55 P. 973 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion.
This is an action upon an insurance agent’s bond. The second amended complaint, upon which the cause was tried, alleges that in January, 1894, the plaintiff, as the general agent of the Insurance Company of North America, appointed the defendants Wilson and King agents in Portland to solicit insurance for and on behalf of such company, and to receive and remit premiums therefor; that before entering upon the discharge of their duties as such agents they were required to, and did, execute and deliver to the plaintiff, as such general agent, their joint and several obligation in the sum of $10,000, with the defendants Knapp and Maxwell as sureties, conditioned that they should well and truly pay over to the plaintiff all moneys which they should receive for and on account of said company whenever and as soon as such money should become due and payable, and in all other respects well and truly perform the duties usually performed by such agents ; that the conditions of said obligation have been broken and violated, in this : that between the first day of January, 1894, and the first of October, 1894, they, “as agents aforesaid,
The defendants Wilson and King, by their answer, admitted their appointment, the execution and delivery of the bond, and that of the premiums collected by them, the sum of $997.49, had not been paid over to the plaintiff, but denied that the conditions of their obligation had been broken in any respect, or that an accounting or settlement had been had between them and the plaintiff ; and as a further and separate defense, and by way of counterclaim, allege that their appointment was to continue for one year, and so long thereafter as should be mutually satisfactory, and that they were to receive certain commissions as payment for their services, — it being further agreed that no other agents should be appointed in their district while they were so acting ; that they entered upon the performance of their contract, and faithfully discharged their duties, and expended a considerable sum of money in advertising, but that shortly after their appointment plaintiff violated his contract with them by appointing another agent to solicit insur
On the trial the defendants objected to the admission of certain evidence offered by the plaintiff to prove the amount of premiums collected by the defendants, and not remitted, on the ground that the complaint alleged a cause of action on an account stated, which the evidence offered did not tend to prove ; and, although the court so construed the complaint, it overruled such objection, and admitted the testimony in evidence, notwithstanding the plaintiff did not claim or pretend that it tended in any way to prove an account stated, or that the action was of that character. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, the defendants moved the court to direct a verdict in their favor upon the affirmative matter of the answers, alleging as ground therefor that no evidence had been offered or introduced tending to prove an account stated. This motion was likewise overruled, whereupon the defendants proceeded to give evidence ; and while one of their witnesses was on the stand, and after the court had repeatedly ruled that the action was upon an account stated, the plaintiff moved to strike out all that part of the amended complaint in reference to the accounting with Wilson and King, so as to avoid any question upon that subject, but the court denied the motion. The plaintiff, being thus compelled to proceed, if at all, upon a cause of action which he had not intended to allege, and which he was unable to and had not attempted to prove, and being unable to take a voluntary nonsuit on account
Reversed.