112 Kan. 145 | Kan. | 1922
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Farmers and Bankers Life Insurance Company sued -W. R. Whitney upon several promissory notes executed by him. He filed a second amended answer and cross-petition, to which the plaintiff demurred. This appeal is taken from the overruling of the demurrer. A former judgment was reversed on account of the erroneous admission of evidence. (Insurance Co. v. Whitney, 105 Kan. 237, 182 Pac. 645.)
1. The allegations of the pleading attacked may be thus summarized: The defendant was the general agent for the plaintiff in certain territory and was entitled to some renewal commissions. The plaintiff wished to appoint one F. R. Fenn as its general agent in this territory. At the solicitation of the plaintiff the defendant entered into a written contract with Fenn, which was also signed and agreed to by the. plaintiff, providing that the defendant should release his claim for such commissions and Fenn should allow him 10 per cent of the “first year’s commissions on new business written by” him [Fenn] under his contract with the plaintiff, and also
The plaintiff contends that the answer does not plead any contract between Fenn and the plaintiff. It alleges that the plaintiff wished to make Fenn its agent in place of the defendant, and solicited the making of the contract between Fenn and the defendant, which it also signed and approved; that the contract provided for the disposition of commissions to be earned by Fenn, a part of which were to be paid by Fenn to the plaintiff for the benefit of the defendant; that under this contract with Fenn the plaintiff was entitled to ten per cent of Fenn’s first year’s commissions on new business written by him under his contract with the plaintiff; that the plaintiff received this ten per cent, $2,000 of which it held for the defendant. The absence of an allegation in so many words that Fenn entered into. an agency contract with the plaintiff is not a ground of demurrer, the existence of such contract being so clearly' assumed and implied that the plaintiff could by no possibility have failed to understand from reading the answer that the defendant was asserting it had been entered into. “The true doctrine to be gathered from all the cases is, that if the substantial facts which constitute a cause of action are stated in a complaint or petition, or can be inferred by reasonable intendment from the matters which are set forth, although the allegations of these facts are imperfect, incomplete, and defective, such insufficiency pertaining, however, to the form rather than to the substance, the proper mode of correction is not by demurrer, nor by excluding evidence at the trial, but by a motion before the trial to make the
The plaintiff also contends that the answer does not affirmatively allege that the amounts paid by Fenn to the plaintiff for the benefit of the defendant exceeded the credits allowed on the notes sued upon. These credits totaled $625.13. The statements that ten per cent of $20,000 from Fenn’s first year’s business was received by the plaintiff on account of the defendant, and that the plaintiff owed the defendant $2,000 on account of the matters stated, are at least inferential allegations to that effect. .
As already indicated, the answer set out that the total “premiums” on the first year’s new business written by Fenn amounted to $20,000, ten per cent of which the plaintiff received on account of the defendant. The plaintiff argues that the force of the allegation is destroyed by the use of the word quoted, inasmuch as the contract had to do with ten per cent of the first year’s commissions. It is reasonably clear from- the context that the pleader meant commissions.
The allegation immediately following, that by the transfer of business from one plan to another Fenn earned “premiums,” to a portion of which the defendant was entitled, confirms this view. The word “premium” has of course a specific meaning in the insurance business which is well understood. But its general sense of a reward or recompense is near enough to that of “commission” to make its use as a synonym excusable, although inexact. The plaintiff cannot have been misled by this inaccuracy in the use of language.
2. The plaintiff further contends that the pleading attacked— the second amended answer and cross-petition — is demurrable on account of the statute of limitations, because it was filed October 7, 1920, and the cross demand it sets out accrued January 5, 1913. An amended answer and cross-petition, which sufficiently set out the same claim, was filed August 19, 1916, and from that time the statute of limitations ceased to run. Subsequent amendments, not essential to a statement of the cause of action, did not affect the matter. (Culp v. Steere, 47 Kan. 746, 28 Pac. 987.)
The judgment is affirmed.