Aetna Ins. Co. of Hartford, Conn. v. Eblen

99 S.W.2d 710, 266 Ky. 548, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 702
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 11, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 S.W.2d 710 (Aetna Ins. Co. of Hartford, Conn. v. Eblen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Ins. Co. of Hartford, Conn. v. Eblen, 99 S.W.2d 710, 266 Ky. 548, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 702 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

[Reversing.

We shall refer to appellant as the Insurance Company. It seeks the reversal of a judgment for $1,000 witb interest from May 9, 1931, recovered against it by the appellee.

In May, 1930, Clyde Culver, a soliciting agent of appellant, took the application of Mrs. Effie L. Gaines .for $1,000 fire insurance upon the dwelling house situated on a farm in Henderson county, Ky., belonging to her and her children.

The policy was duly issued shortly thereafter and Culver delivered it to Mrs. Gaines and took her personal note to himself for the first premium and her note to the Insurance Company for the premium installments to be paid in 1931, 1932, 1933, and 1934, the policy being written on the five-year plan. She had not paid , her *550 note for the first year’s premium and in the early part of January, 1931, Culver called to see her about it and she told him she had sold her farm to Mr. Eblen.

Culver calculated the premium earned on the policy up to that time, $12.82, and took up the policy. Mrs. Gaines did not pay the $12.82, however. About that same time the appellee Eblen had bought a farm from his brother-in-law, M. L. Cooper, and this same Insurance Company had a policy of insurance upon the buildings on that property. Mr. Cooper testified Culver asked him to get his brother-in-law, Eblen, to keep these policies of insurance.

The remaining facts will be brought out in our discussion of the motion for a directed verdict made at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence and renewed at the close of all the evidence and each time overruled.

Motion for Directed Verdict.

The Insurance Company insists it was entitled to a directed verdict in its favor. So we will look at the pleadings and the proof.

Plaintiff’s Pleading.

Mr. Eblen had sued upon an alleged oral contract made with him by Culver by the terms of which he alleges the Insurance Company agreed to continue in force for Eblen’s benefit and protection the policy of insurance issued to Mrs. Gaines and her children, in event Eblen obtained a conveyance of said land to himself and that the Insurance Company would transfer that policy to Eblen and Eblen would be protected by that policy from the date the Gaines property was transferred to Eblen, no date for the transfer being agreed upon, and it was agreed that Eblen should and would pay the premium installments then remaining unpaid to the Insurance Company.

The jury must act on the evidence, but it may reject any evidence that is disputed, therefore in- passing on this motion we will only consider the evidence offered by Eblen and that part of the‘evidence introduced by the Insurance Company which is undisputed, and we must take all this as true. That is as favorable as Eblen can ask. See 64 C. J. p. 446 sec. 434.

There are four important occurrences detailed and we shall now consider them.

*551 Culver’s Conversation with Eblen.

After learning of Eblen’s purchases of these insured properties, Culver took the Gaines policy and the Cooper policy and went to Henderson and saw Eblen at his residence in January, 1931. Eblen agreed to take over the Cooper policy and signed the application for the transfer of it and the note for the unmatured premium installments upon it, paid Cooper the unearned premium and Culver sent that policy to the Insurance Company to have the transfer made.

Culver urged Eblen then to take over the Gaines policy also and assured Eblen he then had an insurable interest in that property, but Eblen declined to do so and told Culver, “As soon as the court makes a deed in this other property, if he does, I will let you know at that time whether or not to transfer the other policy.” At another place in his testimony Eblen says this about that conversation:

“The question was open, understand, between Culver and I. I didn’t tell him when I had the conversation positive I would keep the insurance with him, but I told him if I decided to keep the insurance with him, when the deed was made according, to the terms of our understanding, that I was to get the benefit of the balance on the premium, that I would let him know, and when I sent him word he could transfer the policy. I did let him know, and accepted that proposition after this deed was made.”

"We can certainly say there was no insurance contract made that day in Henderson. Yet Eblen testifies, Culver told him he himself had the power to transfer this, policy to Eblen, and the policy would be in force from that day. This sounds rather -strange in view of the fact Eblen had not paid 1 cent to any one for this insurance and had refused to say whether he would take |t or not.

Culver’s Conversation with Cooper.

Eblen got a deed from the court for the Gaines property on March 9, 1931, and Mr. Eblen introduced his brother-in-law, M. L. Cooper, and Cooper testified that he told Culver Eblen had a deed to the Gaines place and wanted the insurance policy on the Gaines place, and that Culver told him he would “fix it up.” Culver *552 sharply disputes this, but we must take what Cooper says as true, and that Culver did agree to fix it up.

Efforts to Fix it up.

The Insurance Company had by then transferred the Cooper policy to Eblen and that policy had come back to Culver.

Culver mailed this Cooper policy to Eblen, sent along to him an application for transfer of the Gaines policy and a note for the unmatured premium installments on it and wrote him a letter of a few lines. Culver kept no copy of that letter and Eblen says he destroyed it ten minutes after he got it. They give very different accounts of what was in it, but we must take Eblen’s account as true. He never undertakes to reproduce this letter but at three places in his testimony he testifies about it, and here is what he says:

“I sent word by him to Culver I was going to keep the insurance and for him to transfer the policy, and a few days after that, I guess March 15th or 20th, I got a letter from Clyde inclosing these papers; a note for me to sign for the second premium, which showed it was due on June 1st, and a blank form to sign, which he told me in the other case was nothing but a formality, and the Cooper policy — They all came in the same envelope about the 20th of March.
“About three lines were in the letter, the first thing, he thanked me to keep the insurance with him. He said it would help him with the company, and then he said ‘inclosed find the Cooper policies,’ sign them and send them back to him. He just said ‘sign the papers and return them to me,’ and he thanked me for that business.”

Culver testified that Mr. Cooper told him Eblen had received a deed to the Gaines land, but he thought Eblen was going to take insurance with Powell and Martin in Henderson, and when the Cooper policy was returned-he mailed it to Culver and sent with it a note and an application for transfer of. the Gaines policy. Eblen testifies Culver then thanked him for letting bim have the business.

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Related

Leasor v. Bailey
714 S.W.2d 156 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1986)

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99 S.W.2d 710, 266 Ky. 548, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-ins-co-of-hartford-conn-v-eblen-kyctapphigh-1936.