10 S.W.2d 580 | Tex. App. | 1928
This is an appeal from the order of the trial court overruling appellant's plea of privilege. The testimony is undisputed. It shows that M. Lewin, a resident citizen of Hood county, held an accident insurance policy with appellant, which provided that in case of death by accident the beneficiary, appellee Mrs. Lindsay, who lives in New York, would be entitled to $5,000. M. Lewin suffered an accident in Hood county, and was carried to Fort Worth to a hospital, where he died. Appellant is a foreign corporation with a permit to do business in Texas, and maintains its state headquarters in Dallas county, and has an agent in Tarrant county, but did not at any time have an office, agent, or representative in flood county. Appellant filed its plea of privilege, asking that the suit be transferred to Tarrant county. The court overruled the plea; hence this appeal.
The disposition of the case involves the construction of subdivision 28 of article
"Suits on policies may be brought against any life insurance company, or accident insurance company, * * * in the county where the home office of such company is located, or in the county where loss has occurred or where *581 the policyholder or beneficiary instituting such suit resides."
Appellee seeks to uphold the judgment of the trial court, first, on the theory that the loss under the policy occurred in Hood county; and, second, that the policyholder resided in said county. Appellant contends that the loss as a matter of fact occurred in Tarrant county, where M. Lewin died. We agree with appellant's contention. In this connection, it may be well to note that under the old statute, being subdivision 29, article 1830, it was provided that a suit on an accident or life insurance policy could be maintained in the county in which the persons insured, or any of them, resided at the time of the death or injury. Article 4744 of the 1911 Statutes fixed the venue with reference to suits on life and accident policies, and it appears that in the recodification in 1925, article 4744 was substituted for the latter part of section 29 of article 1830, and is now made the latter part of subdivision 28, article 1995, which statute now provides that suit on an accident or life insurance policy may be instituted "where the home office of such company is located, or in the county where loss has occurred, or where the policyholder or beneficiary instituting such suit resides." The present statute eliminates that provision of the statute which authorized the suit to be brought where the insured person lived at the time of death. The question as to where the loss occurred under a life insurance policy, for the purpose of fixing venue, has been passed on by a number of states having similar provisions as that contained in our statute, and without exception the rule seems to be that the loss occurred where the insured died. Volume 7. Cooley's Briefs on Insurance (2d Ed.) p. 6776, states the rule to be:
"In the case of life * * * insurance, the cause of action is held to arise in the county where the insured died."
In Prader v. National Masonic Accident Ass'n,
We think the trial court was in error in overruling appellant's plea of privilege. The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the trial court to sustain appellant's plea of privilege and transfer the case to Tarrant county. *582