Conservative Life Ins. Co. v. Condos

Ohio Court of Appeals
Conservative Life Ins. Co. v. Condos, 157 N.E. 306 (1927)
24 Ohio App. 504; 5 Ohio Law. Abs. 196; 1927 Ohio App. LEXIS 583
Washburn, Pardee

Conservative Life Ins. Co. v. Condos

Opinion of the Court

WASHBURN, P. J.

The Conservative Life Insurance Co. of Wheeling, W. Va. was represented in Akron by-an agent by the name of Hall; who solicited Stephan Condos and obtained from him an application for a policy of insurance by agreeing to take the note of Condos and his .wife, who was the beneficiary, for his first year’s premium, payable sixty days after date.

The policy was issued and delivered and Condos and his wife executed and delivered a cog-novit note for said premium to “the order of G. W. Hall” which note contained no reference whatever to said insurance transaction. By 75% of said premium belonged to the agent, arrangement with the Company and its agent, and the agent was the owner of the note and responsible to the Company for 25% of said premium.

When the note became part due and the agent could not collect he endorsed the note to the Company and was relieved of all liability for the Company’s share of said premium.

Notice of the past due note was sent to Condos, but the letter was returned. Later the Company sent a registered letter to Condos in which was stated that the policy was cancelled. Later Condos died and suit was brought to collect on the insurance. The Company defended on the ground that they had cancelled the policy. The Summit Common Pleas held for Condos, and error proceedings were brought to reverse the lower court.

The Court of Appeals held:

1. There is no provision-in the policy authorizing the sending of notice of forfeiture or cancellation through the mails; and there is nothing in the note or in the policy providing for a forfeiture of the policy for failure to pay said note.

2. Where, as soon as a life insurance policy was issued, the Company had charged up its agent with the part of the premium due it, the debt to the company was transferred to the agent, and it could not claim that because of Condos’ alleged failure to pay the premium within the required time, the policy becomes void.

3. Upon the question of,law, as to whether or not the taking of a note constitutes a payment, it is well settled that an agent of a life insurance company who delivers the policy and has authority to determine how premiums shall be paid, in which case the agent becomes the creditor of the insured and the debtor of the insurer, even though the premium should never reach the company, the policy is binding.

Judgment affirmed.

(Funk, Pardee, JJ., concur.)

Reference

Full Case Name
The Conservative Life Ins. Co. v. Condos.
Cited By
5 cases
Status
Published