Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur v. Bastian

151 N.E. 346 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1926

Action by appellee, filed in the Superior Court of Vigo county, Indiana, and subsequently venued to and tried in Sullivan Circuit Court, upon a policy of insurance known as a benefit certificate issued *329 by appellant. Appellant, by answers resisted the action on the ground that the deceased, Luther Bastian, the insured member, was not sixteen years of age as represented and warranted in his application at the time of applying for insurance, but was only fifteen years of age, an age at which the by-laws of appellant forbade applicants to be insured, and, for the same reasons, by its cross-complaint, it sought a cancellation of the certificate.

(1) The jury returned a verdict for appellee in the sum of $1,328.65, and also finding against appellant, on its cross-complaint.

(2) The court overruled appellant's motion for a new trial and rendered judgment on the verdict for appellee and against appellant in the sum of $1,328.65.

The errors presented and relied upon for reversal are that the court erred in overruling appellant's motion for a new trial; in rendering judgment in favor of appellee and against appellant for $1,328.65, without any finding having been made upon appellant's cross-complaint; and that the court had no jurisdiction to render a judgment in favor of appellee and against appellant until the court had made a finding upon the issue joined on the appellant's cross-complaint and appellee's answer thereto.

Presenting that the court erred in overruling its motion for a new trial, appellant earnestly contends that it was reversible error for the court to refuse to give its tendered 1. instruction No. 3. This instruction would have informed the jury that the evidence was undisputed that the application of the insured was a part of the contract of insurance, and it set out therein clauses 1, 3, and 9, which, in substance, stated that the warranties therein made and the laws of the Supreme Tribe then and thereafter in force were the basis of the contract, and that any untrue or fraudulent *330 statement vitiated the policy and forfeited all payments made thereon, and that the contract was binding upon the beneficiary. There was no application of these facts so stated to any law of the case. There was simply a statement of undisputed evidence. The contract, including the application, had been read to the jury, and it was fully informed of these clauses of the application. While it might not have been error for the court to give the instruction, it certainly was not error for the court to refuse to restate to the jury what it already had before it.

Instruction No. 3 given by the court informed the jury that if it found that the insured was under sixteen years of age at the time the insurance certificate was issued to him, then 2. appellant would have a right to have the certificate surrendered upon tendering the total amount of all moneys paid for such certificate, within a reasonable time. Instruction No. 9 informed the jury that before appellant would be entitled to a surrender of the certificate because of breach of warranty, or misrepresentations, it must, within a reasonable time, tender to the beneficiary the total amount of the premiums or assessments paid. Appellant now contends that actual fraud was averred, and that, under the terms of the contract of insurance, where there is actual fraud on the part of the insured, the premiums need not be tendered back. But appellant filed four paragraphs of answer and a cross-complaint in each of which it averred that it had tendered back the amount paid for the certificate by way of premiums or assessments, and that it had ever since been ready and willing to pay back such premiums or assessments. Clearly it understood that it was incumbent upon it to make a tender of all moneys paid to it on the certificate, and it so acted and answered accordingly. It followed up these answers by the tender *331 of instructions, not to the effect that no tender was required, but as to what was required of appellant in order to make its tender good. Having formed the issues and tried the case on the theory that it was required to make a tender, it may not for the first time in this court be heard to say that no tender was necessary.

If it be conceded that the facts were undisputed, and that the court erred in its instruction No. 10, in submitting to the jury the question as to whether appellant made a tender of 3, 4. premiums or assessments received within a reasonable time, appellant was not harmed thereby. Proof of death was made October 12, 1918, by which it appeared that the insured was born February 26, 1898. By this it appeared that the insured was not of insurable age at the time his certificate was issued to him, and appellant was thereupon put on inquiry as to the correct age of the insured. On December 11, 1918, appellee filed an affidavit with appellant in which she stated that she had inadvertently given the date of the birth of the insured as February 26, 1898, which was incorrect, and that the true date of birth was February 26, 1897. The tender was not made until March 1, 1919, or 140 days after the proof of death was filed, and eighty days after appellee's affidavit was filed. Conceding, as appellant contends, that the question of whether the delay in making the tender was unreasonable was for the court, this court holds that it was unreasonable. Having reached this conclusion, we do not need to consider further instructions as to the sufficiency of the tender.

There was no error in excluding parol evidence of the contents of the birth page of appellee's Bible, the book being in court and in the hands of appellant. The book itself was the best 5. evidence of its contents. *332

Finally, appellant complains that the court erred in rendering judgment in favor of appellee without any finding by the court upon appellant's cross-complaint, such cross-complaint 6. being for the cancellation of the insurance contract, and, therefore, in equity. But, without objection by appellant, the issues joined on the cross-complaint were submitted to the jury for trial. There was no motion by either party that the court try the equity side of the case. The verdict of the jury was for appellee in the sum of $1,328.65, and against appellant on its cross-complaint. This verdict was received by the court without objection by appellant. In appellant's motion for a new trial, there was no reason therefor calling attention of the court to the fact that the court had erred in submitting the issues joined on the cross-complaint to the jury. A trial by the court of the equitable issue was thereby waived. § 437 Burns 1926, § 418 Burns 1914; Ross, Admr., v. Hobson (1891),131 Ind. 166, 172, 26 N.E. 775; Sheets v. Bray (1890),125 Ind. 33, 36, 24 N.E. 357; Lindley v. Sullivan (1893),133 Ind. 588, 32 N.E. 738, 33 N.E. 361; 2 Watson, Revision Works' Practice § 1527 et seq.

We find no reversible error. Affirmed.