274 S.W. 503 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1925
The petition alleged the employment of Nevils as agent for plaintiff and the execution of the bond sued on and alleged the condition of the bond to be in part that *638 Nevils should pay all sums collected by him and pay unearned premiums on policies of insurance that might be cancelled. The petition then alleged as a breach of the bond that Nevils had failed to return and pay to plaintiff the unearned commissions on cancelled policies to the amount of $524.60 and asked judgment for $500, the penalty of the bond.
The demurrer to the petition specified three grounds:
First: That the petition did not state any cause of action against defendants.
Second: Because the petition is based upon a contract between the plaintiff and J.E. Nevils and the contract or a copy thereof was not filed.
Third: That the bond is so indefinite, uncertain and ambiguous in its terms that it could not be binding upon defendants as alleged in the petition.
Of these in inverse order. It is contended that the terms of the bond do not cover liability for failure to return to plaintiff unearned commission resulting from the cancellation of policies. The condition of the bond is not copied in the petition but the allegation in the petition which pleads the terms of the bond specifically states that it covers unearned commissions on cancelled policies and hence the petition is not open to that objection. Whether the bond in fact covers unearned commission on cancelled policies is a question to be determined when the court is called upon to construe the bond and since the bond is not copied in the petition, its construction is not involved in considering a demurrer to the petition. The allegations of the petition determine its sufficiency and we hold this petition good as against the third ground of the demurrer.
The second ground is based on the fact that the agency contract between plaintiff and J.E. Nevils or a copy thereof is not filed with the petition. This suit is on the bond and a copy of it is filed. While the agency contract between plaintiff and Nevils would be competent evidence in determining whether or not Nevils was *639 indebted to plaintiff, the suit was on the bond and not on that contract, hence the bond was the only written instrument that plaintiff was required to file with its petition.
As sustaining our position on the two propositions just discussed, we may say further that when a suit is based on a written instrument executed by the party sued, the statute, section 1270, Revised Statutes 1919, requires that the instrument or a copy thereof be filed with the petition. A failure to file it, however, can only be taken advantage of by motion to dismiss or require it to be filed and cannot be considered on a demurrer to the petition. On demurrer the petition must be judged by what appears on its face and an exhibit is no part of the petition and cannot be used to either aid or condemn it. [Burdsal v. Davies,
The first ground of demurrer, to-wit, that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against defendants rests on the contention that the plaintiff could not cancel policies arbitrarily and require the agent to refund unearned commission but in order to require the agent to return unearned commission on policies cancelled by plaintiff, it must appear that the plaintiff had a good and sufficient reason for cancelling the policies and that the reason for the cancellation must be alleged in the petition and the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to sustain that allegation. If that contention were sound, this petition is not open to that objection because it does not allege that the policies were cancelled by plaintiff. It is common knowledge *640 that the insured as well as the insurer may cause an insurance policy to be cancelled or it may be done by mutual consent. This petition does not allege at whose instance the policies were cancelled and hence is not open to the objection made against it. We are of the opinion, however, that if plaintiff did, of its own volition, cancel the policies, it is not necessary for plaintiff to allege or prove a reason for so doing unless the terms of the policies are such as to make it necessary. The terms of the policies which govern the question of the right to cancel are not set out in the petition and if defendants desire to reach that question, they should have asked that the petition be made more specific in that regard. It occurs to us that unless there is some provision of the policies cancelled that controls, the question of an arbitrary cancellation, which means a cancellation without reason and for some sinister purpose, could only be raised by special plea in the answer and the burden of proof on that question would be on defendants.
We do not think the petition open to the objections raised against it and hold that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to it.
It is insisted by appellant that the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment on the report of the referee. This upon the alleged ground that there was no substantial conflict in the evidence and that judgment for plaintiff as recommended by the referee is the only judgment that could properly be entered on the facts as shown by the evidence and found by the referee. Respondents contend that on the evidence plaintiff could not recover because the bond does not cover the items sued for and for the further reason that there was no showing by plaintiff that it had any just cause to cancel the policies.
On the question of the necessity for plaintiff to show a reason to cancel the policies, we have already held adversely to respondents' contention. The next question is does the bond cover the unearned commission on cancelled *641
policies? The condition of the bond as far as pertinent here is as follows: "That if the above bonded J.E. Nevils as agent of the said Company shall faithfully and punctually pay over to the said Company all amounts due or that may become due to it from time to time for monies collected or received by him for premiums on policies of insurance and renewals thereof or for any ground whatever." It will be observed that the condition of the bond does not specifically mention money that may be due the company as unearned commission on cancelled policies. It does, however, require the agent to "faithfully and punctually pay over to the said Company all amounts due or that may become due to it from time to time for monies collected or received by him for premiums on policies of insurance and renewals thereof." We think that provision covers unearned commissions on cancelled policies. The commission due the agent comes out of the premium collected by him from the insured. The bond requires him to pay to the company all amounts due or that may become due to it from time to time for money received by him for premiums on policies and renewals. When the premium on a policy was paid, all of that premium except the commission of the agent was then due the company and it was the duty of the agent to punctually pay it to the company. It was just as certainly the duty of the agent to pay to the company any part of the premium collected by him that should thereafter become due to it from time to time as just as certainly the duty of the agent to pay to the company. When premiums are paid, the agent retains at the time his entire commission on the supposition that the policy will remain in force for the full term for which it was written, and if it did, then there would be no more to become due to the company out of the premium collected, but it is common knowledge and these sureties on this bond must have known when they signed the bond that an insurance policy on which the premium has been paid may be cancelled before it has run the full time *642
and that when that occurs, part of the premium paid by the insured must be returned to him by the company. When that is done, then the agent is only entitled to retain his commission on the amount of premium retained by the company after returning the unearned portion of the premium to the insured. Therefore, upon the happening of that event, the part of the premium retained by the agent as commission which is unearned becomes at that time due the company from the agent and is covered by the provision of the bond which requires the agent to pay to the company amounts that may become due it from time to time for monies collected by him as premium on policies of insurance secured by him as agent for the company. This seems to us to be a fair and reasonable construction of the terms of the bond. While it is true, as contended by respondents, that voluntary sureties are the favorites of the law and have the right to stand on the strict letter of the obligation they sign as has often been held by the courts of this State for which see Pemiscot County Bank v. Tindle,
Applying these rules of construction to the bond before us we hold that it expresses the intention of the parties that the sureties should be bound for the failure of the agent to pay to the county any amount that should *643 become due the company from him on account of premiums received by him whether it became due the company as soon as paid the agent or should become due from time to time thereafter by the cancellation of policies which would reduce the amount the agent would be authorized to retain as commission upon premiums collected by him. In other words, when the agent collected premiums on insurance policies the sureties undertook to see that he paid that premium or any part of it to the company whenever it became his duty to pay it regardless of the contingency which made it his duty to pay it. The sureties both testified that they did not know the terms of the contract between the company and the agent Nevils when they signed the bond. We do not regard that as material. Their liability was fixed by the bond they signed and not by their knowledge at the time of the terms of the contract between the agent and the company. The bond itself was given to secure the performance by Nevils of his contract with the company and the sureties must have known that fact when they signed the bond and by signing the bond they bound themselves to see that the agent complied with that contract as far as it related to his paying to the company any amount of money that might from time to time become due from him to the company on account of premiums collected by him.
Respondents insist that the case should not have been referred but should have been tried by a jury. The alleged breach of the bond required the examination of some forty-nine or fifty items. The answer was a general denial which put in issue the correctness of each of these items. It is apparent that it would have been impossible for a jury to carry these items in mind and render a correct verdict on each and all of them. Under the pleadings we think the case was properly referred.
Appellant asks that the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for plaintiff on the report of the referee. There were a *644 few items in the account of plaintiff that the evidence for defendant disputed and in view of that we are not disposed to order judgment entered for plaintiff.
Respondents raise the point that no judgment could be rendered on the report of the referee against defendant Nevils because he was never served with process nor voluntarily appeared. The record before us shows that the answer was filed by "defendants;" that at one time a stipulation for a continuance was entered into between plaintiff and "defendants;" that the demurrer to the petition was filed by "defendants;" that a motion to strike out part of the petition was filed by "defendants." When the referee began to take testimony Mr. Clarke, attorney, announced that he appeared for "defendants" Singleton and Yeoman, but did not then and never had appeared for Nevils by filing a demurrer or answer for him. We do not understand that an attorney can by a statement of that kind contradict the record or in any way impeach its verity. We gather from his statement, that when he filed the demurrer and answer and signed them as attorney for "defendants" he intended to file it for defendants Singleton and Yeoman alone and did not intend to include Nevils therein, but if that were his intention he should have specified in the papers filed that it was being filed as a separate demurrer or answer of those two defendants. As it stands we must construe the record as showing a demurrer and an answer filed by all defendants, including Mr. Nevils. The term "defendants" standing alone as it does in this record means all defendants and hence we hold that on the record before us, Mr. Nevils is in court the same as the other defendants. When the case again reaches the circuit court, the same remedies will be open to Mr. Nevils that were available to him before the case was tried.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded to the end that the judgment of dismissal against plaintiff and the order sustaining the demurrer to the *645 petition may be set aside, the demurrer overruled and the cause proceeded with in accordance with this opinion. Bradley andBailey, JJ., concur.