Westerfield v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America

94 S.W.2d 986, 264 Ky. 448, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 330
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 27, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 94 S.W.2d 986 (Westerfield v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westerfield v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America, 94 S.W.2d 986, 264 Ky. 448, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 330 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The appellant and plaintiff below, Melvin G-. Westerfield, in the year 1930 began serving the appellee and defendant below Prudential Insurance Company of America as a solicitor of life insurance for it within a prescribed district in Louisville, Ky., and also making-weekly collections of premiums on nonlapsed policies issued by defendant to persons within his district. The assistant superintendent having charge of that district, received the weekly reports of plaintiff, and of others, similarly employed under him, and which reports contained newly written insurance for the week covered by the report, as well as collections of weekly' premiums-made. The record seems to be somewhat confused on. the point, but as we interpret it the territory allotted to plaintiff and others similarly employed, together with the book containing the weekly premiums that he should collect and account for, as well as new insurance obtained, was known in the parlance of the company and its employees as “the debit.”1

At the end of the week terminating on August 1,. 1933, more than three years after plaintiff began serving the corporate defendant, he and three associates similarly engaged returned their books to the assistant, superintendent and announced their puropse to quit the employment. Plaintiff then acknowledged that he-had collected the past week, upon which he was due to make a report, about $150, but the amounts collected by his associates do not appear in the record. They (including plaintiff) were asked by the assistant superintendent at that time to pay over the amount collected,, but they declined to do so, and stated at the time, in substance, that because of certain manipulations of defendant’s books and certain violations of duty of the assistant superintendent,' they had been defrauded, and about which question there seems to have been prior *450 controversies. They insisted that, because of such wrongful manipulations whereby they were made to account for and pay premiums they had not collected, the company was indebted to them in an amount much 'larger than the sum demanded of them (and which they admitted possessing) as representing the past week’s collections. They stated at the time that upon a proper audit of the books (meaning, of course, after they were •corrected so as to conform to the facts), their contention would be found to be correct; but if not, they would then pay over the respective amounts demanded of them, but would not do so without such an investigating audit. They were then and there told they would be given a certain time within which to make payment, and if not done at the expiration thereof they would be prosecuted for embezzlement.

Following that, and on the next day, they consulted an attorney, who seems to have advised them of the correctness of their position and wrote a letter to the •company demanding a settlement. Defendant answered that letter, but there was no reply made thereto or, if so, it is not manifested by the record. The books, containing the most material facts with reference to the demanded audit, were the weekly ones furnished by defendant to plaintiff and his associates, and which contained a record of the accounts charged to them and for which they were required to settle. Under the rules of the employment, the canvassers, of which plaintiff was one, were not allowed to indicate thereon the lapse of a policy so that they would no longer be charged with the weekly premium due thereon. Under their employment they were required to report the fact of lapses to the assistant superintendent, and he would make the proper entry theron, as well as the proper report to the compay, whereby such lapsed policies would not be entered upon the next week’s book so as to charge the canvasser (as we have concluded to indicate plaintiff) for future premiums thereon. Plaintiff contended that the assistant superintendent had failed to perform his duties in those respects, whereby lapsed policies were continued to show on the weekly books, and for which plaintiff and his associates would be charged at each weekly report thereafter and would be compelled to and did account for such uncollected premiums.

*451 After receiving the letter from the attorney, consulted by plaintiff and associates, the superintendent, of tbe territory of which plaintiff’s district formed a part, wrote to defendant outlining to some extent the facts we have recited, including an account of the resignation of plaintiff and associates and suggesting to the company that they were acting pursuant to a conspiracy to accomplish a wrongful purpose. That was followed by a sort of expert audit of the books turned in at the end of each week by plaintiff as above indicated, and which was made by one of defendant’s inspectors, and from it he reported that plaintiff was owing the company about $601. Following that the agents of defendant appeared before the Jefferson county grand jury and procured an indictment against plaintiff, whereby he was accused of feloniously and unlawfully converting to his own use the property of defendant without its consent and with the intention to permanently appropriate it to himself. Upon the trial thereof plaintiff was acquitted and later filed this “malicious prosecution” action against defendant, and its superintendent. In his petition he made the necessary allegations to support such an action and defendant’s answer thereto merely denied its material averments. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony as given by himself alone, the court sustained defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction in their favor, which was followed by a verdict in accordance therewith, and judgment was rendered dismissing the. petition. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, he prosecutes this appeal.

In addition to what we have stated, plaintiff also testified that the live and non-lapsed policies for the weekly premiums with which he was charged, and for the collection of which he was required to account for each week, were indicated by the letter “X”' at the-appropriate place on the book, but that the lapsed policies — ¡for which, of course-, no premiums were collected —were not so indicated; that he, as such canvasser within his territory, had no right to make such indications, but that they were required to be made by his immediate superior, the assistant superintendent. If properly done, the lapsed policies would not be charged to plaintiff the following week on his new book made out for that week. If, however, no lapses were so in *452 dicated and the book made it appear that a lapsed policy was in fact a non-lapsed one, then plaintiff would be charged with the premium whether he collected it or not, and that the assistant superintendent’s failure to perform his duty in those respects resulted in his being made to account from week to week, over a large period of his entire service, for more money than he had collected, and in that way he and his associates contended that the company upon a final settlement would be indebted to them. No demand was made of plaintiff after the alleged audit of its books for what defendant claims was found to be due it from him, and he never knew of the audit report until after he was indicted.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W.2d 986, 264 Ky. 448, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westerfield-v-prudential-ins-co-of-america-kyctapphigh-1936.