Bennett v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

145 P.2d 815, 173 Or. 386, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 58
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 P.2d 815 (Bennett v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 145 P.2d 815, 173 Or. 386, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 58 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, from a judgment entered against it after a trial by jury in an action instituted to recover sums alleged to be due the plaintiff, Allen F. Bennett, upon an insurance policy which the defendant issued June 18, 1920. The plaintiff, an incompetent, appears by his guardian, who was appointed the day this suit was filed. The sums alleged due, and awarded by the attacked judgment, are $900, disability benefits for the period of October 16, 1935, to July 17, 1939, and $146.08, premiums paid in the same interval. An additional sum of $350 was added by the trial judge as compensation for the plaintiff’s attorney. The issuance of the policy and the period of disability, as alleged by the plaintiff, are conceded by the defendant. Notice of disability was not given to the defendant until July 17, 1939, and due to that fact the defendant contends that error was committed when judgment was entered against it.

*388 Through the medium of the policy the defendant promised, in consideration of a semi-annual premium of $16.68, payable on the 18th day of June and December, to pay to the plaintiff’s widow, upon his death, $1,000. It also agreed, in consideration of a further semi-annual premium of $1.58, that

“* * * if while the above numbered Policy is in full force and effect, and before default in the payment of any premium, the Company receives due proof that the Insured, as the result of injury or disease occurring and originating after the issuance of the Policy, has become totally and permanently disabled so as to be unable at any time to perform any work or engage in any business for compensation or profit, the Company will allow the following benefits:
“(a) Provided said disability occur before the Insured attains sixty years of age, but not otherwise, the Company, commencing with the anniversary of the Policy next following receipt of such proof, will waive payment of each premium becoming due during such disability, and, in addition, commencing six months from the receipt of such proof, will pay each month, during the continuance of such disability, to the Insured, * * * a Monthly Annuity of $10 for each $500 of original insurance under the Policy.”

Since the amount of the policy was $1,000, the promised monthly disability payments were, of course, $20. The required premiums were faithfully paid up to and including the one due June 18, 1939.

The answer admits :

“On or about the 16th day of October, 1935, Allen P. Bennett, as insured, suffered a paralytic stroke and as a result of such disease became permanently and totally disabled so as to be unable *389 at any time to perform any work or engage in any business for compensation or profit.”

In other words, the disability, including its permanent and total character, is conceded. The stroke occurred October 16, 1935. The insured was then 45 years old. July 17, 1939, the defendant received a notice, which it acknowledges was due proof that the insured, as a result of disease, was totally and permanently disabled. September 6, 1939; the defendant commenced making the required payments. The first remittance was for the payment due July 17, 1939. At the same time the defendant returned the premium of $18.26 paid on June 18,1939. The payments have continued ever since the remittance of September 6,1939. Nothing, however, has been paid for the period of October 16, 1935, to July 17,1939.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover disability payments for the period beginning October 16, 1935, the date of the paralytic stroke, to and including July 17, 1939, the date from which the first disability payment Avas calculated. The defendant agrees that if anything is due the plaintiff, the amounts awarded by the judgment are correct; that is, $900 for disability payments, and $146.08 for the return of premiums paid in the disputed period of time.

Two assignments of error are presented. The first states that error was committed

“in not requiring the plaintiff, before permitting recovery, to prove presentation to the insurer of due proof of permanent and total disability within the meaning of the policy as a condition precedent to the defendant’s liability.”

*390 The second is based on a contention that error was committed

“in instructing the jury that the presentation to the insurer of due proof of the disability described in the policy could be excused if they found the plaintiff was mentally incapacitated from filing this proof of disability, and that the same was not filed because of the fact of mental incapacity.”

The plaintiff concedes that no proof of disability was submitted to the defendant prior to the one aforementioned, that is, the notice received on July 17,1939. In explanation of the tardiness, the plaintiff’s witnesses explained that Mrs. Bennett knew nothing of the provision of the policy which stipulated for the disability payments, and that the effect of the stroke so impaired the plaintiff’s mind that he was bereft of all knowledge of the policy.

The plaintiff and his wife (she now being the guardian of his estate) were married in 1918. Two years later the plaintiff, who was then a streetcar conductor, told his wife, according to her testimony,

“that he had taken out insurance for me today, and when he died that I would have something, and that was all there was to it. It was never explained to me at all. I knew nothing about it. I only knew that he paid on it twice a year; and when he had the stroke I just continued to pay that twice a year.”

Thus was the wife advised of the policy which underlies this case. She swore positively that she knew nothing of the disability clause. The policy before us is the only life insurance which the couple possess.

When the policy was delivered to the home it was placed, unread, in a receptacle where the couple kept their valuable papers and remained there, unread, until *391 June of 1939. In that month the cruel demands of impoverishment drove the wife to the relief office with a request for assistance. There she was asked to bring to the office any insurance policies the family possessed. When she submitted the policy in question there was discovered the clause above quoted. Then the proof of claim, which we have already mentioned, was made, and next came the disability payments beginning July 17,1939.

When Mrs. Bennett visited the relief office, her husband, as an overseas veteran of the World War, was convalescing in the Veterans Hospital in Portland where he had been for most of the time since October of 1935. The stroke, according to Mrs. Bennett, rendered her husband a helpless invalid.

A couple of years before his stroke Bennett lost his employment with the streetcar system due to the fact that the line upon which he worked was abandoned. A year later the couple moved to a farm. Then in 1935 came the disabling stroke. Bennett was immediately taken to the Veterans Hospital and remained there for six months.

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Related

Grau v. Northwestern Mutual Insurance
350 P.2d 1082 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 P.2d 815, 173 Or. 386, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-or-1943.