58 Ind. App. 98 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1914
This was an action brought by appellee against appellant to recover on a life insurance policy issued to her husband and in which she was designated the beneficiary. The original complaint consisted of four paragraphs, a demurrer to the third was sustained, and after the evidence had all been introduced, the court instructed the jury to disregard the first and second, for the reason that the evidence did not support either of these paragraphs. The only paragraph of the complaint before us, therefore, is the fourth, wherein it is averred in substance that the policy of insurance covering the life of Elmer W. Tuttle was issued by the Majestic Life Insurance Company on April 16, 1906. On or about October 10, 1907, appellant, Majestic Life
“Premiums are paid at the home office of the company on or before the dates when due in exchange for an official receipt signed by the president or secretary, ,and countersigned by an authorized agent of the company. If any premium be not paid when due, the policy shall be void and all premiums forfeited to the company except as herein provided. * * No condition, provision or privilege of this policy can be waived or modified in any ease except by an indorsement hereon signed by the president or secretary. No agent has the power on behalf of the company to modify * * * this contract, to extend the time for paying premiums, to waive any forfeiture, or to bind the company by making any promises. * *”
The defendant employed in its home office, collectors to collect premiums and otherwise assist in the conduct of its business, and they under the direction and with the knowledge and consent of defendant accepted payment of overdue premiums or promissory notes given in payment of or extending the time of payment of premiums, and they granted policy holders extension of time in payment of premiums or notes given in payment or extension of the time of payment of premiums. Elmer W. Tuttle paid to defendant’s predecessor the semiannual premium due on April 16, 1906, on that date; the semiannual premium due October 16, 1906, he paid on December 8, 1906; that due on April 16, 1907, he paid on April 26, 1907, and all of which payments were
October 10, 1907, was the date on which the Majestic Life Assurance Company reinsured the risks of the Majestic Life Insurance Company, including the policy in suit, and the insured paid the semiannual premiums to the assurance company on the following days: the payment due October 16, 1907, on November 13, 1907; that due on April 16, 1908, was paid to one of defendant’s collectors on that' day by the execution of a note accepted by defendant in the principal sum of $34.70 payable in 120 days, and at the same time defendant delivered to insured its receipt providing that “should this premium be paid by check or note and . said cheek be not paid on presentation, or be not paid on maturity, then the policy herein becomes lapsed, and all premiums paid on its account shall be forfeited to the company as provided in the policy. ’ ’ The note above mentioned was paid to a collector on December 12, 1908, after it was overdue, and was accepted by the company. The premium due October 16, 1908, was paid to a collector on November 16, 1908, which was one day after the time of grace allowed had expired, by the execution of a promissory note accepted by defendant, in the usual form, and containing this provision,
“I understand and agree with the Majestic Life Assurance Company that in consideration of its acceptance hereof, the time of payment of said premium is extended until the maturity of this note, at which time all rights and benefits secured by said policy shall cease and determine without notice and said policy shall be null and void, subject, however, to the provisions in said policy contained,. it being understood that failure to pay this note at its maturity shall have the same effect as- failure to pay the premiums as required in said policy. I further agree that this note is not in payment for life insurance or of any premium, but that it is exclusively an extension of the time of payment of the premium above referred to; and the non*103 payment npon said policy of insurance shall not impair the obligations of this note, but the same shall become due and payable for the proportion of its face and interest that the period for which said premium is hereby extended bears to the whole time covered by said premium. E. W. Tuttle.”
An official receipt was then delivered to the insured similar to the one given on April 16, 1908. This note was not paid at maturity, but in lieu thereof Tuttle executed and delivered to one of defendant’s collectors another promissory note dated May 17, 1909, becoming due August 1, 1909, and calling for the sum of $35.64, the amount of the premium due and payable on October 16, 1908, which note contained the same agreement as to extension above set out.
The semiannual premium due April 16, 1909, was likewise paid to one of defendant’s collectors by the execution of a promissory note for $33.90, dated May 17, 1908, due August 1, 1909, which note defendant accepted. This note also contained a provision similar to that set out above as contained in the two before-mentioned notes. At the same time defendant delivered its official receipt to insured, which likewise contained the same provisions as to forfeiture as the receipts above mentioned. Said last two notes were not paid at maturity, and on August 12, 1909, plaintiff received from defendant a letter as follows:
“Under recent date we advised you that your note in amount $35.64 with .45 interest, also your other note in amount $33.90, with .43 interest would fall due Aug. 1st, ’09. Ve presume that you have overlooked this matter, however, we will thank you to let us have remittance to cover and oblige.
Jy-Bm Tours truly, Majestic Life Assurance Co.”
Subsequent to the receipt of this letter one of defendant’s collectors called on assured, produced the notes and requested payment from him. It was then agreed that the time of payment might be extended until the corn on plaintiff’s farm was gathered and marketed. The notes were then
By the course of defendant’s conduct in accepting overdue payments of premiums and overdue payments of notes given in payment of premiums said Tuttle was honestly led to believe from the time of said agreements until his death that his policy was in force and that defendant would accept payment of the notes at the time agreed upon. It is also averred that the defendant by its action above set out waived the conditions as to the extension of time of payment of premiums and of forfeiture whether contained in said policy, said receipts or said notes and at no time Avas the insured or the beneficiary informed that the policy had been forfeited until after the death of the insured, and that in fact the policy had never been forfeited. The assured died on October 25, 1909, while this policy, by reason of the said payments and agreements, was in force. A request for proper blanks for proof of death was made of defendant, but it denied liability, and refused this request. The said insured and the beneficiary each performed all the conditions of the policy required of each to be performed, and a judgment for $2,000 and interest was demanded. A demurrer to this complaint for want of facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action was- overruled, and this action of the court is challenged.
The defendant’s answer was in two paragraphs, the first a general denial. In the second the execution of the policy of insurance and the reinsurance thereof is admitted, and it avers the insured paid the premiums according to the terms of the policy up to and including the premium due April 16, 1908, but denies that any other premiums were paid and sets out the clauses in the policy regarding the payment of premiums and forfeiture of the same as the one set out in the complaint. It is then averred that the insured executed to defendant his promissory note dated November 16, 1908, instead of paying the premium due October 16, 1908, the
With the general verdict, answers to a number of interrogatories were returned, and over appellant’s separate motions for judgment on these answers and for a new trial, judgment was rendered for appellee on the verdict. The errors assigned and argued call in question the rulings of the court on the demurrer to the complaint, on the motion for judgment on the answers to the interrogatories and on the motion fpr a new trial, on the grounds that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence, that there was error in giving instruction No. 24 on the court’s own motion, and in refusing to give a peremptory instruction to find for defendant.
Under the second specification of error, appellant urges that the answers to the interrogatories returned with the general verdict do not show a waiver of the forfeiture clauses contained in the several instruments involved here, either by ratification or by estoppel, and for that reason the answers are in irreconcilable conflict with the general verdict and must control.
Prom what we have said it is apparent that the court did not err in refusing either to direct a verdict for appellant or to enter judgment in its favor on the answers to the interrogatories or in refusing to grant a new trial on account of the insufficiency of the evidence.
Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported, in 107 N. E. 22, As to when acts and knowledge of agents prevent forfeiture, see 9 Am. St. 236; 26 Am. Rep. 370. Waiver of provision in life insurance policy as to time of payment of premiums by acceptance of premium after appointed time or similar acts. See 7 Ann. Cas. 385. See, also, under (1) 31 Cyc. 338; (2) 25 Cyc. 916; (3) 25 Cyc. 954; 38 Cyc. 1957; (4) 38 Cyc. 1902; (5) 25 Cyc. 858, 861; (6) 25 Cyc. 868; (7) 25 Cyc. 870; (8) 7 Cyc. 597; (9) 25 Cyc. 954; (10) 38 Cyc. 1598.