Barden v. St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance

3 Mo. App. 248, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 5
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Mo. App. 248 (Barden v. St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barden v. St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance, 3 Mo. App. 248, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 5 (Mo. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

Hayden, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record states that this cause was submitted to the court below, sitting as a jury, on an agreed statement of facts, which is as follows :

“ Said cause coming on to be heard, and being submitted to the court, it -is hereby mutually agreed by and between plaintiffs and defendant herein: The policy No.' 14,077, with petition filed, is admitted, and shows terms and conditions of contract between plaintiffs and defendant. The marriage of plaintiffs admitted as in petition charged.

“It is admitted that the sale and transfer of property and ass^s of, and abandonment of business by, the defendant, as also of plaintiffs’ contract, as charged by plaintiffs in the petition, has reference solely to the contract of reinsurance between the defendant and the Mound City Life Insurance Company of December 13, 1873, a compliance with all the terms and conditions of which by both of said companies is hereby admitted, and a copy of said contract submitted in evidence, as is also the charters of said companies, together with a copy of the record in case of F. P. Blair, Superintendent of Insurance, etc., v. The St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance Company, in St. Louis Circuit Court, October term, 1873, by virtue of which proceedings and the charters of said companies defendant herein, as in answer filed, claims authority for, and right to make and enter into, said contract of December 13, 1873, and exemption from all liability by reason thereof as charged in plaintiffs’ petition, which right is by plaintiffs in their replication herein denied, and the issue thus made is submitted to the court.

“It is further agreed that no knowledge on the part of plaintiffs, of said contract of December 13, 1873, is claimed [250]*250by defendant, saving by implication from publication thereof as made and publicity given to it in the public press at or about the date thereof.

“ It is admitted that plaintiffs paid the annual premium on said policy of $343.80 in quarterly payments of one-third, by note reduced by dividends as declared, and two-thirds thereof in cash, as follows, to wit:

Cash December 16, 1868, as per indorsement on policy.......................$57.95

Cash March 16, 1869, books of company... 57.95

Cash June 16, 1869, receipt............... 57.95

Cash September 16, 1869, receipt........ 57.95

Cash December 16, 1869, receipt......... 69.35

Cash March 16, 1870, books of company... 57.95

Cash June 16, 1870, receipt............. 57.95

Cash September 16, 1870, receipt........ 57.95

Cash December 16,1870, books of company, 57.95

Cash March 16, 1871, receipt............ 57.95

“And on the 16th day of December, 1869, plaintiff executed and delivered to defendant his note for $189.97 as balance due on premium for years aforesaid, and otherwise so complied with terms and conditions thereof that said policy stood, as is hereby admitted by defendant, on books of defendant, in force for an amount proportionate to the amount originally insured, as the premiums paid bear to number of premiums agreed to be paid, less outstanding note as aforesaid.”

The policy of insurance and the contract of date December 13, 1873, between the Mound City Life Insurance Company and the defendant were received in evidence by the court below, in connection with the above statement, as was, also, the record of proceedings in the suit of Francis P. Blair, superintendent of insurance, etc., against this defendant. No instructions were asked or given, and no exceptions to evidence were taken, at the trial. The court below, sitting as a jury, found for the plaintiffs in the sum of $811.18, [251]*251which is the amount of cash premiums paid on the policy, with interest at 6 per cent, per annum from the date of each payment. A motion for new trial and one in arrest of judgment were made and overruled.

The policy, in consideration of an annual premium of $343.80 on or before December 16th in each year, for fifteen consecutive years, to be paid, assures the life of William A. Barden in the amount of $5,000. The annual premiums are to be paid as follows : an annual premium note of $112, and a quarter-annual cash premium of $57.95, on the 16th day of December, March, June, and-September. The company agree to pay the policy on December 16, 1883, when the insured shall have attained the age of forty-five years, or in ninety days after due notice and proofs of his death, if he should die before that date. The policy has the following proviso:

“ That if the two annual premiums next due and payable after the date hereof shall be well and truly paid, and default shall be made in the payment of said annual premiums thereafter to become due and payable, at the time herein-before mentioned and limited for the payment thereof respectively, then and in such case such default shall not work a forfeiture of this policy, but the sum of five thousand dollars, the amount insured, shall be then commuted or reduced to such proportional part of the whole sum or amount insured as the sums of the annual payments so paid by the said insured shall bear to the sum of the fifteen annual payments herein stipulated and agreed to be paid by said William A. Barden as aforesaid.”

It is obvious from the above that the case was not tried in the court below on what is properly called an agreed statement of facts. An agreed statement of facts, strictly speaking, corresponds to a special verdict. It presupposes that the issues have been settled, the evidence passed upon, and contains, therefore, no questions arising on the pleadings [252]*252or any matter of evidence, but results in the form of ascertained facts. When these facts are submitted to a court, it is the business of a court to deduce from them the proper legal conclusions. But the statement in this case, while it sets out some facts, is rather in the nature of admissions made by the parties to the case in the course of a trial, to obviate the necessity of adducing evidence and to narrow down the issues presented by the pleadings to questions of law for the court. Under these circumstances the question involved in this case may be said to be, Does this statement of facts, together with the evidence preserved by the bill of exceptions, taken with all the inferences which the court below; might fairly deduce from the statement and the evidence, justify the judgment of the court below? The question is asked in this form in order to give the plaintiffs the fullest benefit of the statement, and because, when so put, it disposes at the outset of some objections which are preliminary in their character.

For instance, the plaintiffs object that, as no exceptions were saved to evidence, and no instructions given or refused, at the trial, this court should not interfere with the judgment of the court below. But the position is obviously untenable. As no instructions were given, or rulings upon evidence made, the action of the court below must be taken to be correct, unless it appears that upon the facts the judgment could not have been given consistently with a correct application of the law to the case. The appellant says it could not, and the burden is on the appellant to show it. The judgment of the court below is presumed to be correct.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ford v. City of Cameron
19 Mo. App. 467 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1885)
Vanderline v. Smith
18 Mo. App. 55 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Mo. App. 248, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barden-v-st-louis-mutual-life-insurance-moctapp-1877.