Pythian Life Ass'n v. Preston

47 Neb. 374 | Neb. | 1896

Harrison, J.

The defendant in error instituted this action in the district court of Douglas county against the Pythian Life Association to recover the sum of $2,000 alleged to be due her from the life association under and by virtue of a membership certificate therein, or a policy of insurance, claimed to have been issued of date May 31, 1890, upon the life of Willet C. Preston, who was the husband of the defendant in error, and who had died since that date and prior to the commencement of this suit. The plaintiff in error, it appears, was a corporation, organized and existing under the laws of this state, engaged in the business of life insurance, with its general offices or headquarters in the city of Omaha; that on or about the 31st day of May, 1890, one David H. Caldwell, who was then its general agent, received the application of Willet C. Preston, in the city of Minneapolis, Minnesota, for membership in the association, or a policy of insurance upon his life, to be issued by it. This application was not procured by the general agent personally, but was solicited and procured by one Josiah Towne, who, Caldwell *378testifies, was a special agent appointed by him, and who, it further appears, was acting and working under him and his directions and occupying the same office with him. The application was forwarded to'the association at Omaha in the regular course of business and was approved, and a certificate or policy, the one upon which this suit was predicated, was issued and sent to Caldwell at Minneapolis for delivery to the insured party. The articles of agreement, under and by. which David H. Caldwell was appointed agent of the association and so acted, were signed by its president and secretary, and by the appointee, and as portions of these articles may play a more or less important part in the final disposition of at least some of the vital questions to be herein decided, we deem it best to notice them here. They were as follows:

“This agreement, made this 4th day of January, 1890, between the Pythian Life Association, of Omaha, Nebraska, party of the first part, and David H. Caldwell, of Geneva, Nebraska, party of the second part,
“Witnesseth, That the party of the first part hereby appoints the said party of the second part its general agent for the purpose of procuring and effecting applications for membership in said association that will be satisfactory to said party of the first, part, and of collecting membership fees on application thus effected, and for the further purpose of appointing and supervising district, special, and local agents. * * * The appointing of all subagents shall be at the sole expense of the party of the second part. The party of the first part to be in no way chargeable or responsible to the agents thus appointed for *379any salary, commission, or expenses incurred by them or any of them in procuring applications or prosecuting the business ■ of any agency created hereby or hereunder, except as hereinafter stipulated. The party of the second .part to be responsible to the party of the first part for the good behavior of his subagents and for their fidelity to the interests of the party of the first párt. * * * The compensation allowed said party of the second part for his services rendered under the terms of this contract shall be 100 per cent of the membership fee or advance premium adopted by the party of the first part and collected by the party of’ the second part, or his subagents, if applications are written for insurance on the mortuary rate or quarterly premium-paying plans; but if written on the natural premium .or endowment rate plan, with payments due semi-annually, then an additional compensation of 50 cents per $1,000 of insurance shall be allowed to said party of the second part, to become due and payable when the first semi-annual premium is paid to and received by the said party of the first part; but if application and policy is written on the natural premium or endowment-rate plans and premiums are paid annually, then the sum of fl per each $1,000 shall be allowed in addition to the membership fee, to be due and payable when the first annual premium is paid to and received by the party of the first part. * * * The territory assigned to said party of the second part shall consist of the state of Minnesota, and such other territory as may be hereafter agreed upon.”

In regard to the connection of Josiah Towne, who personally solicited and received Mr. Preston’s application, with the business of the associa*380tion at Minneapolis, where it was taken, and the relation existing between Towne and Caldwell, its general agent, the latter testified as follows:

Q. Are yon acquainted with Josiah Towne?
A. I am.
Q, What relation did he occupy to you while you were general agent?
A. As special agent.

Josiah Towne himself testified on this point as follows:

Q. What was your business during the months of June and July, 1890?
A. Soliciting insurance for the Pythian Life Association.
Q. With whom were you associated?
A. D. H. Caldwell.

The president of the life association says:

Q. I will ask you whether or not the defendant company had, to your knowledge, during the months of May, June, and July, 1890, an agent in Minneapolis or Minnesota, by the name of Josiah Towne?
A. No, sir; we did not.

The application for insurance contained the following statements: “It is further agreed that under no circumstances shall the certificate hereby applied for be in force until the actual payment to and acceptance of the advance dues by the association, and actual delivery of the certificate to the applicant during his lifetime and good health, with a receipt for the payment of the advance dues. It is further agreed that this application, its warranties and agreements, together with all the conditions and stipulations contained in the certificate now applied for, shall be binding on me and on any further *381legal holder of the policy now applied for. I hereby agree to pay to said association, the money required to keep the certificate issued hereon in full force and effect as provided by the by-laws of said association, and I hereby adopt said bylaws and agree to be governed by them and will obey and comply with every article, its subdivisions, and its stipulations or provisions contained therein;” and on the same subject there was in the policy: “This contract is not binding until the written application therefor shall have been received, accepted, and this policy of insurance issued by the association and delivered to such member in person during his lifetime and good health, nor until the admission fee and advance premium is paid thereon. No agent of the association has authority to make, alter, or discharge contracts, waive forfeitures, extend credit, or grant permission, and no alteration of the terms of this contract shall be valid, and no forfeiture thereunder shall be waived, unless alteration or waiver shall be in'writing and signed by the president and one other officer of the Pythian Life Association.” ' ■

It is contended by counsel for plaintiff in error:

“First — Towne was not in any manner connected with plaintiff in érror. He was not its agent or solicitor. He had never been authorized by it to do any business for it. He had absolutely no authority to make any oral agreement for credit, or any other kind of an agreement, either orally or in writing, for plaintiff in error.
“Second — Even if he had been a regular or general soliciting agent of plaintiff in error, he could not bind plaintiff in error by a delivery of the policy in question without full payment of the premium.”

*382David H. Caldwell testified in regard to the delivery of the policy to the insured, as follows:

Q. What did you do with the policy after you received it?
A. In company with Mr. Towne, delivered it to Mr. Preston at the schoolhouse within a day or two from the time we received it.
Q. Did you receive any money at that time?
A. No, sir.
*******
Q. What did you say about this policy having been delivered at the schoolhouse?
A. It was delivered within two or three days of the time received by me at the schoolhouse where ' Mr. Preston then worked.
Q. By whom?
A. By myself. Mr. Towne had the policy in his possession and handed it to Mr. Preston while I was with him.
Q. Left it with him?
A. No, sir.
Q. What was done with it?
A. I took it out of his hands.
Q. You took it from Mr. Preston?
A. Later.
Q. How much later?
A. Perhaps fifteen minutes.
Q. Mr. Towne had it in his possession and handed it to Mr. Preston, and then you' took it back again from Mr. Preston?
A. After a time.
Q. Did you keep it in your possession after that?
A. I can’t say how long; I gave it to Mr. Towne, either the same day, or very soon, to be delivered by him. The policy has not been in *383my possession later than that day further than to be in that desk.
Q. Then what?
A. I think it was the same day that I gave it to Mr. Towne.
Q. The same day or about the same time after you had taken it back from Preston you gave it to Mr.’ Towne, did you ever see it again after that?
A. As it lay in our desk, the desk in Towne’s and my office, in that vicinity.
Q. You did not have any more to do with it?
A. I did not.

Josiah Towne stated in his evidence that the policy was received at the office occupied by Caldwell and himself and within the next day or two they went to the schoolhouse in the city, where the applicant for insurance was employed as janitor, and there talked with him, and what the conversation was we will give as we find it recorded in the transcript of the testimony:

A. Went to the schoolhouse. Mr. Preston was not there; went out on the side, Twenty-third avenue I think it is; went in on the street side and went out on the avenue side. Just as we got on the sidewalk, Mr. Preston put in an appearance from his residence and met us about twenty feet from the schoolhouse. I passed the* time of day and shook hands with him and says, “Tony” • — always called him Tony — and took it out and delivered it to him. He says, “I can’t pay for that to-day. I have just heard from the farm. I have lost a horse.” He spoke something in regard to a note of $80 or $90 that he had got to-meet; taking into consideration the fact of the note and the loss of the horse he could not take it then. He had it in his hand and during the con*384versation Mr. Caldwell took the policy from him. “Well,” I says, “Tony, when could you take it?” This was some time during the middle of the week; the first or middle of the week. He says, “I will meet you at the lodge on Friday night.” He says, “I will meet you at my lodge on Friday night, and I will pay you.” I says, “All right, I will be there.” Mr. Caldwell had the policy and we left with the understanding of the arrangement of Friday evening at his lodge. That was the conversation then and there.
Q. When did you next see Mr. Preston?
A. On Friday night by arrangement.
Q. What talk, if any, did you have with him then?
A. I went in to the lodge room and he was paying his dues and I thought it would be fiardly courteous, I did not think it would, and without dunning him I went and stood right by him. He said, “Joe, I can’t pay you to-night. I used more money than I expected. I am paying my dues to-night, but I will pay you at the office to-morrow morning at 10 o’clock,” which would have been Saturday, the 7th. This was the 6th day of June. I said, “All right, Tony; I will be there at 10 o’clock.”
Q. Where did you next see Mr. Preston?
A. At 9 o’clock the next morning at the office, or on the sidewalk first.' He was waiting for me •and was ahead of time.
* # # * # *
Q. State what took place there.
A. Went into the office and I sat down and took the policy out of my pocket. He immediately commenced to talk that he did not, could not afford to take that policy and pay for it now. *385He redted the fact of the loss of the horse and the note that was coming due and the expense he would be upon the farm; and I said to him,— you want all the conversation between him and myself, — I said to him, “Tony, you are getting to be too old a man to refuse to take any insurance. It is not a matter of accommodation; it’s a privilege that any man would insure a man of your age. You are getting old. You have been accepted, the policy is here, you are getting at that time of life you need it; your expectancy is not a great many years.” “Well,” he says, “Joe, I would rather not take it, I can’t pay for it; but,” he says, “I will pay you for all your trouble.” I says, “Tony, I want .nothing if you don’t take the policy. I get no commission, but I will not take anything from you if you don’t take the policy.” I says, “You want to take it even if you don’t pay for it all now.” I says, “You are perfectly good. I had just as lief take your word as take a bond and,” I says, “you want to take it out. You need it,” .and I passed it over to him. He took it in his hand, unfolded it, not way open, but just merely the face of it in that shape. “Well,” he says, “I will take it; and I will pay you $5, and when I come down from the farm, which will be next month, I will pay you the balance.” I says, “Tony, that is all right.” He paid me $5 and I made a memorandum of it in a book, opposite his name: “Received of Tony Preston, on June 7th, $5.” He then handed the policy back to me. He says, “You just keep the policy for me, will you?” I says, “All right.” He wanted me to keep the policy. It would be just as safe with me as it would with him. I took and put it in an envelope *386and put it in my pocket. He got up and left the ' office.

The policy remained in the possession of Towne until July 29, 1890, on which date it was given by him to the son of the insured, who at that time-paid the balance of the amount due of the premium. The whole sum of the membership fee- and advance premium we will now’" state was testified to be $21.66. The policy was taken home-by the son and handed to his father, who then gave it to his wife, the defendant in error. The insured had been ill for some days prior to this,, and about two or three hours after turning the policy over to his wife, died. It appears that the-following assessments, or calls, were sent from the main office of the association, addressed to-Mr. Preston:

Omaha, Neb., July 31, 1890.
“Bro:Willet G. Preston, Minneapolis, Minn.: You-are hereby notified that we have charged to your insurance account the amounts this day falling due in accordance with the terms of your policy Nos. 2348, 2349, and that your account now stands, as follows: * * * The amount shown above to be now due to balance, $11.62, must be received at the home office on or before August 29, 1890,. in order to prevent forfeiture of your insurance. * * * Make remittances payable to the Pythian Life Association. Pay to D. H. Caldwell, R. 16, K. P. Block, Minneapolis, Minn.”
“Omaha, Neb., July 1,1890.
“Brother.: Satisfactory proof of death has been submitted to the association for the following claim: * * * in consequence whereof the managing board of directors, as provided in article 9, section 2, of the by-laws of the associa*387tion, as set forth, in your policy of insurance, have ordered that a mortuary call be made upon all the members of the mortuary payment plan, of a two-thirds quarterly, mortuary premium and a 33 1-3 per cent dividend or deduction be made from the maximum quarterly premium of members insured on the national premium plan. This call is made upon all members insured prior to this date.
“Fraternally yours in F., C. & B.
“George Esmond,
“Acting Secretary Pythian LAfe Association.”

It further appears that the defendant in error wrote to the association and requested that blank proofs of loss be sent to her; that this was done; that she procured them to be filled out and forwarded to the association; that they were received, and after they were examined a request was sent to Mrs. Preston to furnish some additional matters in the same connection, which she did.

The practical workings and benefits of insurance, both on life and property, are now universally acknowledged and adopted in countries where civilization and intelligence prevail, and people generally avail themselves of it under some of the different plans of issuance, either what is denominated the plan of the old line companies, or the mutual plan, or the lodge or association plan, etc. Whatever the plan, there is usually, if not always, issued some contract or agreement, most often styled a “policy” or “certificate of membership,” as the case may be. In some jurisdictions the forms and conditions of these are provided and prescribed by law, but in the majority are left to be agreed upon by the *388insurer and insured. The insurer usually making them as numerous and as stringent as seems best calculated, or, as experience has taught, will "best subserve the end desired to be attained in the conduct of the business. If-the public, the customers, could be induced to pay more attention to the matter and examine the conditions and stipulations of the policies issued to them, and, where they are arbitrary or unreasonable beyond justice between the parties to the contract, demand that they be made less complicated and made consonant with a spirit of equity, or be refused or not received, no doubt the framers would soon discover a way by which they could be made safe and fair and also bear and pass the scrutiny of the public, the customers. But where it is, as it has heretofore been, the task of the legislator to pass laws to effect the purpose above sketched, or the judiciary or courts of the land to annul an unreasonable and unfair stipulation and condition when a case involving the validity is presented for adjudication, it was, and is, naught but a mere trial , of the skill and ingenuity of the .draughtsmen of the policies to frame new conditions to evade the laws enacted by the legislatures, or to fill the place of such as are declared void or robbed of their effect by the courts. Contracts of insurance occupy no different position in the eyes of the law than do any other agreements, and when not unconscionable and unfair, .should be enforced as made between the parties. The stipulation in the contract sued upon in the case at bar, that it should not be binding unless the membership fee and what was styled “the advance premium” were paid and the policy actually delivered to the person whose life was to be *389insured thereby during life and good health, and the condition that no agent had authority to extend credit, were neither of them unjust or unfair or incapable of enforcement, nor such as should not be enforced in exact conformity with the letter and spirit. The association, it appears, had appointed a general agent, and the a^teement which gave his appointment effect, assigned or in effect made his, as his compensation for what business he might do for it, all membership fees and advance premiums, and apparently without any further regard for how he received them or when, or what arrangements he might make as to their payment, whether he exacted it as contemplated by the terms of the policy or extended credit, as it is claimed, he did in this particular' instance. Our belief that the arrangement with the general agent should be thus construed is much strengthened by the facts that Preston had been considered by the association as one of its members, and it had recognized him in that relationship, by notifying him to contribute dues and premiums and mailed him a notice of a mortuary call. Clearly it would be violative of the principles of justice and right to hold that an arrangement might exist between the association and its agent by which the membership fees and advance premiums to be paid by ah applicant for insurance became the property of the agent, and the association was no further interested in them, or their payment, had no further control over them, and whether payment was exacted on delivery of the policy, credit was extended, or payment was entirely waived, could in no manner affect the association or its rights or funds, and say that if the agent extended credit or made the applicant a *390present' of the membership fees and advance premiums, and.the party to whom a policy had been delivered under such circumstances, died, that the policy was not in force. While it is very evident that, under the terms of the application and policy, no credit could be extended for the association, or rather it was the intention that none should be, it is equally clear that by their agreement it had no further power or control over the membership fees or advance premiums, and could make no objections to credit being extended by the general agent. The contract which the association entered into Avith him, by which he became entitled to the whole amount of such fees and premiums, was inconsistent with the stipulations contained in the application and policy, in regard to the payment of the fees and advance premiums, or their enforcement as against a party to whom their general agent had granted time for their payment. The policy was prepared and forAvarded to the general agent by the association to be delivered and he to receive payment of fees and premiums of which no part belonged to the association, but to the general agent. If delivered, it was in full force, without regard to any arrangement made between the agent and the party insured respecting the time of payment of the advance premiurd. (Smith v. Provident Savings Life Assurance Society of New York, 65 Fed. Rep., 765, and cases cited.) The facts of the case referred to were somewhat different from the facts in the case at bar, but the principle of law applicable and decisive the same, and equally applicable and controlling in the present case.

In regard to the contention that Towne was not an agent of the association, in no manner *391•connected with it or it-s business and could not bind it by delivering a policy to the applicant, or “by any agreement to extend credit, the general agent testified that Towne was a special agent lor the association, appointed by him (the general agent) by virtue of the authority conferred upon him by his contract with the association, by which it will be remembered he was empowered to appoint special agents, but however this may have “been, there was ample evidence to show that ‘Towne was soliciting business for the association, working with and under the orders and directions of the general agent, and whether he was recognized by the association as an agent, or in its service, or its officers had any knowledge of Ms work, or his existence, is immaterial. The policy in question was forwarded to the general agent for the delivery. He turned it over to Towne, who had solicited and received the application, and directed him :to deliver it to the party for whom by its terms, it was intended, and Towne followed the directions, and as appears from the testimony, gave it to Willet C. Preston, who left it with Towne for safe-keeping, and if the arrangement in respect to extension of credit lor the payment of a portion of the amount due .as fees and advance premiums, effectéd at the time of such delivery, was satisfactory to Caldwell, the general agent to whom the moneys to be paid belonged, and it is a fair inference that it . was, no one could complain and certainly not the association, for, as we- have seen, it had no interest in the fees or premiums to be paid at that time, or how they were paid, or when. We must •conclude from a full investigation of the testimony that it sustains a finding of the delivery of *392the policy sued upon in this action and in such a manner and at such a time as constitute it a valid, subsisting, and binding contract between the party applicant, and thereby insured, and the association. What occurred between Towne and Preston at the time the policy was given by Towne to Preston, considered with all the other-facts and circumstances shown by the evidence and which were necessarily incident to and had a direct bearing upon this part of the transaction, constituted in legal effect a delivery of the policy.

There is an assignment of error which reads as follows: “The court erred in giving the second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth instructions given by the court on its own motion, to which the-plaintiff excepted.” Instruction numbered 11, given by the court on its own motion, was without fault, also some of the others enumerated in this assignment. The assignment was as tb all the instructions, and having determined that it is not well taken in respect to one or more, in accordance with a well established rule of this, court, it must be overruled as to all.

It is further assigned as error: “The court erred in refusing to give the first and second instructions asked by the plaintiff in error, to which refusal plaintiff in error duly excepted.’^ No. 2 of the instructions referred to in this assignment, in some of the statements contained therein, would have incorrectly informed the jury, and the refusal to give Avas therefore proper. The-error assigned was of the refusal to give the two-instructions, and it being determined that the action of the court as to either of them was without error, it disposes of the entire assignment.

*393This disposes of all the errors which were urged in the argument,, and it follows from the views herein expressed and the conclusions reached that the judgment of the district court must be

Affirmed.