Baltimore Life Insurance v. Howard

52 A. 897, 95 Md. 244, 1902 Md. LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 17, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 52 A. 897 (Baltimore Life Insurance v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Life Insurance v. Howard, 52 A. 897, 95 Md. 244, 1902 Md. LEXIS 166 (Md. 1902).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instituted to recover on what is called an in-' dustrial insurance policy. The premium was an annual one, payable in weekly instalments' of twenty-five cerits on each and' every Monday during the life of thé insured. The policy was dated April sixteenth, nineteen hundred. By the sixth condition indorsed on the policy it is provided that if the weekly *251 premiums should be due for more than four successive Mondays the policy would be void, but if the insured died while not more than four weeks premiums were due the insurer should not be free from liability, “ subject, however, to clause 16 hereof.” The sixteenth condition is in these words : “Policies upon which premiums are due for more than four successive Mondays become thereby lapsed whether the proper entries of such lapse are made upon the books of the society or not. Such policies can only be revived by the payment in full of all premiums due, and the passing by the insured of a medical examination satisfactory to the society ; both of which are conditions precedent to any such revival. Payment of money after a policy has been in arrears as aforesaid, without passing such a medical examination will in no case revive the policy, but will only entitle the policy holder to a return, on demand, of whatever payments may have been made since the date of the lapse of the policy.” Condition 11 prohibits agents, including superintendents “and all employees other than directors of the society ” from altering contracts or waiving forfeitures, and does not permit them to receive premiums on policies in arrears beyond the time allowed by the society, except as provided by clause sixteen. On July sixteenth, nineteen hundred, more than four weeks premiums were due on the policy in suit and the premiums never were paid up in full after that time, though between that date and the death of the insured thirty-five weekly payments were made. On February the twenty-fifth, nineteen hundred and one, six weekly premiums were due and during that week four of those six were paid to the company. On March the fourth, another premium fell due and was paid, leaving two due at the time of the death of the insured, and she died four days after the last payment.

It appears that each policy holder is furnished with a passbook in which payments made to the agent of the company and the dates of such payments are entered. The agent calls upon the policy holders to collect the premiums. From time to time inspectors or superintendents are sent out by the company with the primary purpose of checking the accounts of the *252 agents who collect the weekly premiums. These inspectors or superintendents then go with the agent, to $very policy holder, collect what they can and examine the policy holde.rs book and receipt therein for the premiums paid to the inspector, if any are so paid. These inspectors or superintendents make up their reports which show the number of the policy, the name of the insured, the amount of cash received, the amount due on each policy after crediting payments and also the date to which the payments made settle the premiums. These reports with this detailed information as to the status of every policy, showing whether the policy has lapsed or is in force, are returned to the office of the company where a summary of them is made and generally shown to the president and actuary. The inspector who called upon the insured in February, nineteen hundred and one, was Charles C. Rogers and a page from his report was given in evidence. By that report it distinctly appeared that the policy sued on was six weeks in arrears on February the twenty-fifth that during the same week one dollar was paid,- and that after crediting that sum there were but two weeks premiums due. The plaintiff then proved by a competent witness that she was present on February the twenty-fifth, when inspector or Superintendent Rogers,and an agent named Wacker called upon the insured and informed her that the premiums were in arrear ; and the witness testified that Rogers stated to the insured , “ Well, you -pay one week and I will fix the books all right for you,” that the insured paid one weeks premium and promised to pay three others later in the week, whereupon Rogers said: “Mrs. Howard now the book is all fixed up and you will be all right.” To the admissibility of this testimony respecting the statements made by Rogers the defendant objected, but the Court overruled the objection and this decision forms the basis of the first exception. We need not pause to consider this ruling now, because what will be said.later,on in .discussing the prayers and the granted instructions will be sufficient to show its accuracy. No allusion need be made to the second exception, because the ground upon which the overruled objection was founded was entirely *253 removed by the evidence adduced by the defendant. It further appeared that the premiums paid by the insured to Rogers were turned over by him to the company. Upon the part of the defendant, Rogers testified that he did not make the statements attributed to him by the plaintiff’s witness—being those set out in the first exception. He further testified that notwithstanding the defaults in July, nineteen hundred, collections were continued to be made upon the policy though inspections had been made after the default, and had, of course and of necessity, revealed that default to the company. It was shown that about twenty of these inspection books with an average of three hundred names each were filed in the company’s office every week.

When the testimony was closed the plaintiff asked and the Court granted the following instruction : “ The plaintiff prays the Court to instruct the jury that if they shall find from the evidence that after the weekly dues payable on the policy sued upon were more than four weeks in arrear, which fact was known or could have been known to the proper officers of the defendant company, said officers or said company continued to collect dues upon said policy, and that Mrs. Howard was told by the Superintendent Rogers that her policy was all right, then they, the jury, may infer that such action on the part of said defendant company and its officers was a waiver of the default which occurred when the said dues were permitted to become more than four weeks overdue.” An instruction embodying a converse hypothesis as to the statements of Rogers was given at the instance of the defendant. The defendant asked, but the Court declined to give an instruction, first, that there was no legally sufficient evidence to show that the company was indebted to the plaintiff over and above eight dollars and seventy-five cents, the amount paid by the insured after she had been in arrear for more than four weeks in July, nineteen hundred ; and, secondly, that there was no legally sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding that the company had waived the forfeiture occasioned by the six weeks delinquency in July. To the granting of the plaintiff's in *254 struction and to the refusal to give those asked by the defendant the company excepted and these rulings constitute the errors assigned in the third exception.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 A. 897, 95 Md. 244, 1902 Md. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-life-insurance-v-howard-md-1902.