25 N.W.2d 248 | Mich. | 1946
This suit was brought by plaintiffs to recover commissions claimed to be due them for acting as agents for the defendants in selling compensation insurance. The defendants denied liability and gave notice of set-off and recoupment. The amounts involved are stipulated. Plaintiffs claim they are entitled to a judgment for $2,473.28 plus interest, against T.H. Mastin Company, a copartnership, Consolidated Underwriters and Underwriters Exchange. The trial judge, hearing the case without a jury, entered a judgment against L.A. Walden individually of no cause for action as to all defendants; against L.A. Walden Company, a Michigan corporation, of no cause for action as to Underwriters Exchange and T.H. Mastin Company, a Missouri corporation; and in favor of defendant Consolidated Underwriters and T.H. Mastin Company, a copartnership, on their claim of set-off and recoupment, and against L.A. Walden Company, a Michigan corporation, for $1,329.81. No defendant has appealed or cross-appealed. Plaintiffs appeal, claiming they should have judgment against all the defendants except T.H. Mastin Company, a Missouri corporation, for $2,473.28 plus interest. The involvement among these various parties, as to their respective claims, is a fair sample of the confusion that existed between and among them during the course of their transactions. The question this Court is asked to decide, on the appeal, is whether either plaintiff is entitled to a judgment and, if so, against whom; and, if not, whether the judgment for defendants Consolidated Underwriters and T.H. *344 Mastin Company, a copartnership, against L.A. Walden Company, a corporation, for $1,329.81 should be affirmed. The trial court held that there was no proof on which to base a judgment against the defendants Underwriters Exchange and T.H. Mastin Company, a Missouri corporation, and we concur in this conclusion.
The crucial issue in the case, which we consider to be controlling of the result, is whether plaintiffs, or either of them, are entitled to agent's commissions on premiums collected by the defendants, or any one or more of them, after termination of the agency contract, on certain annual policies issued prior to the termination of the agency contract, and during the remainder of the policy years.
L.A. Walden Company, a Michigan corporation, was licensed by the State commissioner of insurance to act as agent for defendants Underwriters Exchange and Consolidated Underwriters during the period material to this suit. Defendant T.H. Mastin Company, a copartnership, was attorney-in-fact for these two reciprocal insurance exchanges. It had an agency contract with L.A. Walden, as an individual, which the trial court found was lawfully terminated by T.H. Mastin Company, the copartnership, on January 15, 1943.
The insurance written was mostly for workmen's compensation liability. There was, in addition, a small amount of public liability insurance which is not involved in this suit. The compensation policies were for a term of one year, and a new policy was issued each year. If the premium was small, it might be paid at the beginning of the policy year. If the premium was large, the insured was allowed to make an initial deposit of one-third the estimated premium, and to pay the full amount in monthly instalments during the policy year. Both types of *345 premium payment were subject to audit at the end of the policy year, at which time adjustment of premium was made according to the actual number of employees covered, their wages, and type of risk, none of which could be precisely determined before the end of the policy year. T.H. Mastin Company, the copartnership, collected the premiums directly from the insured. Exhibit 21, a typical insurance policy, contains the following provisions as to cancellation:
"This contract may be canceled by either of the parties after 10 days' written notice to the other. * * * If canceled by the attorneys-in-fact for nonpayment of monthly charges, or if canceled by the subscriber for any cause, the subscriber shall pay to the attorneys-in-fact the remuneration they would have received had the contract continued in force until its next anniversary date."
It appears that defendants dealt indiscriminately with both plaintiffs as agents, although the agency contract itself was with L.A. Walden as an individual. The express contract on which plaintiffs rely was in the form of a proposal addressed by T.H. Mastin Company to L.A. Walden individually, and the acceptance was signed by Walden individually. However, most of the agency licenses issued by the State insurance commissioner were to "L.A. Walden Company, L.A. Walden, President." The record before us indicates that during the entire course of their dealings these parties acted on the assumption that either one, or both, of the plaintiffs had authority to act as agent for the defendants. Their transactions were in such confusion in that regard that checks for payment of commissions were made payable to L.A. Walden and the corporation jointly. In some years State licenses to act as agent for the defendant reciprocal insurance *346
companies were issued by the State insurance commissioner to both L.A. Walden as an individual and to the corporate plaintiff. L.A. Walden is the president of L.A. Walden Company and sole owner of all the corporate stock. We find that the record indicates a community of interest between the two plaintiffs to such an extent that plaintiffs may be treated as one for the purpose of considering the issue in the case. See Montgomery v. CentralNational Bank Trust Co. of Battle Creek,
Plaintiffs declared on an express written agreement signed "T.H. Mastin Company, By T.H. Mastin," and accepted by "L.A. Walden." The defendants answered admitting the contract, but claimed that it was to continue only so long as plaintiff L.A. Walden was employed as agent, that he terminated his employment in November, 1942, and that therefore he was entitled to no commissions except those on premium deposits paid during the time he was in defendants' employ. Plaintiffs, replying to the affirmative matter in the answer, stated:
"That although plaintiff L.A. Walden ceased to act as agent for defendants in November, 1942, at which time defendants terminated such agency,* he was nevertheless entitled to receive commissions on business written by him over a period of one year, that being the time for which the policies were written."
We conclude that recovery, if any, must depend upon the construction to be given the terms and provisions in the express written contract of agency. The parties differ as to the meaning of these terms. See Millar v. Macey Co.,
The material part of the written contract as to commissions on premium payments to be paid to the agent is as follows:
"1. Nine per cent. of all business except special deals, to be paid monthly, based upon the earned and paid monthly premiumdeposits; this to begin on the 1st of January, 1941.
"2. Five per cent. bonus of the first year's estimated premium on new business only, based upon the paid initial deposit, if you prefer to do it this way rather than waiting until the actual premium has been paid. If you prefer to wait until the actualpremium has been paid, it can be paid to you monthly, based onthe actual earned paid premium. This bonus does not apply on the special deals. * * *
"6. It is understood this agreement will continue so long as we employ you to look after our interests in the Detroit, Michigan territory, unless in the future the undersigned conclude to make another agreement."
Defendants contend that the words "based upon the earned and paid monthly premium deposits," in paragraph 1, preclude recovery of commissions on premiums paid after termination of the agency. However, this conclusion cannot be clearly deduced from the language of the contract. Unless the contract clearly so provides, we should not conclude that there must now be a forfeiture of plaintiffs' commissions fully earned. Does "based upon" mean contingent upon, or does it mean computed on the basis of the earned and paid premium deposits? To aid in resolving this ambiguity it is necessary to look to the dealings of the parties. The method which they employed in carrying out these provisions of the contract was as follows: If the premium *348
was a lump sum payment, plaintiffs received nothing until the audit at the end of the year. If it was made in monthly payments, they received an approximate commission during the following month, which was subject to adjustment at the end of the year. From the second paragraph of the contract it is clear that a similar method was optional with the plaintiffs in the case of new accounts, and this lends credence to the testimony as to the course of dealing under paragraph 1, which was uncontradicted. This contract was drawn by Mr. Mastin, a lawyer, and should be construed against the defendants where ambiguous. Saxon v.Howey,
Under such circumstances, does the right to commissions fully earned by plaintiffs on premiums accrued, but not certain in amount, become forfeited upon termination of the agency? There is nothing in the contract to this effect. Defendants claim it as a rule of law, and the trial court so found. We do not agree with this conclusion. Defendants rely upon Phoenix Mutual Life Ins.Co. v. Holloway,
We conclude that plaintiffs are entitled to the commissions claimed. The case is similar to Stevenson v. BrotherhoodsMutual Benefit,
"It is thus obvious that Sheerin (the agent) had concluded every essential step necessary to entitle him to his compensation under his arrangement with the American Surety Company. The fact that the company extended credit to the bank (the insured) did not reduce the period of the bond to any less term than two years, or lessen the liability of the bank to pay the premium when due, or require any other act on the part of Sheerin in order to earn his commission."
In this case, the fact that defendants extended monthly credit to the insured did not reduce the period of a policy to any less term than one year, or require any further act on the part of plaintiffs to earn the commission. *350
The foregoing conclusion answers defendants' claim that the termination of the agency contract ended plaintiffs' rights to commissions on premiums then unpaid, regardless of the length of time the policies had to run thereafter. Defendants terminated the agency agreement on January 15, 1943, as they had the right to do under paragraph 6 of the contract hereinbefore quoted. However, such termination did not end plaintiffs' right to commissions on premiums earned by plaintiffs and later collected by the defendants, on policies issued during the life of the agreement.
The judgment for the defendants on their set-off and recoupment is set aside and reversed. Inasmuch as the plaintiff corporation has received the benefits of the agency contract entered into by L.A. Walden, individually, and is the agent of the defendant reciprocal companies recognized by the State insurance commissioner, L.A. Walden Company, a Michigan corporation, will be considered as the plaintiff entitled to the commissions. The case is remanded for entry of judgment for plaintiff L.A. Walden Company against defendants T.H. Mastin Company, a copartnership, and Consolidated Underwriters, a reciprocal insurance exchange, for $2,473.28, together with interest at five per cent. from April 11, 1945, to date of entry of judgment, with costs to said plaintiff.
BUTZEL, C.J., and CARR, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, REID, NORTH, and DETHMERS, JJ., concurred.