158 Ind. 304 | Ind. | 1902
In January, 1889, the appellant was employed by the appellee as its agent to manage its business in the State of Indiana. The contract of employment was in writing, and among its provisions were the following: The appellant was to procure applications for insurance; to collect when due, so far as practicable, when authorized so to do by the appellee, all premiums payable to the appellee; to remit all sums due to the appellee immediately upon collection; in case of his inability to collect premiums on policies and renewal receipts, appellant was to return the same to the appellee; and he was to be governed in all respects by the rules and regulations of the company and its officers. The appellee was to pay to the appellant commissions on first annual premiums on all business procured by him or his agents according to certain schedules of rates attached to said contract. It was also provided that the appellee should pay to the appellant a collection fee of
The errors assigned and discussed by counsel for appellant present for review the rulings of the court on demurrers to the pleadings and its decisions on the motions to consolidate the two actions, to render judgment for appellant notwithstanding the verdict, and for a new trial.
The second paragraph of the answer of the insurance company was directed to so much of the complaint as sought the recovery of any sum from the company on account of the seven and one-half per cent, commissions on second and subsequent years’ renewals, after the termination of the employment. It alleged, in substance, that, by the terms of the agreement sued upon, it was expressly provided, that, if the appellant should fail to remit to the company money collected by him belonging to the company, then all rights of the appellant under the agreement should be forfeited to the company, and the latter discharged from all liability to said appellant; that, before the termination of the employment, the appellant, as such agent, had collected more than $8,000 belonging to the company'; that he concealed this fact from the company; that he failed to remit the sums so collected, but appropriated the same to his own use; and that for this cause he was discharged by the company. No defect in this answer is pointed out, and we are unable to perceive any. If the appellant had himself violated the contract without legal excuse, he could not maintain an action upon it. This paragraph of answer charges that he had so violated it. Board, etc., v. Hill, 115 Ind. 316, 327; Skehan v. Rummel, 124 Ind. 347.
The same facts, substantially, are pleaded in the third paragraph of the answer by way of set-off. The objection that this answer is bad, because it does not set out the agreement of employment, or make a copy of it an exhibit, cannot prevail. A copy of the agreement was, filed with the
Neither is there any force in the suggestion that the answer does not show that the set-off claimed arose out of a debt, duty, or contract held by the appellee at the time the suit was commenced, and that the same matured at or before the time it was offered as a set-off. §351 Burns 1901. The answer expressly avers that the appellant had collected moneys, under the agreement sued upon, which it was his duty to pay over and remit, but which he wrongfully retained, and appropriated, to the amount of $10,000, “for which sum said plaintiff is now indebted to this defendant.” The agreement states that the agent shall immediately remit all moneys collected by him for the company. The answer shows that the set-off arose from a duty imposed by a contract; that it was held by the appellee at the time the suit was commenced; and that the claim had matured before the time it was offered as a set-off. The demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer was therefore properly overruled.
The fourth paragraph of answer goes to' so much of the. complaint only as charges the appellee with an indebtedness to the appellant accruing before March 15, 1894, — the date
The fifth paragraph of the answer, which was a set-off, is objected to for the same reasons urged against the third, and also upon the grounds that no demand for the moneys alleged to have been held by the appellant was averred, and that the appellee cannot dispute the correctness of the amount found to be due upon the accounting of March 15, 1894, while retaining any of the money paid to it under that settlement. Mo demand before suit was necessary. By the terms of the agreement, it was made the duty of the agent to pay over and remit all moneys collected by him immediately after collecting them. His failure to do so was a breach of his contract, and authorized the company to sue at once. Field v. Brown, 146 Ind. 293; Cree v. Sherfy, 138 Ind. 354; Richards v. Reeves, 149 Ind. 427.
It appears from the answer that the appellant did not faithfully account for the moneys collected by him, and that a much larger sum was in fact in his hands, on March 15, 1894, than that reported by him. The memorandum of settlement made on that day did not operate as a release of the appellant from his obligation, as agent, to pay over all moneys in his hands belonging to the appellee, or give him any title to the moneys wrongfully retained by him. Mot-
The answer, further stated that the appellee, at the time said supposed accounting took place, received from the appellant and his wife a conveyance of certain real estate in part payment of the amount admitted to be due from the appellant to the appellee, but that after-wards appellant’s wife recovered a judgment against the appellee setting aside said conveyance on the ground that it was intended as a mortgage to secure á debt due from her husband; that the real estate was her separate property, and that said conveyance was void except as to a preexisting lien of $3,000, which had been paid out of the proceeds of a mortgage executed by the appellant and his wife to a building and loan association, and which mortgage debt had been assumed by the appellee in the said accounting and settlement. It was competent for the appellee to show that a supposed payment made to it by the appellant had been set aside by the judgment of a court, and thereby rendered unavailing, and to charge the appellant with the amount due to the company at the time the ineffectual payment was made. In our opinion, the fifth paragraph of the answer was sufficient to withstand a demurrer.
The ruling of the court upon the appellant’s demurrer to the first paragraph of the reply of the appellee to the answer of the appellant to the cross-complaint of appellee, if erroneous, was harmless, for the reason that the appellee was defeated upon its cross-complaint. The judgment upon this branch of the case was that the appellee take nothing, and that the appellant recover his costs.
The two actions (between the appellant and the appellee
Nothing contained in the answers of the jury to the questions of fact submitted to them authorized a judgment in favor of the appellant. The answers did not cover the issues, and many of them related to the evidence, merely, and not to the ultimate facts of the case. The answer to the question, “Did the plaintiff forfeit his contract with the defendant?” “No, — ” was a mere conclusion, and not the finding of a fact.
The motion for a venire de novo rests upon the alleged uncertainty of the verdict. The form of the verdict was “We, the jury, find for the defendant.” Throughout the proceedings the appellant had been described as the plaintiff, and the appellee as the defendant. There was no motion that the jury be required to make their verdict more certain, and indeed there seems to have been no occasion for any change in it. The appellee was the only party who could have objected to it. Nothing was said in the verdict concerning the cross-complaint of the company, but this did not harm the appellant.
The last question to be determined is whether the court erred in overruling- appellant’s motion for a new trial. The evidence is not in the record. The sole ground upon which the claim for a new trial is placed is that the court erred in giving and in refusing to give certain instructions. But' an examination of the record discloses that, while cer
Finding no error, the judgment is affirmed.
Hadley, J., did not participate.