Pacific Mutual Life Insurance v. Walker

67 Ark. 147 | Ark. | 1899

Riddick, J.,

(after stating the facts.) This action was brought upon a policy of insurance against accidental injuries. One of the defenses against the action is based on the contention that a certain installment of the premium agreed to be given as a consideration for the policy was not paid. The plaintiff, Walker, gave the insurance company an order on the railroad company, of which he was an employee, for the payment of this installment, it being specified therein that the same should be deducted from his wages. The insurance company contends that by the terms of this order the payment could only be made from the wages of plaintiff for the month of June, 1896; that he had ceased to be an employee of the company before that month; that therefore the company owed him no wages for that month; and that the order was not paid, and could not be collected. To show that the payment of this installment was not confined to the June wages, the plaintiff introduced a witness, who, over the objection of the defendant, was permitted to testify as follows:

“I heard a man by the name of Murphy, who -was the agent of an accident insurance company, say that his company took orders for the premiums, and the railway company paid these orders out of the wages of its employees when they had anything coming to them, and that they held these orders till the employee had the money to their credit, and that then the railway company paid the order, and charged it to the-;employee; but I do not know whether this man Murphy was an agent of the defendant in this case or not.”

The only basis for the admission of this testimony is the fact that the policy sued on appears to have been countersigned by one “Frank Murphy, special agent.” There is nothing to show the identity of these two Murphys. But, even if it be admitted that it was Frank Murphy, the special agent of the defendant insurance company, who made the statement, still it was clearly incompetent, for it does not appear that in making the statement he was acting for the company, or had power to bind it by such admissions. If a principal was bound by statements made in every casual conversation of his agent, it would be hazardous to send out agents, and few could afford to employ them. This testimony should have been excluded, its admission being error of the most palpable kind.

The next question arises on the exception by defendant to the action of the presiding judge in giving to the jury the instruction copied in the statement of facts. It will be seen, by an examination of that instruction, that the jury were told, in substance, that if Walker was continuously in the employ of the railway company from the issuance of the policy up -to the time of the accident, and if the insurance company gave him no notice of the non-payment of his order upon the railway company, he could in that event recover, even though the last installment due on the premium had not been paid. Now, it is by no means clear that the railway company had money of Walker in its hands out of which, by the terms of the order, the last installment couldhave been paid. On the contrary, there was evidence tending to show that the railway company owed Walker nothing. But, under the law as stated in this instruction, if Walker had collected and used every cent due him by the railway company, yet, if the insurance company failed to notify him of the nonpayment of his order, it would be treated as a payment. There seems to be little justice in such a rule, for it is reasonable to suppose that Walker knew what the railway company owed him, and if he left nothing to pay his order, he knew that his order would not be paid, and in that event was not entitled to notice of its non-payment’ Certainly, under no reasonable view of the law would Walker be allowed to hold the insurance company responsible for the non-payment of his order when he left no funds out of which it could be paid. McMahon v. Travelers Insurance Co., 77 Iowa, 229; Bane v. Insurance Co., 85 Ky. 677.

If, however, the railroad company retained funds in its hands belonging to Walker, out of which to pay this last installment, and the insurance company either failed to present the order, or, if presented and not paid, failed to return it to Walker, and made no effort to notify him of its non-payment, there would be grounds for holding the company liable, just as if the order had been in fact paid. If wages were due Walker from the railway company for the month upon which the order was drawn sufficient to pay the order, then, in the absence of any complaint or notice from the insurance company to the contrary, he might well presume that the order he had given it for the premium had been paid, or that the insurance company treated the order as a payment, and would not insist upon a forfeiture for non-payment of the premium. Having acted in a way that would naturally lead the insured to believe that his premium had been paid, the company should not, under such circumstances, be allowed to insist on a forfeiture for non-payment. Lyon v. Traveler’s Insurance Co., 55 Mich. 141; National B. Association v. Jackson, 114 Ill. 533; Bury v. Insurance Co., 89 Tenn. 427.

Now, the instruction did not submit the question to the jury as to whether the railroad company had funds in its hands due Walker for wages for the month upon which the order was drawn, but permitted a finding against the insurance company on account of its failure to return the order and notify Walker of its non-payment, although he may have withdrawn all funds due him by the company, leaving nothing to pay his order, and it was therefore, in our opinion, erroneous and prejudicial to the l'ights of appellant.

A.s this ease must be retried, we will call attention to another defect in this instruction relating to its form. With the exception above noted, it submits to the jury about every possible issue that could have been raised in the case. Few of these questions were disputed on the trial, and the incorporation of all of them in a single instruction tended to make it of unusual leugth, and more or less confusing to the jury. For instance, this instruction submits to the jury the questions whether Walker, prior to his injury, had taken an insurance policy; whether, by the terms of the policy, he was to receive $500 for an accident causing loss of foot by dismemberment; whether he gave an order on the railway company for the payment of the premium; and whether these installments of «-this premium were paid. These and other questions which were not disputed at the trial, and about which there was no conflict in the evidence, were submitted to the jury, along with the disputed questions of fact. The province of the jury is to determine questions of fact about which there is conflict, and it is unnecessary to submit to them questions about which there is no dispute, and which are conclusively established by the evidence. Catlett v. Ry. Co., 57 Ark. 461. By doing so in this case, the other joints were obscured and clouded by an excess of verbiage. When necessary to refer to the undisputed facts, the presiding judge can state them to the jury as facts in the case which they must take as established. For instance, in this case the jury could have been told that the suit was based upon an insurance policy issued to Walker by the defendant company, and the terms of the policy bearing on the case could have been explained to them. They could have been further told that Walker gave an order on the railway company for four several sums .to cover the premium, and that the first three of these installments had been paid, and that about them there was no dispute. After disposing of these and other undisputed facts, the judge could have submitted to the jury the questions about which there was conflict, and upon which they were asked to decide. In this way long and complicated instructions can be avoided, and the matter presented to the jury in a way that they cannot fail to understand the questions to be decided.

This defect, being one of form only, would not ordinarily be ground for reversal, but we have referred to it because we consider it to be of the highest importance in jury trials that they should comprehend exactly what they are asked to decide, and they cannot do this unless the questions are clearly pointed out to them by the charge of the presiding judge.

There are other points discussed, but the views of the court about them sufficiently appear from what has been said. For the errors indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.

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