Ballah v. Peoria Life Ass'n

159 Ill. App. 222, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 49
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 7, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 159 Ill. App. 222 (Ballah v. Peoria Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballah v. Peoria Life Ass'n, 159 Ill. App. 222, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 49 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in assumpsit upon a policy of life insurance for $1,000 issued by the defendant on November 12, 1903, to James H. Ballah, the husband of the plaintiff. Payment of the policy was .refused, by the defendant upon the ground that the insured had permitted the same to lapse by his failure to pay the quarterly premium amounting to $5.04 on November 12, 1908, preceding his death on February 6, 1909. Under the pleadings two issues were submitted to the jury: First, whether or not by its course of conduct in accepting payment of premiums after the time fixed therefor by the terms of the policy, the defendant had waived its right to declare a forfeiture of the policy for non-payment of the premium when the same became due, and second, whether or not the insured had in fact paid the premium in question on November 12, 1908. Upon the trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,030.81 and answered in the affirmative the special interrogatory submitted at the request of the plaintiff, as follows: “Was the premium of $5.04 due November 12, 1908, paid when due?” The plaintiff remitted $10 from the amount of the verdict, and the court thereupon rendered judgment against the defendant for $1,020.81, to reverse which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

When the policy was issued on November 12, 1903, the annual premium of $18.63 was payable annually. On November 12, 1905, at the request of the insured the premium was made payable quarterly in installments of $5.04, and on February 6, 1906, the premium was again made payable annually and so continued until February 12, 1907, when the premium was again made payable quarterly.

It is insisted by counsel for the defendant that the necessary effect of the special finding of fact by the jury that the premium due November 12, 1908, was then paid, is to eliminate the question of waiver from the case, and that the general verdict in favor of the plaintiff must be held to have been predicated solely upon such answer to the special interrogatory. If in answer to a special interrogatory the jury had found against the plaintiff upon the first count of the declaration, that there was no waiver by the defendant of the prompt payment of premiums, or that the defendant had not waived its right to declare a forfeiture of the policy, the position assumed by counsel for defendant would unquestionably be correct.

Section 79 of the Practice Act provides in substance that in any case in which the jury render a general verdict they may be required to find specially upon any material question or questions of fact, and that when a special finding of fact is inconsistent with the general verdict the former shall control the latter and the court may render judgment accordingly. Hurd’s Stat. 1909 p. 1705. The special interrogatory submitted to the jury in this ease only relates to a fact material to a recovery under the second count of the declaration and has no relation to the issue of waiver involved in the first count of the declaration. As an answer by the jury in the negative to the question submitted would not have affected or been inconsistent with a general verdict, so an answer in the affirmative does not affect and is not inconsistent with such general verdict, and a judgment could be properly entered upon such general verdict notwithstanding an answer to such question either in the affirmative or the negative. The provision in the statute that when the special finding of fact is inconsistent with the general verdict the former shall control the latter, manifestly only relates to such material questions of fact submitted to the jury as directly control and affect the general verdict.

The question of waiver involved under the first count of the declaration was one of fact for the determination of the jury. The evidence bearing upon this question is so close and conflicting that we are unable to say upon this record, and in view of the answer of the jury to the special interrogatory, that the general verdict for the plaintiff was based as well upon the first as upon the second count of the declaration. As the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded primarily because the evidence is insufficient to sustain a recovery under the second count of the declaration we do not deem it necessary to consider and discuss the question of waiver further than to say there is sufficient evidence in the record to require the submission of that question to a jury.

The evidence introduced on behalf of the plaintiff as tending to show that the insured on November 12, 1908, paid the premium amounting to $5.04 due on that day, discloses that on the morning of that day the insured and his wife went to Danville; that they were then contemplating a trip west; that while they were in the store of one G-reenebaum, the insured left said store and walked in the direction of a building about two blocks distant in which the manager of the defendant had an office; that on that day the insured paid a premium upon a policy which he carried in the Massachusetts Life Insurance Company and also paid his dues in a Building and Loan Association and an assessment on his certificate in the Modern Woodmen of America; that the insured had sufficient money on his person to pay said premium and that he was a man who paid his obligations; that immediately after the death of the insured a brother of the plaintiff went to the office of the manager of the defendant in Danville and inquired whether the deceased had a policy in the defendant association, and that the bookkeeper in the office, to whom the inquiry was directed, replied: “Yes”; that the manager then looked through some papers on his desk and said: “Why, look here, I find Mr. Ballah’s receipt for this quarter has not been taken up yet;” that the bookkeeper said: “Mr. Ballah surely has paid that because he was one of the promptest men we had on our books;” that the manager then further said: “It is possible that he paid it and just took a personal receipt for it and has not come to get this receipt;” that the bookkeeper said she would look through the books and see if it was paid. Conceding’ the competency of all the evidence referred to it is wholly insufficient to support the finding of the jury that the insured paid the premium in question on November 12, 1908.

Evidence of the payment by the insured on November 12, 1908, of certain dues, assessments and premiums, having no relation to the policy in question, and that the insured then had money and was a man who paid his obligations was improperly admitted. In Thorp v. Goewey, 85 Ill. 611, where a claim was filed against the estate of a deceased person upon a promissory note outstanding a period of seventeen years, the genuineness of which was disputed, it was held competent for the defense to show in evidence that from the date the note purported to have been given down to his death the deceased was prompt to pay his debts, was prudent, careful, credit good, was a man of large property and did not like to be in debt, and that the payee, his son, was so pressed by his creditors before the maker’s death as,to take refuge in bankruptcy. In Mark v. Miles, 59 Ill. App.

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Related

Davidson v. Montgomery Ward & Co.
171 Ill. App. 355 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1912)
Ballah v. Peoria Life Ass'n
168 Ill. App. 603 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 Ill. App. 222, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballah-v-peoria-life-assn-illappct-1910.