38 Pa. Super. 623 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909
Opinion by
This case came into the court below by appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace, in favor of the plaintiff. On trial before the court and a jury, there was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $204.37, and the court having discharged the rule for judgment in favor of the defendant non obstante veredicto, and refused a new trial, judgment was entered on the verdict and therefore this appeal.
The appellant’s statement of the questions involved brings at once before us the important and controlling points in the case: “ (a) Does an application by the member of a mutual live v,stock insurance company, for insurance of an animal and the indorsement of the application, ‘approved,’ constitute more than a parol contract of insurance? (b) The member in consideration of such acceptance agreeing to comply with the bylaws of the company adopted by himself and fellow members, do the by-laws become a necessary, essential part of such parol contract, to be received in evidence without being ‘ attached to and accompanying’ the application? (c) Is such an appli
It appears that the defendant company was incorporated on April 29,1887, for the insurance of horses and cattle against death, upon the mutual plan. The corporation has no capital stock; has made no profit; paid no dividends and levied only so much money in the twenty years of its existence as was required for the payment of the losses of its members.- The plaintiff became a member of the corporation on November 28,1904. From time to time he applied for and received insurance until at one time he had nearly 100 horses insured. At the annual meeting on January 7, 1905, the members of the corporation' adopted the following by-law: "The face of the assessment is to be paid in the home office within thirty days after the date of notice. If not paid at the expiration of thirty days, ten per cent will be added for the purpose of defraying expenses for collection and insurance shall be suspended and remain suspended for a period of ten days, after all assessments are paid. If not paid in ninety days, the tax shall be collected by legal process, and all interests in the company shall be. forfeited and membership and insurance may be canceled by action of the board of directors. An animal not in good health at the time of suspension cannot be reinstated until its health is reestablished.”
On October 8, 1905, the plaintiff applied for insurance of a black horse, with white star, paying fifty cents to the inspector taking the application. In his application plaintiff agreed that the application, with the statements made by him, should form the basis of the contract between him and the association, and further agreed that if any of the statements made by him should be untrue, or if he should neglect to pay the assessments on or before the day they fall due, or if he should fail to comply with the by-laws and regulations governing the company, that then the contract should become null and void. The application was approved the same day by the secretary and a duplicate of the application so indorsed and marked No. 93, whole number 4,693, sent to plaintiff. Following the custom of the association, no policy or other written evidence of the insurance
An examination of plaintiff’s exhibit No. 2, being his application for insurance on the black horse, and which the learned court below construed to be an insurance policy, shows that it is merely an application for insurance, approved on October 8, 1905, by H. S. Funk, secretary. It is utterly impossible for us to construe this paper, standing alone, as an insurance policy or contract, which can be enforced without parol testimony. Nowhere within its four corners does it state the amount of insurance, nor when to be paid. It is not clear from this paper whether it is an insurance against loss by sickness and death or loss by theft, or both. There is on this paper an estimated value of the horse, in figures, $250. In this application the plaintiff agrees to be bound by the by-laws and regulations governing said company and in case he fails or neglects to comply with the same, the contract shall become null and void,
The learned judge in his opinion refusing a new trial and discharging the rule for judgment in favor of the defendant non obstante veredicto, contends and cites ample authority for the proposition that an insurance contract may be in parol. There is no doubt about the soundness of this position. The difficulty in the present case is that the plaintiff could not make out his case without testimony outside of the written and printed application and, if he was relying on a parol contract, it is impossible for us to see why all of the evidence bearing on that contract was not competent. The plaintiff, in his application, referred to the by-laws and regulations governing the company, of which he was a member, and unless there was an insurance policy in this case, within the meaning of the act of 1881, it is not apparent how that act can be invoked to exclude the bylaws and regulations of the company which were confessedly made a part of the contract of insurance by the plaintiff, himself, in his application, treated by the court as a policy of insurance. Note the language of the act of 1881 with its title “Relating to life and fire insurance policies. That all life and fire insurance policies upon the lives or property of persons within this Commonwealth, etc.,” it seems to us that the legislative intent here embraces life insurance policies issued on human beings and fire insurance policies issued upon the property of persons within this commonwealth. The court below seems to understand the case of Zimmer v. Accident Ins. Co., 207 Pa. 472, to warrant him in holding that the act of 1881 applies in the present case. We do not so understand that decision, nor do we understand it to controvert Acheson, J., in Standard Life and Accident Ins. Co. v. Carroll, 86 Fed. Repr. 567, in which that judge says, referring to the act of 1881: “At the date of this act there was, and still is, in Pennsylvania, a legislative classification of insurance. The Act of May 1, 1876, P. L. 53, provides for the incorporation of four different kinds of insur
We do not understand the Supreme Court to decide that a purely accident insurance policy must have a copy of the application and by-laws attached to it to make them admissible in evidence. We do not think the Zimmer case sustains the learned court below in excluding the by-laws in the present case.
We have examined a large number of Supreme Court cases holding that the act of 1881 applied, but they are all either life or fire insurance policies. Among these cases are Pickett v. Ins. Co., 144 Pa. 79; Imperial Fire Ins. Co. v. Dunham, 117 Pa. 460; New Era Life Assn. v. Musser, 120 Pa. 384; Hebb v. Ins. Co., 138 Pa. 174, and Norristown Title, Trust, etc., Co. v. Ins. Co., 132 Pa. 385.
After a somewhat thorough examination of the cases we find
The learned counsel for the plaintiff objected to and succeeded in having the learned court exclude material and competent evidence, the by-laws of the defendant company, and as the case stood when it went to the jury, the court ought to have affirmed the defendant’s fourth point (fourth assignment): “Under all the evidence the verdict must be for the defendant.” For this reason the learned judge erred in not granting judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto on the reserved question, “Whether there is any evidence of facts under which the plaintiff is entitled to recover.” This view of the case renders it unnecessary for us to discuss the other assignments of error.
The judgment is reversed and we here enter judgment in favor of the defendant non obstante veredicto.