Provident Life Accident Ins. Co. v. Priest

103 So. 678 | Ala. | 1925

This is a suit by Edward L. Priest against the Provident Life Accident Insurance Company of Chattanooga, Tenn., a *578 corporation, based upon a policy of life and accident insurance. The suit was filed on December 3, 1923, and claimed $460 for the five and three-fourths months previous to November 14, 1923, at the rate of $80 per month. The jury returned a verdict on the issues in favor of the plaintiff for $460, and from a judgment rendered thereon by the court this appeal is prosecuted by the defendant.

There are eight errors assigned growing out of rulings of the court on demurrers to the complaint, demurrers to pleas, demurrers to replications, demurrers to rejoinders, and motions to strike pleas; but only one of these is argued in brief of appellant. Errors assigned in civil cases which counsel do not urge in brief by argument will be treated as waived and abandoned; so we will consider the errors only which are insisted on and argued in the brief of appellant. Supreme Court rule 1, Code 1923, p. 880; Henry v. Hall, 106 Ala. 84,17 So. 187, 54 Am. St. Rep. 22; L. N. R. R. Co. v. Morgan, 114 Ala. 449, headnote 1, 22 So. 20.

The assignment of error numbered 6 on the pleadings, insisted on and argued by appellant, reads as follows:

"The trial court erred in overruling appellant's demurrers separately and severally to appellee's replication three."

The record page 27 shows plaintiff filed "replication 3 to pleas D, F, H, and J separately and severally"; defendant filed demurrers to replication 3. "The demurrer to replication 3 as answer to all special pleas is by the court heard and considered, whereupon it is ordered and adjudged by the court that said demurrer be and same is hereby overruled." So it is obvious that in this one assignment of error numbered 6 there are four alleged errors — four rulings of the court — assigned as one error, or it is uncertain and indefinite which one of the four rulings he intended to assign as error. This replication 3 was filed to pleas D, F, H, and J separately and severally; they are each special pleas, and the court overruled the demurrers to this replication, answering each of these pleas, thereby holding replication 3 sufficient as to each of the four pleas. This made four rulings of the court on the demurrers to replication 3, which was filed to four special pleas, and it appears to us that appellant intended to assign as one alleged error No. 6, the four rulings of the court, holding replication 3 sufficient to special pleas D, F, H, and J, as the court overruled demurrers to replication 3 to all the special pleas. If the assignment of error is uncertain and indefinite as to the particular error complained of, this court will decline to consider it. The assignment should state concisely in what the error consists. Supreme Court rule 1, Code 1923, p. 880; Cobb v. Malone, 92 Ala. 630, 9 So. 738; National Fertilizer Co. v. Holland, 107 Ala. 412, headnote 3,18 So. 170, 54 Am. St. Rep. 101; Hall v. Pearce, 209 Ala. 397, headnote 3, 96 So. 608. These four rulings of the court, overruling demurrers to replication 3 to the four special pleas, assigned jointly as one error, will be held bad, if the assignment is not good in toto. If this replication 3 is sufficient — not subject to the demurrers — as to any one of the four special pleas, then the assignment, being joint, is bad and unavailing. Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. Hubbard,142 Ala. 546, 38 So. 750; Dabbs v. Letson, 210 Ala. 306, headnote 6, 98 So. 4; Hall v. Pearce, 209 Ala. 397, headnote 6,96 So. 608; Ashford v. Ashford, 136 Ala. 631, headnote 9, 34 So. 10, 96 Am. St. Rep. 82.

This cause of action is based, as hereinbefore stated, on an accident insurance policy, by the terms of which defendant insured the plaintiff; the amount of indemnity being $80 per month for a period not to exceed sixty months for total disability by the accident, rendering the insured wholly and continuously unable to perform any and every duty pertaining to his business or occupation. The two counts claimed $460 for the five and three-fourths months immediately prior to November 14, 1923. The suit was commenced on December 3, 1923. The second count of the complaint averred the policy was issued on August 28, 1922; that he received the injury, protected by the policy, on October 14, 1922, and he was and has been continuously from that time totally disabled and prevented by it from performing any and all duties pertaining to his business or occupation. The cause was tried on general issue to the complaint, and special pleas D, F, H, and J, and replication 3 to the special pleas and general denial of the replication.

Pleas D, F, and H set up payment of the claim or demand for which the suit was brought before the action was commenced. Pleas D and H aver on January 10, 1923, the defendant paid plaintiff $500 in compromise, satisfaction, release, and discharge, in advance settlement, of the claim of the plaintiff under the policy, and plaintiff in consideration thereof executed a written release and discharge in full satisfaction of his claim under the policy; a copy of said release and satisfaction executed by the plaintiff being attached as an exhibit to these pleas.

This replication 3 to pleas D, F, and H avers defendant paid plaintiff $80 under the policy for the first month after his injury, and that the written release was obtained by fraud, and is therefore void." This replication appears in full in the report of the case. Replication 3 is not subject to the demurrers on the ground the facts averred are insufficient to show fraud in securing the release. The averments therein, if true, are sufficient to render the settlement invalid for fraud. Western Ry. Co. v. Foshee, 183 Ala. 182, *579 headnote 9, 62 So. 500; L. N. R. R. Co. v. Huffstutler,162 Ala. 619, headnotes 2, 3, 50 So. 146; Cleere v. Cleere,82 Ala. 581, 3 So. 107, 60 Am. Rep. 750.

The appellant insists the replication is demurrable — insufficient to answer these pleas — because it fails to allege the $500 received by plaintiff was returned, offered, or tendered to the defendant before the suit was commenced; that he seeks to avoid for fraud the release contract, and fails to return the $500 received under it. To avoid a contract on the ground of fraud, the consideration received under it should be returned or tendered to the adversary; he should be placed in status quo, unless an offer of restoration would have been futile, or unless it had been waived by him. Rabitte v. A. G. S. R. R. Co., 158 Ala. 431, 47 So. 573.

It appears from the pleading that defendant paid plaintiff $80 for his total disability for one month. The complaint alleges total disability for thirteen months from October 14, 1922, the time of injury, to November 14, 1923, and that it was continuing at the time the suit was commenced. It is apparent that he did not include in the suit a claim for $500 for the remaining six and one-fourth months of the thirteen months of total disability on account of having received this $500 from the defendant. This replication avers in substance that plaintiff's attorney before this suit was filed notified defendant this settlement was void for fraud, and plaintiff, after realizing the effects of the settlement and the facts constituting the fraud in its procurement, rescinded it, and desired the payments made by it to be considered as partial payments merely on the amount then due on the policy, treating the policy as still binding and subsisting because of the fraud in the procurement of the settlement. The defendant notified plaintiff's attorney, as shown by the replication, "that it was ridiculous for plaintiff to claim that he was not mentally responsible for his actions in said compromise settlement, which was made in good faith and was fair, and defendant would not reopen the case"; and the replication alleges also that defendant wrote his attorney on November 26, 1923, that "our legal department has gone over the case carefully and advise us that according to the law and the facts in this case that they do not feel that we have liability, therefore we cannot see our way clear to reopen the claim for further consideration"; and the replication, after alleging the foregoing and other facts, states an offer would have been futile, and defendant waived the same.

If it was necessary for the plaintiff in this suit to have returned or offered to return the $500 received in the compromise as advance settlement before seeking to disaffirm it for fraud, which we do not decide, still, under the averments in this replication, a refund or tender of the same to the defendant would have been futile. It is evident that it would have been refused, if tendered, as the defendant writes under advice from their legal department it is not liable and it will not reopen the claim for further consideration. The defendant thereby shows it intended to stand by as valid the advance settlement made by it with the plaintiff. So it was not necessary, under these averments, if true, for the plaintiff to have refunded or tendered the $500 to the defendant. Rabitte v. A. G. S. R. R. Co., 158 Ala. 431, 47 So. 573. Replication 3 to special pleas D, F, and H is not subject to the grounds of demurrer assigned to it, and the court did not err in overruling demurrers to this replication to these three pleas.

Plea J sets up that the policy provides, if insured is disabled by such injury for more than 30 days, he or his representative shall, as a condition precedent to any liability of the company hereunder, furnish the company, every 30 days thereafter, with a report in writing from his attending physician, fully stating the condition of the insured and the probable duration of the disability; and that plaintiff was disabled from the injury for, to wit, five months — more than 30 days — was regularly attended by a physician, and he and his representative failed to furnish the defendant every 30 days a report in writing as the policy required. The plaintiff filed replication 3 as an answer to this special plea J, and the demurrers of the defendant to the replication were overruled by the court. Whether the court erred in this ruling we need not discuss or decide, because it is assigned as error jointly with the rulings of the court on the demurrers of the defendant to replication 3 to special pleas D, F, and H; and these rulings are held free from error. This assignment is not good in toto, so we need not discuss this ruling on demurrer to this replication to this special plea. Dabbs v. Letson,210 Ala. 306, headnote 6, 98 So. 4, and other authorities cited supra on this subject.

The plaintiff at the time of the injury was working for the United States Cast Iron Pipe Company as a moulder, making pipe fittings. He made the moulds with an iron flask, weighing from 3,000 to 5,000 pounds, and about six feet square. It turned over and hit him, fell on him, broke his leg, in three or four places, which leg is now two and one-half inches shorter than the other. The hip bone was also injured: the hips were bruised; the pelvic bone was broken; his urethra was cut in two, and his bladder was punctured, and he was otherwise internally injured. After the injury he was unconscious, and first regained consciousness in the doctor's office. There was evidence that he was totally disabled physically from performing his usual labor, and would be in that *580 physical condition during the remainder of his life.

The defendant objected and reserved exceptions to questions calling for and obtaining answers from the plaintiff that, when confined to his bed at the hospital and at his home from this injury, at times he remembered things and at other times he did not, that he was nervous, in a nervous condition, and that he did not know all the time what was going on around him. If in these rulings of the court there was error, which we do not decide, it was without injury, because the plaintiff had prior to this, without objection, testified:

That he "was unconscious right at the start after it hit me, and when I came to my consciousness I was in the doctor's office. * * * Since my injury my nerves have all been torn up and I am all the time nervous and jerky, and I can hardly feed myself at times. * * * During the time I was in Norwood Hospital my condition was pretty bad, but I do not have much recollection about it. * * * I was under the influence of opiates while I was in the hospital, and I suffered pain while I was in the hospital, and the pain was so great that it seemed like it was about all I could stand, and that kept up all the time I was at the hospital."

This evidence was before the jury without objection when defendant presented objections to the questions calling for the additional evidence mentioned. These rulings, if error, were without injury to the substantial rights of the defendant. Rule 45, Supreme Court, Code 1923, p. 895.

The defendant insists that written charge No. 12, which was the general affirmative charge, "If you believe the evidence, you cannot find for the plaintiff," should have been given by the court. There was evidence tending to prove each count of the complaint; there was evidence tending to prove each of the four special pleas D, F, H, and J, hereinbefore mentioned. The real litigated issue was on replication 3 to the four special pleas. The evidence on this replication was in clear and striking conflict, the evidence of the plaintiff tending to prove each material averment contained in it, and the evidence of the defendant was in striking contrast. This rendered the issue presented by this replication on the conflicting evidence, and its reasonable tendencies on the material facts therein, a question for the jury to decide, and the court did not err in refusing this written charge numbered 12. McMillan v. Aiken, 205 Ala. 35, headnote 9-11, 88 So. 135.

The defendant separately requested the court to give written charges numbered 17, 21, 8, 11, 19, and 9. These charges were each refused by the court, and the court thereby committed no error. Each of these charges ignores the evidence tending to show it would have been futile for the plaintiff to have attempted to return or to have offered to return the $500 to the defendant, as it tends to show he would have refused it, and they each ignore the evidence tending to show defendant waived the return or the offer to return by its letters to plaintiff's attorney and by the acts of its agents. Rabitte v. A. G. S. R. R. Co., 158 Ala. 431, 47 So. 573.

Written charge numbered 6, requested by the defendant, was refused by the court. In this there was no error. The same rule of law stated, or attempted to be stated, by this charge was substantially and fairly given to the jury in the court's general oral charge, and in written charges numbered 1 and 7, requested by the defendant, which were given to the jury by the court. Section 5364, Code of 1907, as amended, Acts 1915, p. 815; section 9509, Code 1923.

Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment will be affirmed.

Affirmed.

ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur.

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