The appellants (defendants below) pleaded in offset and counter-claim that the appellee (plaintiff below) negligently failed to collect, or allow them to collect, certain premium notes, one-half of which when collected was to belong to them and the other half to the company, for which they were acting as agents in soliciting and procuring persons to purchase life insurance in the plaintiff company.
The contract of agency provided that 50 per cent of the first annual premiums should be paid to the agents as their commissions, when the notes should be collected, and 5 per cent of all subsequent premiums paid to the company. The evidence offered and excluded by the court tended to prove that the company issued policies to the parties, accepted their notes for the first premiums, and negligently failed to collect same or allow appellants to do so, though the parties were solvent and the notes could have been collected by the use of ordinary and proper diligence. The ground of objection was that the evidence varied the written contract put in evidence by appellee. We think the evidence was admissible under the allegations of appellants.
The court also excluded evidence tending to prove that the agents (appellants) procured one Addington to take out a policy in the company, and upon his application, medical examiner's report, etc., he was accepted by the company and the policy was issued to him and sent to a bank to be delivered to him. He being away from home on business, and not knowing that the policy was awaiting him, the company recalled it, it seems, because not taken and paid for promptly, no other reason appearing. Upon his return home he was informed of the issuance and recall of the policy, and was willing and offered to take the policy and pay the premium, and the appellants so notified appellee, but the company failed and refused to return the policy, and the agents' one-half interest in the premium was thus lost to them.
We think this evidence ought to have been admitted. The matter had been properly pleaded, and we think that the proffered evidence tended to show that the agents had an earned interest in the premium which could not arbitrarily be thus disposed of by appellee. If a mistake had been made, and it were shown that he was accepted by mistake, or by *Page 453 fraud either on the part of the agents or by the assured, which being discovered the company by reason thereof declined to execute the contract, or any other good reason shown for the rejection, it would be different; but no such case as this is pleaded or proved.
The written contract put in evidence by appellee showed that premium notes taken by appellants were to be sent to appellee monthly, but appellants offered to prove that the notes in controversy had been reported and sent to appellee as soon as taken, not waiting until they matured, and had been held by it and not collected nor attempted to be collected. This evidence was excluded because varying the written contract. We think that if the appellee accepted and held the notes, and failed to object to receiving them before the time expressed in the contract, it waived the provision of the contract, and that the evidence ought to have been admitted.
The jury were charged peremptorily to find a verdict for appellee, which is complained of. With the evidence above referred to all admitted, of course, the court would not give such a charge; and we think it unnecessary to notice the assignment complaining of the charge of the court.
It is urged here also by an assignment that this charge was erroneous, because the appellee having alleged itself to be a foreign corporation doing business in this State under a permit from our Secretary of State, and having failed to make proof of such allegation, when a general denial thereof had been filed by the defendant, it could not recover. We think this assignment too is well taken. Tabor v. Building and Loan Association, 40 S.W. Rep., 954.
For the reasons above given, we think the judgment in this case ought to be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial; and we make the order accordingly.
Reversed and remanded.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING. January 8, 1898.