your particular field will be the city of Baltimore, and you are at liberty to solicit all such dealers there as we do not already sell to.” King was subsequently dismissed from this employment on the alleged ground that his employers had ascertained he had been attending to the business of another house. In a suit by King to recover damages for this alleged wrongful dismissal, it was held, though King had signed no contract, and there was nothing in the letter mentioned expressly creating or defining any obligation on his part, that he was not bound to give them his whole time, but that he was bound to serve them in good faith and to the extent of his ability, and that if doing this did not require his whole time and entire services, he could occupy the remainder of his time in any other pursuit he saw fit, provided it was not inconsistent with his contract with them, and did not impair the value of his services to them as' salesman of their goods in the Baltimore market. That case is stronger than the one before us, because there the compensation was a large fixed sum, while here it is dependent upon the amount of insurance written. If the purpose of the company had been to monopolize the whole time and services of Parker so as to ensure the largest volume of business they would command, the contract could, and doubtless would, have been so drawn.

And in Black v. Woodrow & Richardson, 39 Md. 215, Judge Alvey said: “ It not infrequently occurs that contracts, on their face and by their express terms, appear to be obligatory on one party only, but in such cases if it is manifest that it was the intention of the parties, and the consideration upon which one party assumed an express obligation, that there should be a corresponding and correlative obligation on -the other party, such corresponding and correlative obligation will be implied.” Upon this sound principle of construe *30 tion, we think Parker was clearly under an implied obligation to serve the insurance company in good faith within the limitations laid down in Jaffray v. King, and that the contract is not lacking in the requisite mutuality of consideration and obligation.

The principle upon which the plaintiff’s claim is founded has been recognized in this State in McCullough Iron Co. v. Carpenter, 67 Md. 584, and in Lister Ag. Works v. Pender, 74 Md. 15. In those cases, the rule laid down by Best, C. J., in Beeston v. Collyer, 4 Bingham, 309, was adopted, viz., “ that if a contract for a year is made, and the parties do not disagree, and the service continues, the same contract prevails for the next year during which service has continued, without a new agreement.” Mr. Wood, in his work on Master and Servant, sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A. 1042, 92 Md. 22, 1900 Md. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-insurance-v-parker-md-1900.