Atlantic Life Insurance v. Fugate

170 S.E. 573, 161 Va. 27, 1933 Va. LEXIS 297
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 21, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 170 S.E. 573 (Atlantic Life Insurance v. Fugate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Life Insurance v. Fugate, 170 S.E. 573, 161 Va. 27, 1933 Va. LEXIS 297 (Va. 1933).

Opinion

Hudgins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mabel A. Fugate, in her own right and as administratrix of Henry C. Fugate, recovered two judgments in the sum of $5,000 and $2,300 respectively, against Atlantic Life Insurance Company, on an insurance policy issued by defendant company on the life of Henry C. Fugate. The $2,300 was the amount claimed for “total disability benefits,” at $50 per month, during the life of the insured.

The defendant below assigns nine errors to the ruling of the trial court, hut in our view of the case it is necessary to consider only one, i. e„ the refusal of the court [29]*29to set aside the verdict oft the ground that it was not supported by the evidence.

On June 29, 1921, defendant company issued its policy for $5,000 on the life of Henry C. Fugate, of Bristol, Virginia, naming Mabel A. Fugate, wife of the insured, beneficiary. The policy contains a supplemental contract, designated “Total Disability Benefit,” the material parts of which are:

“Atlantic Life Insurance Company hereby agrees that. if, * * * while this contract is in full force by the payment of premiums, the insured shall furnish proof satisfactory to the company that * * * he has become totally and permanently disabled, and will by such disablement be prevented for life from engaging in any gainful occupation, the company shall, by endorsement hereon, agree to

“(I) Continue the contract without requiring the payment of premiums, if any, thereafter falling due during the continuance of such disability, * * * and in addition thereto,

“(2) Pay immediately to the insured * * * 1/100th of the face value of said contract ($10 for each $1000) and a like sum on the same day of each month thereafter during the life of the insured and the continuance of the disability.”

The premiums on this policy due June 29,1921, ’22 and ’23 were duly paid. There was default in payment of the premium due in 1924 and only $18.80 was paid on that due in 1925. Under the automatic loan provisions of the contract, the policy was continued in force until June 29, 1927. On that date the unused loan value of the policy ($77.50) was not sufficient to pay the annual premium then due and was applied to purchase of extended term insurance, which expired January 10, 1929. The insured died February 2, 1931, without having made claim to any benefits under the contract. A year later, February, 1932, these actions were instituted.

Defendant contends that the failure to give notice or [30]*30furnish proof of the disability • of the insured prior to June 29, 1927, is sufficient, alone, to bar recovery on the policy. This question was decided and the conflicting authorities reviewed at length by this court in an opinion delivered by Judge Gregory in Swann v. Atlantic Life Ins. Co., 156 Va. 852, 159 S. E. 192, 195, where it is said:

“We conclude that the giving of notice and proof of disability was not a condition precedent to the right to a waiver of premiums where the insured through no fault of his own has become, while' the policy is in force, mentally and physically incapable of giving the notice or furnishing the proofs to the company, * * *.”

In that case the question arose on the pleadings. It was remanded for trial on the merits. It was again before this court and reported in Atlantic Life Ins. Co. v. Swann, 160 Va. 125, 168 S. E. 423, 425. Chief Justice Campbell, who wrote the opinion, discussing an instruction which told the jury that the plaintiff “must show, by the preponderance of the evidence, that the insured was, during the entire time between the onset of his disability, if any, and his death, reasonably incapable of notifying the company of his disability or of furnishing the company proof of such disability,” said:

“The insertion of the word ‘reasonably’ in the instruction renders it erroneous. To be relieved of the necessity of giving notice or furnishing proof, the insured must be totally (either physically or mentally) incapacitated from acting in the matter.”

In that case it was conceded that before the lapse of the policj7 the insured had become totally and permanently disabled, whereby he was prevented for life from engaging in any gainful occupation, but it was denied that he was physically or mentally incapable of giving notice or furnishing proof from the date of his disability to the time of his death. The court reversed the case on two grounds; (1) that the instruction referred to above was erroneous, and (2) that the evidence tending to show7 [31]*31physical and mental incapacity did not support the verdict.

In the case at har, the defendant not only contends that the insured was physically and mentally capable of giving notice and furnishing proof, but that at no time prior to the lapse of the policy had he become so totally and permanently disabled, within the terms of the contract, that he was prevented from engaging in any gainful occupation.

In the view that we take of the case, it is unnecessary to decide whether or not the insured, during the life of the policy, suffered a total and permanent disability within its meaning, for he may have been totally and permanently disabled, and yet have been both physically and metally capable of giving notice or furnishing proof to the company of his condition. Inasmuch as the plaintiff is here with verdicts approved by the trial court, we will edeavor to summarizei the evidence as strongly in her favor as the record fairly permits.

It appears that Henry C. Fugate moved from Russell county to Bristol, Virginia, in 1916; that prior to 1924 he was comparatively healthy and fairly successful in business; that in 1924 or ’25 he suffered financial reverses and lost most of his property; that about the same time he became ill and was confined to his bed from November, 1924, to April, 1925. His family physician, then or later, advised his wife, but did not inform him, that he had pellagra. In 1926 and ’27 he was confined to his bed a part of the time, and in the latter year was critically ill for several months. The two physicians who had formerly attended him died. In 1930 he consulted Dr. Rogers, in whose office he was given medical attention once in September, four times in October, four times in November, and twice in December. After December 27th of that year, the doctor visited him at his home until his death on February 2, 1931. At intervals during these five years, the insured engaged in supervising the building of houses for sale.

[32]*32In the examination of both the wife and daughter are found answers to certain questions which, if considered separate and apart from their entire testimony, support the contention that the insured had lost both his physical and mental powers; but when this testimony is considered as a whole, it is apparent that the insured at various times between 1924, or late in 1926, when it is claimed he became totally and permanently disabled, and the date of his death, was engaged in various business transactions.- The testimony of both of these witnesses reveals that the insured maintained an office as late as the year 1930, and when he was unable to go to his offiqa conducted his business from his. home, sometimes from his sick bed; that his daughter was frequently kept from school to attend to business matters under his direction. While both, his wife and daughter admitted these facts, neither- .went- into details about them.

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Related

Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Krupel
183 S.E. 241 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.E. 573, 161 Va. 27, 1933 Va. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-life-insurance-v-fugate-va-1933.