6 N.Y.S. 374 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The defendant issued to Edwin A. Walter, of Kendall Creek, Pa., on the 5th day of June, 1882, a policy of life insurance, payable to his personal representatives, in the sum of ©2,500, upon the payment by the assured, semi-annually, of a premium of $25.87, on the 5th day of December, and of June, in each year. The assured failed to pay the premium due on the 5th day of December, 1885, according to the terms of the policy, and subsequently gave his note to the company, which was received by it, by which he promised to pay the company, 90 days thereafter, this premium. At the expiration of the 90 days, the note not having been paid, another note for a like amount was given by the assured, at 60 days, which contained the condition that, if not paid at maturity, the policy should be- rendered null and void. This note was never paid. A like sum for the semi-annual premium due the 5th day of J une, 1886, also remained unpaid at the time of the death of the assured, which occurred on the 6th day of October, 1886. The fourth condition of the contract of insurance provided that none of the conditions of the contract could be waived except by an agreement in writing, signed either by the president or secretary of the company.
The case, as it was finally submitted to the jury, involved two important questions. One of them was whether or not Mr. Dutcher, the secretary of the company, had not orally agreed with the insured to waive the condition of prompt payment, and had extended the time for making such payment, so as to save the policy from forfeiture. It becomes necessary, therefore, to examine the evidence upon which the proposition was submitted to the jury for its decision. The plaintiff’s case rests upon the testimony of Harvey H. Bartholomew, who upon this subject testifies as follows: “I was present at a conversation between Mr. Dutcher and Dr. Walter, in the office of Drs. Ben
The testimony was, unquestionably, illegally admitted. It is not seriously attempted to maintain its competency upon this appeal. It was at no time struck out of the case. The learned judge at circuit, in his charge to the jury, to some extent broke its force by instructing the jury that such evidence “amounted to nothing whatever.” “It did not restore the policy, or extend the time of the payment of the premium, and consequently is of no importance in the'case;” yet he allowed it to remain for the consideration of the jury ostensibly upon the subject of taking out a paid-up policy in the place of one or both of the policies held by the deceased. It was not binding, the jury was further advised by the court, inasmuch as McGee was not a general officer, being neither the president nor secretary of the company. There does not, however, appear a distinct, unqualified withdrawal of this evidence from the consideration of the jury. It was much more direct in its result, as to an actual waiver or attempted waiver by an officer of the company, than that given by the witness Bartholomew in his interview with the secretary, Dutcher. We are unable to say that this evidence, so illegally admitted under objection and exception, did not play an important part in leading the jury to its final conclusion in respect to the import of the interview between the assured and the secretary, for it would not be expected that they would refine nicely between the differences in the powers of the agent or local officer in waiving a condition and those of a secretary of the company. The learned court properly instructed the jury that whether the condition was waived in the manner testified to by the witness Bartholomew or not, yet the company had the right, at any time, to insist upon the payment of the premiums remaining unpaid, and to terminate the period which had been given the deceased in which to pay the same. It is shown that on the 27th day of May, 1886, the company caused to be mailed to the deceased a notice to the effect that the premium due May 4th of that year had not been paid, and in consequence thereof the policy had lapsed, and that they should cancel the same on their books. Under the evidence, and under the presumption made by the course of business of the defendant, the court instructed the jury that that letter was actually mailed to the assured. He instructed them, furthermore, that it did not necessarily follow that the letter was in fact received by the assured, and submitted to the jury the question whether such letter was received by him in his life-time. The evidence in behalf of the plaintiff upon this subject is that givén by the administrator of the deceased, to the effect that, in looking over the papers of his intestate, he did not find such letter. The court was requested to charge “that, as matter of law, this letter was received by Walter.” The court refused so to charge, and the defendant excepted. What was seemingly intended to be requested of the court to charge was that, upon showing the actual mailing of the letter with the postage thereon prepaid, a presumption arose that the same was received by the person addressed. This manifestly is the meaning of the request, although its language is inartistic. The rule is, as given by Greenleaf on Evidence, (vol. 1, § 40,) “that there is a presumption of law that a letter or other paper, duly directed and mailed,