Barber v. Hartford Life Insurance

187 S.W. 867, 269 Mo. 21, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 867 (Barber v. Hartford Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber v. Hartford Life Insurance, 187 S.W. 867, 269 Mo. 21, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 110 (Mo. 1916).

Opinion

BROWN, C.

This is an action at law on policy number 174,416 issued by the defendant September 4, 1893, insuring the life of Frank Barber for $2000 for the benefit of the plaintiff, who was then his wife and is now Ms widow, and for damages for vexatious refusal to pay the loss under the provisions of section 7068, Revised Statutes 1909. Mr. Barber died June 5, 1910. There was a judgment in the circuit court for $2976, including $200 damages and $500 attorney’s fee awarded by the jury for vexatious refusal to pay, from wMch this appeal is taken. The defendant is a life insurance company of Connecticut. It had a business department called the “Safety Fund Department,” which was again divided into the “Men’s Division” and “Women’s Division,” which issued policies payable on the assessment plan, and tMs policy was of course in the ‘Men’s Division,” and was called a “Certificate of Membership Safety Fund Department.”

The answer pleads that this certificate was conditioned upon the payment of periodical assessments; that on January 29, 1910, an assessment designated as “Call 126” was levied on it against Barber for $13, with dues amounting to $1.50, which became due by the terms of the certificate on March 1, 1910; that Mr. Barber failed to pay it on or before March 20th, to which time it had been extended; and in consequence thereof the insurance was, by the terms of the certificate, forfeited. The issues in the case grow out of this circumstance. It also pleads, in effect, that an action had been brought in the New Haven .County Superior Court of Connecticut, by one Dresser, holding a similar certificate of membership in the safety fund department of defendant, on his own behalf, as well as on behalf of all others similarly situated, including the plaintiff, wherein the rights of plaintiff were fully adjudicated; that the mortuary fund of said department and the trust thereby created is being [28]*28administered strictly in accordance with the terms of said certificate and trust as construed and adjudicated by said court, whereby defendant is without authority to pay out of said mortuary fund the amount of any certificate of membership where, as in this case, the member has failed or refused to pay the assessment levied against him to maintain said fund. It also denied the right of plaintiff to recover the damages and attorney’s fee sued for, because the provisions of said section 7068 authorizing the imposition of such damages and attorney’s fee are unconstitutional* and void as being in violation of section 10 of article 1 of the Constitution of the United States, and of section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment thereto, and of section 30 of article 2, and of section 10 of article 2, of the Constitution of Missouri; and because the construction thereof by the courts of this State constitutes a rule of judicial construction violative of said provisions of the State and Federal constitutions, and because said section 7068, if applied to this case, and in its application to the facts of this case, denies the defendant due process of law as guaranteed, by the State and Federal constitutions. These matters were all put in issue by replication.

The defendant on the trial offered in evidence the record in the Dresser case duly certified under the act of Congress in such cases made and provided, which was, on plaintiff’s objection, excluded, to which defendant duly excepted.

The policy sued on, so far as applicable to the questions in this case, is as follows:

“In consideration of the representations, agreements, and warranties made in the application herefor, and of the admission fee paid; and of $3 per annum on each $1000 of the indemnity herein provided for, for expense dues, to be paid as hereinafter conditioned, and of the further payment of all mortality calls proportioned to the said indemnity, levied against the herein-named member to form a mortuary fund for the payment of all indemnity matured by deaths of members, and to create a safety fund as hereinafter described, which mortality calls, to be levied upon all the members in the department wherein this certificate is issued whose certificates are in force at the date of such deaths, shall be made according to the table of graduated mortality ratios given hereon, and as further determined by their respective ages [29]*29and the aggregate indemnity of the dates of.such deaths, with due allowance for discontinuance of membership (one-third of the proceeds of such mortality calls to be applied toward said safety fund until the sum of $10 on each $1000 indemnity aforesaid shall have been thus applied, when the basis of all subsequent mortality calls shall be two-thirds only of the table given hereon) does hereby issue this certificate of membership in its safety fund department to Frank Barber (herein called the member) of St. Louis County, of city of St. Louis, State of Missouri, with the following agreements:
“That ninety days from the receipt by the president or secretary of said company of satisfactory proofs, in accordance with forms furnished upon notice of death and with full information as to the manner and cause of the death of the herein-named member while this certificate is in force, all the conditions hereof having been conformed to by the member, upon presentation and surrender of this certificate properly receipted, there shall be due and payable, out of the aforesaid mortuary fund and not otherwise, the indemnity of $2000 (less the balance unpaid, if any, of the stipulated contribution to said safety fund, with fifty per cent added, together with the unpaid installments of annual expense dues and any mortality or other charge against the member payment of which is not matured), to his wife, Bosa Barber, if living, otherwise to his legal representatives. All such payments to be made at the home office of said company in lawful money of the United States.
“That said company will deposit said sum of $10, when received, with the trustee, named in a contract with it (of which a copy is printed hereon), as a safety fund in trust for the uses and purposes expressed in said contract; and shall make a semiannual division of the net interest received therefrom by it pro rata among all the holders of certificates in force in said department at such times, who shall have contributed five years prior to the date of any such division their stipulated proportion of said fund, by applying the same to the payment of their future dues and assessments; and that, whenever said fund shall amount to $1,000,000, all subsequent receipts therefor shall be divided by the said company in like manner as the interest.”

The department in which this certificate was issued was organized about 1879, on the following plan: Each person applying for insurance under the plan was to pay an admission fee of $8 for $1000; $12 for $2000; $15 for. $3000; $18 for $4000; $20 for $5000; $40 for $10000, and the medical examination fee estimated at $3 to he paid to the physician; also to pay annually for the sole purpose of paying all expenses of said insurance $3 for each $1000 of insurance; and also to pay, as mortuary payments assessed to pay death losses, an amount graduated according to the policy holder’s age [30]

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Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 867, 269 Mo. 21, 1916 Mo. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-hartford-life-insurance-mo-1916.