114 S.W.2d 496 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1938
Reversing.
The Ætna Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., issued to the Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Company, of Louisville, a group policy insuring its employees against total and permanent disability, and on June 18, 1926, a certificate of insurance was issued to Walter Carter, who had been in the company's employ for a number of years. The master policy, subject to which the certificate was issued, contained a provision by which the Insurance Company obligated itself to pay to the employee the amount of insurance in force upon his life at the time such disability commenced in lieu of all other benefits, "upon receipt at the home office of the Company during the continuance of insurance on such employee of satisfactory evidence of such disability." The policy also provided:
"This insurance will be terminated whenever said employee, for any reason whatsoever, ceases to be in the employ of said employer."
The Insurance Company defended on the ground that Carter voluntarily left the employ of the Manufacturing Company on May 11, 1927, that the insurance issued to him was cancelled on May 31, 1927, and that no claim was presented and no evidence of disability was received by the home office of the Insurance Company during the continuance of the insurance. The defenses were put in issue by reply. At the trial a jury was impaneled, and the case was stated to the jury by counsel for each side. Being of the opinion that the evidence which counsel for plaintiff offered to produce was not sufficient to show that satisfactory evidence of plaintiff's disability was received at the home office during the continuance of the insurance, the court on its own motion instructed the jury to find for the Insurance Company. Carter appeals.
There is no objection to the practice of giving a peremptory instruction after the opening statement of counsel. Falls City Plumbing Supply Company v. *394
Jake's Foundry Company,
"Of course, in all such proceedings nothing should be taken, without full consideration, against the party making the statement or admission. He should be allowed to explain and qualify it, so far as the truth will permit; but if, with such explanation and qualification, it should clearly appear that there could be no recovery, the court should not hesitate to so declare and give such direction as will dispose of the action."
We come then to the propriety of the court's ruling. The first question presented is whether, in the circumstances, notice to the employer of Carter's disability was sufficient? Ordinarily, the employer is the agent of the employee and not of the insurer, Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Hall,
But, as Carter may not be able to show the custom, it becomes necessary to consider the defense that the insurance was terminated when Carter quit work, and the further defense that no evidence of disability was received at the home office of the Insurance Company during the continuance of the insurance. It appears that Carter offered to prove by competent evidence that he had been in the employ of the Manufacturing Company for several years, and that some time prior to May 11, 1927, he became totally and permanently disabled by disease, and that on May 11, 1927, his condition was such that he was forced to go to bed and not return to work. Of course, if Carter, while suffering no disability, voluntarily quit work, his insurance then ceased; but not so if he was forced to quit work on account of his disability. Ætna Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn. v. Castle,
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial not inconsistent with this opinion.