92 Ky. 290 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1891
delivered the opinion oe the court.
In 1880 three thousand dollars of insurance was taken out in the Presbyterian Mutual Assurance Fund, of Louisville, Ky., upon the life of Anna K. Boesse, payable to her husband, the appellee, John Boesse, at her death.
The policy was kept in force by the regular payment of the premiums, and on January 25, 1888, the company desired to quit business. A contract was therefore then made between it and the appellant, the People’s Mutual Assurance Fund of the same city, by which, in consideration of the first-named company turning over its risks to the appellant, the latter agreed “to reinsure all the present existing certificates, now in full force, which have been issued by the first party to certificate-holders now in good standing, and to deliver to each of said 'certificate-holders a policy of insurance in the party of the second part, the said certificate-holders first agreeing to accept said policies and. to pay the party of the second part for insurance at the following rates: * * * The party of the second part hereby binds itself to cause to be executed and issued its policy, immediately, to each holder of a certificate in the party of the first part, who may be in good standing in said first party, accompanied by a written or printed statement or agreement, to be signed by said certificate-holder accepting said policy so sent him, her or them, but in no case shall the party of the second part be liable upon the policy so issued until the person or persons to whom the same may be sent shall have signed the agreement or acceptance aforesaid, and delivered the same to the party of the second part at its office in Louisville, Ky., or mailed the same addressed
“ The party of the first part binds itself to pay over to the party of the second part all money received by it upon its outstanding certificates from and after this date in all cases where the policies of the second party shall be accepted, the said money to be used by the second party in protecting the risks incurred in issuing the policies aforesaid.”
February 16, 1888, the appellant, at the instance of Anna K. Boesse, issued a policy upon her life for three thousand .dollars, payable at her death to her husband. She died November 14, 1888. This action is to recover the three thousand dollars, and an unearned premium, which the insured paid before it fell due, and which was not due at her death.
A demurrer was sustained to the answer, and judgment rendered for the appellee upon the pleadings. The orders in the case show that two amended answers were tendered and rejected by the court. They can not be considered, however, as they have not been copied into this record. Indeed they do not Appear to have been made a part of the record, either, by agreement or bill of exceptions. The defense which the appellant’s counsel claim is presented is, that the risk taken by it was not a transferred one from the other company; that an executed policy and a written acceptance of the insurance, to be signed by the assured, were sent to and received by her, but the latter was not returned to the company; that thirteen days thereafter, and when she had forfeited all right under the contract between the two companies to transferred insurance, she made personal application to
The written statement of the assured to the appellant, in what is called the “ health certificate,” that she desired a transfer of the insurance, was an acceptance by her in advance of insurance with the appellant.
In addition to all this it is an admitted fact by the pleadings, that in an action settling_ the affairs of the Presbyterian Mutual Assurance Fund, the appellant claimed and recovered from it so much 'of the insurance premiums as the first-named company had received, but which it had not earned by reason of the transfer of its insurance to the appellant, and this claim embraced the insurance now in contest. This shows beyond all doubt that it was merely transferred insurance, otherwise the appellant would not have been entitled to this fund, but would have been compelled to look to the insured for the
The averments of the petition show the insured was embraced by the contract between the two companies. This was the material matter presented by it for issue. The answer when analyzed makes none. It does not deny the existence of the contract, or state facts, such as. the non-payment of premiums, showing she was not in-good standing in the old company when it was made. It does deny that she then had such standing, but this is merely the opinion or conclusion of the pleader, and is insufficient. The admitted facts under the pleadings and exhibits filed with them show-that it was transferred insurance by virtue of the contract between the two com
Judgment affirmed.