97 Ga. 449 | Ga. | 1895
This was an action by Jones against Methvin upon a. promissory note signed by the latter and payable to the-order of the former. It was given in payment of a premium upon a policy of life insurance issued by an insurance company to Methvin upon his application, but procured through Jones. When the policy was tendered toMethvin, he accepted it, not noticing at the time that his name was therein improperly spelled “Methoin.” After-making this discovery, the defendant (according to his testimony) mailed the policy to the company’s agent from whom he had received it, enclosing the same in a letter. There was evidence from which it could be inferred that no such letter was ever in fact written; and it seems quite certain that, if written at all, the defendant did not point out the misspelling of his name and request a proper correction, or otherwise indicate in what respect he was dissatisfied with the policy, or state any reason for the return of it. It clearly appeared that the agent received neither the letter nor the policy; and it was not even contended that the insurance company itself was ever notified of the error in the policy, or that it had any knowledge whatever of its alleged return to the agent.
The jury found for the defendant. We think the verdict was manifestly wrong. The defense set up seems to us absolutely without merit. Notwithstanding the slight error in the spelling of Methvin’s name, the policy was doubtless binding upon the company; and though it was
His defense was, however, bad for another and still stronger reason. It affirmatively appears that neither the policy nor the alleged letter ever reached the hands of the agent. In sending these documents in the manner stated, the defendant took tbe risk of the mails, and he therefore cannot complain if the papers failed to reach their destination. It was incumbent upon him to take the proper steps to have the policy corrected. Assuming that the letter he claims to have written had any existence in fact, and was all that it should have been, it was his business to see that it reached the company’s agent. The means of transportation selected by himself utterly failed to accomplish this