193 A. 460 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1937
Argued April 16, 1937. This is an action of assumpsit by the beneficiaries to recover upon a policy of life insurance issued by the defendant on March 27, 1930. The policy required the *24 payment of a semi-annual premium of $29.20 on the 27th day of each March and September. After paying three semi-annual premiums the insured, Sarah V. Grentzer, failed to pay the premium which was due on September 27, 1931, or within the thirty-one day grace period granted under the policy. The policy therefore lapsed for non-payment of the premium due on September 27, 1931.
Quoting from the opinion of the lower court: "On November 2, 1931, Lubeck, an agent of the defendant company, received from Mrs. Grentzer her signature to an application for reinstatement together with check for $35.20, which admittedly included the $29.20 premium due on this particular policy. The reinstatement provision in the policy reads as follows: `If this Policy shall lapse for non-payment of any premium when due, it may be reinstated at any time upon written application with evidence, satisfactory to the company, of the insurability of the Insured and the payment of all overdue premiums with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum.'. . . . . . It was the plaintiff's contention that compliance with the reinstatement provision of the policy had been waived by the conduct of the company. In support thereof plaintiffs offered, through their witnesses, testimony to the effect that when the agent called at the Grentzer home, received the check and the signature to the application for reinstatement, he did not secure answers to the questions which were on the printed form, but that the agent left, taking the blank form, returned to the office of the company, where he gave to the cashier the check for the premium and the blank form. At that time and place, certain answers given by the agent to the cashier were filled in upon the form and turned over to those in charge of the office; that the check for premium was subsequently deposited and paid and that subsequently, on November 10, 1931, Mrs. Grentzer died; *25 that after the death of Mrs. Grentzer when claim was made by the plaintiff beneficiaries, the company tendered the premium of $29.20, which was refused.
"Contradicting this testimony was that relied upon by the defendant to indicate that no waiver of the reinstatement provision of the policy had been intended or made. It was the testimony of the defendant's witnesses that when the reinstatement application, together with the premium check were received at the local office by the cashier there from Lubeck, the agent, that immediate steps were made to turn over one of the attached slips on the application for reinstatement to Dr. Thompson, examining physician for the company, who made two unsuccessful attempts, one on Nov. 4, 1931 and the other on Nov. 10, 1931, to interview the insured; that his failure in that regard was promptly reported to the company and that at no time did they do anything further with regard to the policy.
"The question of whether or not the conduct of the company constituted a waiver was properly submitted to the jury under adequate instruction and by them resolved in favor of the defendant when the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $29.20, representing the last premium paid."
Plaintiffs' motions for judgment non obstante veredicto and for new trial were overruled, whereupon plaintiffs appealed.
Was the policy in this case ever reinstated? Under its terms, to renew a lapsed policy, the company required "evidence, satisfactory to the Company, of the insurability of the Insured and the payment of all overdue premiums." This court, in Mitchellv. Alta Life Ins. Co.,
To the same effect is Fishman v. Eureka-Maryland AssuranceCorp.,
Likewise is Riebel v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
In Smith v. Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World,
In the instant case, the premium due on September 27, 1931, was not paid on or before its due date, nor within the thirty-one day period allowed for the payment *28 of a premium. The policy, therefore, lapsed and had to be reinstated in order to be in force when the insured died. A condition precedent to reinstatement under the express terms of the policy was the furnishing of evidence of insurability satisfactory to the company. This condition was not fulfilled. It is not sufficient that Mrs. Grentzer applied in writing for reinstatement of the policy and paid the overdue premium. The furnishing of satisfactory evidence of insurability is required in addition.
The question whether the defendant had waived the furnishing to it of evidence of Mrs. Grentzer's insurability was submitted to the jury and decided by them in favor of the defendant. The verdict is supported by the evidence. Dr. Crawford L. Thompson, a physician who has long practiced in Pittsburgh and was a disinterested witness at the time of the trial, testified positively that the reinstatement application signed by Mrs. Grentzer was placed in his hands to make a medical examination of her; that he called at her house for the purpose of examining her on November 4, 1931, which was only two days after Mrs. Grentzer made the application, but could not gain admittance to the house, and that he again called at her house to examine her on Nov. 10th, but she was then already dead. Since the verdict was, in effect for the defendant, all evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom favorable to the defendant must be accepted and all contrary evidence and inferences rejected: Kissinger v. Pgh. Rys.Co.,
Appellants contend that the reinstatement provision in the policy is ambiguous. It may be noted that the clause requiring "evidence of insurability satisfactory to the company" is found in the applicable section of the Pennsylvania Insurance Act of 1921, P.L. 682, 723, § 410 (k)
Plaintiffs having failed to meet the burden of proof to establish evidence of insurability satisfactory to the company, no recovery could be permitted beyond the return of the last premium, and the trial court would have been justified in directing a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amount of said premium, viz., $29.20. If such a result is a hardship upon the plaintiffs, we can only say as was said by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of N.Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Statham,
Appellants contend that at the time of the alleged default in the payment of premium (October 28, 1931), the insurance company was indebted to the assured in the sum of $482, being the amount due the assured as the beneficiary of her brother's policies in the same company. This brother had died on September 26, *31 1931, and it is claimed that proofs were made out at the assured's house by the defendant's representative a few days later.
There is no evidence in the record to support this contention. There is no evidence that Mrs. Grentzer was the beneficiary of any policy which her brother had in the defendant company. We were advised at bar on the argument of this case, and the same was not contradicted, that the brother's policies contained a facility of payment provision. If this be true, Mrs. Grentzer had no right of action upon and could not enforce payment to her of the policies: Yelda v. W. S. Life Ins. Co.,
Even if we assume the correctness of the facts predicated by appellants, they would not avoid the lapse of the policy in suit. Even if more than the premium had been due from the defendant to Mrs. Grentzer, on account of a policy on the life of some other person who had died before the premium on the policy in suit became due, the company would not have been bound to apply sufficient of said proceeds to pay the premium on the policy in suit to prevent it from lapsing. That is because the proceeds would have been due the insured on account of an entirely different transaction and under a policy wholly distinct from the one on which the premium was due. The principle which the appellants seek to evoke applies only where the debt due from the insurer to the insured is based upon or grows out of the same policy as the one in litigation and upon which a premium was not paid. *32
In the case of Judge v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
The same distinction which the Supreme Court pointed out between the Judge case and the Girard, Matlack, Sporrer and Holyland cases exists between the latter and the case at bar.
With reference to an alleged agreement between Mrs. Grentzer and some unnamed supposed agent of the defendant to apply sufficient of the proceeds of the brother's policies to the payment of the premium on the policy in suit, it is sufficient that no agent of the defendant would have authority to make any such agreement, *34
in view of the express provisions of the policy prescribing how premiums shall be paid and limiting the authority of agents. The policy expressly stipulates that "All premiums or installments of premiums are payable at the Company's Home Office, but may be paid to an authorized agent of the Company on or before the dates when due, in exchange for official receipts countersigned by such authorized agent." The policy further provides that "No agent is authorized to waive forfeitures or to make, modify or discharge contracts or to extend the time for paying a premium. No provision of this Policy can be waived or modified in any case except by an endorsement hereon signed by the President, a Vice-President or the Secretary." It is not contended that the premium due on September 27, 1931, was paid to the agent in exchange for the company's official receipt for said premium. If the alleged agreement between Mrs. Grentzer and the agent were valid, it would clearly modify the contract with reference to the payment of premiums, which is expressly beyond the power of any agent. Such a modification, to be valid, would require an endorsement on the policy signed by the President, a Vice-President or the Secretary. Such an alleged agreement might also have the effect of extending the time for paying a premium, which is also expressly excluded from the authority of any agent. The offer of such an alleged agreement was, therefore, rightly excluded. That limitations in insurance policies upon the authority of agents are valid and will be enforced, is shown by the following decisions of this court: Youngblood v. PrudentialIns. Co.,
In addition, plaintiffs proved that the premium due *35 September 27, 1931, had been paid by Mrs. Grentzer's check dated November 2, 1931. The plaintiffs thereby recognized that the policy in suit had lapsed, and required reinstatement. Evidently the deceased also understood that her policy had lapsed, because she admittedly signed the application to reinstate the policy. Plaintiffs' actions, as well as those of the deceased, are inconsistent with the position that the premium was to be paid out of the amounts alleged to have been due under the brother's policies.
The other contentions of appellants, except the one which complains about the refusal of a new trial for after-discovered evidence, relate to rulings on the admission or rejection of evidence. If the court below could, or should have, entered a compulsory nonsuit, or directed a verdict simply for the return of the last premium, or entered judgment n.o.v. for the amount of said last premium, then any rulings upon the admissibility of evidence become of no consequence. None of the evidence in question would change the fundamental facts that the policy was allowed to lapse for nonpayment of the premium due on September 27, 1931, and that satisfactory evidence of insurability was never thereafter furnished the defendant. Those basic facts are all that are necessary to the determination, as a matter of law, that there can be no recovery, beyond the amount of the last premium. A case will not be reversed for harmless error: Duffel'sEst.
Appellants' last contention relates to the proposition that the plaintiffs should have been granted a new trial for after-discovered evidence. The plaintiffs are not entitled to recover more than the last premium as a matter of law.
The law governing new trials for after-discovered evidence has been clearly set forth in Commonwealth *36 v. Mellon,
The alleged after-discovered evidence was to the following effect: "(a). That Mr. Davis, the field supervisor of the insurance company, who had testified for the company, had notified Mr. Tully our newly discovered witness who had worked for the company from 1929 to 1934, that the insurance company had agreed to grant the request of the assured to have her premium deducted from the money that was due by the company *37 to her; (b) that Mr. Tully knew that the company, because of the financial depression existing, had waived all medical examinations where the premium had been paid within thirty days after it had lapsed."
One of the essential requirements for a new trial on the ground of after-discovered evidence is that such evidence could not have been obtained at the trial by the use of reasonable diligence. There is no averment whatsoever in the plaintiffs' "Affidavit as to After Discovered Evidence," attached to their additional reasons for a new trial, to the effect that the alleged after-discovered evidence could not have been obtained at the trial by the use of reasonable diligence. Nor is there any inherent reason apparent why the alleged after-discovered evidence could not have been obtained at the trial by the exercise of reasonable diligence. The alleged after-discovered evidence all relates to matters which supposedly occurred long before the trial. This alone would also be sufficient to justify affirmance of the action of the court below.
The plaintiffs' affidavit does not state specifically when the alleged after-discovered evidence was uncovered. The affidavit simply states that the plaintiffs learned of the additional evidence "subsequent to the trial" of this case. In Hornick v.Betlehem Mines Corp., supra, the Supreme Court said with reference to a similar vague averment, at p. 230: "It will be noticed that in its petition, defendant does not state specifically when it learned the alleged fact on which it grounds its application; it merely avers that the evidence was discovered `since the trial;' as time is one of the decisive elements in the consideration of the question, such an indefinite statement of the time of discovery is without value."
We see no error which would warrant a reversal of the judgment or justify a new trial.
The assignments of error are overruled and judgment affirmed. *38