134 Va. 468 | Va. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding by motion to recover a judgment upon two policies of insurance. One for $500.00 on a life insurance policy, and the other for $2,000.00 on an accident policy. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of Gulley’s administratrix for $2,500.00 — the full amount of the two policies.
“First, because O. H. Gulley in his lifetime did not pay the premiums, or either of them, for the policies of insurance in the notice mentioned and never accepted the said policies, or either of them.
“Second, because the said policies were sent by H. S. Rawlings, agent for the defendant, to the said C. H. Gulley by mail on the condition that he pay the first premium for said policies and accept the said, policies, but said C. H. Gulley never paid said premiums, or either one of them, and never accepted said policies, or either one of them.
“Third, because H. S. Rawlings, agent for the defendant, submitted the said policies to C. H. Gulley on condition that he approve or accept the said policies and pay the premiums therefor by note executed by him to H. S. Rawlings, and he never approved or accepted said policies, or either of them, and never executed a note for said premiums.
“Fourth, because the application for both of said policies provides that neither policy shall take effect until the first premium shall have been actually paid while said Gulley was in good health and said Gulley never paid the first premium on either policy.”
The exact position of the Insurance Company is thus stated by its counsel:
“Was the policy of the Reliance Life Insurance Company ever accepted by C. H. Gulley and was the first premium thereon ever actually paid by him?
“Upon the answer to this question the proper decision*473 of this ease rests. We earnestly submit that a careful analysis of the testimony shows that the Reliance policy was only delivered to Gulley on approval and for inspection, that Gulley never had accepted the Reliance policy, and that he had never paid the first premium due thereon. We are confident that the court will find no evidence in this record to show an absolute delivery of the Reliance policy and an acceptance of the policy by Gulley, and we think we can show very clearly from the evidence that the Reliance policy was delivered only conditionally and for inspection.”
Charles H. Gulley, the deceased, first applied to H. S. Rawlings, agent for the Reliance Company for the full amount of insurance desired, but the company refused it on account of his occupation and family history, and thereupon Rawlings undertook to “broker” him in the Travellers Insurance Company for a part of the amount desired, so that the applications for policies in the two companies were pending at the same time. E. R. Cover was the agent of the Travellers Company to whom Rawlings applied for the insurance in that company. The policies in the two companies were first submitted to Charles H. Gulley, August 16, 1920, and it is claimed by the Reliance Company, and testified to by Rawlings, that there was enclosed with the policies the following letter, signed by Rawlings by name “Buck,” the name he generally used in his letters to Gulley, and spoken of in the record as the typewritten letter:
*474 “H. S. Rawlings,
“General Agent.
James H. Reed,
President.
“RELIANCE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
“of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania,
“VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT
“511-12 Mutual Building,
“Richmond, Virginia.
“Aug. 15, 1920.
“Dear Gulley:
. “Your letter received and I must say that the reason I brokered you through the Travellers at the same time I sent your application in to my company was the fact that you being a mail clerk makes it very hard to get accident and health insurance. Nevertheless you can get life with very little trouble. Also Chas, your family history makes health insurance hard to secure.
“Understand you do not have to take these policies, but I would suggest that you do, as I think they are the best you can buy and then too the cost is small.
“Please let me hear from you regarding same, thanking you in advance with kindest regards to Mrs.
“Sincerely
“Buck.”
There was enclosed with the policies a note for $72.54, the aggregate of the premiums on the two policies, to be signed and returned by Gulley, if he accepted the policies. Rawlings testified that these policies and the note unsigned were returned to him, by mail, at Richmond with a pencil memorandum attached, the contents of which do not appear from the record. Raw-lings further testified that he returned, by mail from
*476 “RELIANCE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
“of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
“James H. Reed, President.
“VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT
“511-12 Mutual Building,
“Richmond, Virginia.
,“H. S. Rawlings,
“General Agent.
“Dear Gulley:
“I am enclosing two policies for your approval, also note which you may fill out ,one policypayingyou$2,500 at death and $10 per week and the,other $1,000 at death and $20.00 per week. Thefirst one will eostyou$27.14— the second $45.40. Take your pick — or both and return signed note and oblige
“Sincerely
“Buck.”
Gulley, who was a railway mail clerk, was killed in a railroad accident on October 6, 1920. On the morning of October 8, 1920, there was found in the desk of Gulley, at his residence, the policies of insurance in the Reliance and Travellers companies aforesaid in the envelope aforesaid, postmarked Richmond, Va., September 24, 1 p. m., 1920, along with the unsigned note for $27.41. There is conflict in the testimony as to whether one or two letters from Rawlings to Gulley were found with the policies. It is admitted, however, that what is spoken of as the typewritten letter was so found. Raw-lings testified that the undated letter in his handwriting was also found with the policies. Rawlings also testified that he never saw or heard from Gulley after he returned to Gulley the note for $27.41 for his signature.
At the trial, six instructions were given at the instance of the plaintiff, to all of which the defendant objected, but the objections were overruled and the defendant excepted. Instruction A was as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that the law presumes from the fact that the policy in question was received by the insured and filed by him in his desk among his papers and there retained by him until his death, that he had accepted the same subject to all of its terms and conditions. The acceptance by an insured of a policy of insurance, when the same has been submitted to him in complete form by the insurer, may be inferred from his conduct in retaining it or from any act or declaration on his part manifesting his purpose to accept it.”
The first part of this instruction is bad because it takes away from, the jury the consideration and determination of the very fact in issue. It tells the jury that the law presumes, upon the facts therein stated, that “the policy in question” has been accepted by Gulley. There was testimony that the policy was sent to Gulley on approval and along with it a note to be signed by him for the first premium; that the note had been sent to Rawlings unsigned; that he had returned the note for signature about October 1, and that Gulley had left home about the time he received the note and had not returned thereafter before his death on October 6. There is no evidence that the policy was to be treated as delivered unless Gulley gave the note for the first premium. When the two policies were returned to Gulley for approval, according to the testimony of Rawlings, there was also enclosed the undated letter in the handwriting of Rawlings hereinbefore quoted requesting the return, signed, of the note for $27.41 enclosed — the pre
The latter part of the instruction is also objectionable. Outside of the fact that Gulley put the policy in his desk, there is no evidence of any act on his part from which an acceptance of the policy could have been inferred, nor could the insurance company be adversely affected by any uncommunicated “declarations” on the part of Gulley. This part of the instruction was misleading.
Instruction B was- as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence in this case that the policy or policies in controversy were found after the death of Charles H. Gulley in his possession and among his effects, then the law presumes that said policy or policies were delivered to him by the defendant company as valid and subsisting contracts, without any condition of any sort attached to them.”
This instruction would have been a correct statement of the law if it had said that “the law presumes, in the absence of evidencetothe contrary, that,” etc. But it ignores all of the defendant’s evidence tending to show that the policies were not to be effectual unless and until Gulley paid the premium or gave Rawlings his note for the amount thereof. If Rawlings was to be credited, the policies were delivered on condition that Gulley was
Instruction C, given for the defendant, is subject to similar criticism to that made of Instruction B. Instruction O was as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that inasmuch as the*480 policy or policies in controversy in this case acknowledge receipt of the premium and recite that they were issued in consideration of that premium, the law presumes that, as between the company and the deceased, the premium was considered as fully paid. The court further tells the jury that when the said, policies were delivered without requiring payment of the premium the presumption is that a credit was intended and this was a waiver of the condition of prepayment set out in the application for said policy or policies.”
The instruction is a correct statement of the law where there has been an unconditional delivery of the policy, but not where the delivery of the policy and the payment of the premium, or giving a note therefor, are to be coincident. The assured cannot take the policy and claim the benefit thereof without complying with his part of the contract. The instruction cut the defendant off from the benefit of the testimony of Raw-lings and the written evidence on that subject. It should have stated that “the law presumes, in the absence of evidence to the contrary,” etc., and left it to the jury to say whether or not they would credit the evidence offered to the contrary. The presumption was not a conclusive one, but was open to explanation; and this explanation the insurance company offered to make.
It is earnestly insisted by counsel for the assured that the insurance company is estopped from denying that the first premium had been paid because Gulley had possession of the policy at the time of his death, and the policy acknowledged the receipt of the first premium. A number of authorities are cited to sustain the proposition, and, for the purposes of this case, it may be conceded that such is the law in case of an unconditional delivery of the policy, or in the absence of any evidence on the subject of a condition. But in the case at bar,
“It would seem, on principle, that in all eases where policies are put into the hands of applicants for the purpose of examination, or subject to rejection, such delivery should be considered conditional and not as constituting a waiver of condition of prepayment.” Citing numerous authorities.
In Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Oliver, 95 Va. 445, 451, 28 S. E. 594, 597, it is said: “The policy not having teen delivered and the blank in the application for the insurance not having been filled, there is no unequivocal acknowledgment of receipt of the premium, or any such acknowledgment of its receipt, as would estop the defendant company from proving that it had not been paid or waived. Consequently, evidence was admissible to that end, and the question propounded to the witness was one proper to be asked and answered.” (Italics supplied.)
There is no reason why a policy of insurance should stand on a different footing from any other contract. Like other contracts, it may be delivered upon condition, and until the condition is performed the delivery is not effectual to complete the contract. Although the contract of insurance is in writing, it may be shown by parol that the delivery was upon condition, and whether or not the delivery was upon condition is a question to be determined by the jury upon the evidence submitted, including, of course, the parol testi
The instruction is also objectionable in stating that “the court tells the jury that when the said policies were delivered without requiring payment of the premium” etc.: This assumes an unconditional delivery, thereby ignoring the testimony of Rawlings and the other evidence on the subject. It should have stated if they were delivered under the circumstances mentioned.
Instruction E assumes an unconditional delivery of the policy. If again tendered this assumption should be removed by inserting the word “unconditionally,” between the words “such agent” and the words “delivers a policy.”
The trial court was liberal in granting instructions to the defendant, some of which cover the objections made to instructions given for the plaintiff, but the errors in the instructions given for the plaintiff were not corrected by the instructions given for the defendant. While omissions in one instruction or set of instructions may sometimes be supplied by a fuller statement in one or more other instructions, where it would not confuse or mislead the jury, it is rare, if ever, that positive error can be so corrected. A material error in an instruction, complete in itself, is not cured by a correct statement of the law in another instruction, as it is said that it cannot be told by which the jury were eon-
Exception was taken to the action of the trial court in permitting a witness to answer a certain question, on the ground that it was hearsay. The only thing in the answer that could have been hurtful to the insurance company was the statement - of' the witness that Gulley said to him “Yes, I have taken out a policy with Buck.” But the witness had been previously examined on behalf of the plaintiff, and, on cross-examination by counsel for the insurance company, stated substantially the same fact as was elicited by the question objected to. He was asked on his first examination by counsel for the insurance company: “And all your brother-in-law told you was that he had closed the deal and taken the insurance?” To which he replied: “Yes, sir.” The error complained of, if any, was harmless.
We are unable to say that the judgment of the trial court overruling a motion for a new trial, on the ground that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence, is “plainly wrong or without evidence to support it,” and hence cannot set said judgment aside and enter a judgment for the defendant, as we have been asked to do; but for the errors of the trial court in the instructions given to the jury its judgment will have to be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial to be had in accordance with the views hereinbefore expressed.
Beversed.