199 Mo. App. 544 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1918
Plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendant $1374.75 as for moneys had and received. The petition alleges that the defendant George C. Stinde'act
The defendants filed separate demurrers, each defendant predicating its separate demurrer on the ground that the petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute, a cause of action. These demurrers were sustained -by the court. The plaintiff stood on his petition and refused to plead further and final judgment was entered on the demurrers m favor of the defendants; whereupon plaintiff brings this appeal.
The sole proposition presented to this court for determination is the question of the sufficiency of the petition to state a cause of action against either or both of the defendants. To determine this question- it will be necessary that we construe sections 6934 and 6935, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909, upon which sections plaintiff must rely to warrant a recovery on his part.
Section 6934 prohibits discriminations and rebates or any special favor as an inducement to the taking out of a policy of life insurance. By one of the provisions of
It is argued by learned counsel for appellant that the penalty inflicted by the statute implies a prohibition against the writing of any insurance upon a promise to rebate a part of the premium, and that policies of insurance entered into in violation of'such prohibition-of the statute are absolutely void even though the statute itself does not mention that the policies so issued shall be void.
After carefully considering the statute and the undoubted intention of the legislators who enacted the same, and considering the said sections in light of the recognized rules of judicial construction, we cannot hold that a policy of insurance which has been duly executed, delivered and accepted by the insured and the first premium for such policy paid for, is void by reason of the fact . that the insurance company or its representatives promised to give the insured a rebate of part of the premium paid for such insurance.
The wording of the statute is plain that it is intended not to prohibit the writing of life insurance but that it prohibits the promising and giving of rebátes on premiums. We concede at the outset that any contract en
It will be noted that the statute places a penalty upon the insurance company or its agent or representative who violates this statute but provides no penality for the insured. To hold the'policies of insurance1'illegal or void, as contended for by appellant, would result in invalidating many contracts of life insurance aggregating perhaps thousands of dollars on which the insured have paid many years ’ premiums, and this because an agent of the company which issued the policies had, with or without the knowledge of the officers of the company, granted a rebate out of the agent’s commission of part or all of the first or other premiums.
We are unwilling to hold the Legislature intended that an insurance company, where a policy has been issued and some part of the premium returned or rebated, should be permitted to proceed for years thereafter to accept the premiums called for under the policy and then upon the demise of the insured be permitted to deny any liability under the policy on the ground that it was void ab initio because a rebate had been allowed the insured upon his original or other premium in violation of the statute. Nor can we conceive that it was intended that an insured who had received a rebate, should be permitted at any time within the period limited by law for the commencement of such action, to recover all premiums which the insured may have paid upon the policy because of his having received such rebate, to the disadvantage of the others insured in such company who had conformed to the law and paid the full amount of the prescribed premiums. To hold otherwise would be to reward the very violators of this statute and that too at the expense of those who strictly adhered to the law.
“Insurance companies are engaged in a public business, and upon grounds of public policy insurance contracts that may, in preliminary verbal arrangements be
“When the purpose of a statute is . . . a regulation of a traffic or business, and not to prohibit it altogether whether a contract which violates the statute shall be treated as wholly void will depend on an intention expressed in the particular statute. Unless the contrary intention is manifest the contract will be valid.” [Sutherland, Statutory Construction (2 Ed.), see. 503.]
It is plain that the purpose of our statute is to regulate contracts of insurance and not to prohibit them. It is equally clear that the statute does prohibit and render void all rebating agreements. Had the Legislature so intended, the statute could have provided that the policy or contract -of insurance be void or' nonenforceable. The statute is silent as to what effect the violation of the statute shall have upon any policy of insurance that may have been fully executed and delivered. It would thus seem that the insured can be required to pay the full amount of the premiums, whilst the agent or company guilty of the rebating can be punished under the statue. Under such a construction of the statute the full purpose of the law is carried out and the ends of justice subserved without invalidating the policy of insurance itself.
We therefore hold that, considering the object of this legislation, its effect upon the nonoffending policy-holders and beneficiaries, and having in mind the particular penal