Bramble v. Kansas City Life Insurance

160 S.W.2d 746, 349 Mo. 318
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 12, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 160 S.W.2d 746 (Bramble v. Kansas City 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
Bramble v. Kansas City Life Insurance, 160 S.W.2d 746, 349 Mo. 318 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

This is an action on an insurance policy to recover $10,000, the face amount of the policy, together with interest, and penalty and attorneys' fees for vexatious refusal to pay. The jury returned a verdict for $7000 on the policy, with $2000 interest and $2500 attorneys' fees. On defendant's motion for a new trial, the trial court required a remittitur of the attorneys' fees, which was made, and judgment was entered for plaintiff for $9000. Plaintiff moved to modify and to enter judgment for $10,000 on the policy, plus the interest, but the motion was overruled. Both parties have appealed. We shall continue to refer to the parties as plaintiff and defendant.

On February 13, 1920, defendant issued the policy sued on, and thereby insured the life of Harley L. Bramble for $10,000. The insurance was made payable to his estate. Certain specific terms of the policy will be stated in the course of the opinion. It is admitted that the policy was in force up to [748] February 13, 1933. Plaintiff contends that the policy lapsed on said date, while defendant contends it did not lapse until February 13, 1935. It is admitted the cash surrender or loan value of the policy on February 13, 1933, was $3326.40 and the total indebtedness $2798.22, leaving "a net equity" of $528.18; and that this sum, applied on said date as a net single premium for extended insurance, would have kept the insurance in force to a date considerably beyond the date of insured's death.

The annual premium of $337.90, due February 13, 1933, was not paid on or before said date, nor within the 31 days of grace thereafter. On March 7, 1933, and within the grace period, the insured wrote defendant as follows (omitting heading and signature): "My premium and loan interest is due and I cannot pay them now. If the loan value of my policy will take care of them for another year please fill out note and send to me to sign." This letter was received by defendant on March 9, 1933, and, thereafter, on March 21, 1933, interest was credited to the insured's account in the sum of $188.17 and on March 22, 1933, the premium on the policy was credited in *Page 321 the sum of $337.90, both being paid from the proceeds of an additional loan (dated March 22, 1933) in the sum of $526.07, secured by the policy. The actual entry of credit for the premium, on March 22, 1933, was made a few days after the expiration of the grace period. The exact date of the execution of the note by insured, or the receipt thereof by defendant, did not appear.

Prior to the 1934 premium date, to-wit, on February 12, 1934, the insured wrote defendant as follows (heading and signature omitted): "My premium is due on policy No. 205960. Will you please increase my loan on same to take care of it for another year. If the loan value is not enough to take care of it for a year please extend it to amount of same." This letter was received by defendant on February 14, 1934, and the loan against the policy was thereafter increased a total of $567.63 to pay $337.90 premium and $219.73 interest. This loan increased the total indebtedness against the policy to $3881.92, for which sum a note was executed by the insured on February 20, 1934. The note recites that the policy was deposited and assigned as security. The premium due the following year, on February 13, 1935, was not paid on said date or within the grace period thereafter, but on March 21, 1935, and after the expiration of the grace period, upon the insured's application and the execution of an extension agreement an extension was granted for the payment of premium until September 1, 1935, but the premium was not paid. On February 13, 1935, "after the expiration of 15 years," the policy according to its terms had a cash surrender or loan value of $4027.80. The amount of indebtedness then due, as evidenced by insured's note, was $3881.92. On the basis of the net cash value over indebtedness, to-wit, $145.88, the policy was extended as term insurance for 338 days from February 13, 1935, to January 17, 1936. An additional value of $42.52 would have kept the policy in force as extended or term insurance from January 17, 1936 to April 23, 1936, the date of insured's death.

In submitting the cause to the jury the plaintiff requested and the court instructed the jury as follows: ". . . if you find and believe from the evidence that the premium due on said policy on February 13, 1933, was not paid at that time or within the 31 day grace period which expired March 16, 1933, then the policy lapsed and it was the duty of the defendant insurance company to continue the insurance as extended term insurance for such period of time as the reserve on the policy, less the indebtedness against it on February 13, 1933, would purchase, at Harley Bramble's attained age, and in this connection you are further instructed that even though you may find that Harley Bramble entered into a loan agreement and executed loan notes after such lapse, if any, yet under the law any such loan notes and agreements could not be used to shorten the term of extended insurance, or reduce the reserve value of the policy which was then available to purchase extended term insurance." *Page 322

Defendant assigns error on the giving of this instruction and contends that it is not based upon the evidence and that "it completely ignored the fact that the policy did not lapse and there was no failure to pay the premium due February 13, 1933, for the reason said premium was paid by insured's procuring a loan on his policy, the request for which was made before the 31 day grace period had expired and any delay of insured in returning the executed note was clearly waived by defendant." Defendant further contends that "the trial court erred in not giving defendant's instruction in the nature of a demurrer offered at the close of all the evidence," because, at the[749] time the policy lapsed, its cash value less the indebtedness was sufficient to purchase extended insurance only until January 17, 1936, and, therefore, the insurance was not in force at the date of insured's death on April 23, 1936.

[1] Plaintiff first contends that "when the premium due February 13, 1933, was not paid when due, the policy lapsed, and became subject to commutation under the nonforfeiture statutes, and the policy reserve available for extended insurance could not be reduced by a subsequent loan." Plaintiff says: "While the defendant might waive the prompt payment of the premium, it could not as a condition of such waiver shorten the term of the extended insurance, by deducting from the reserve or cash value, a so-called loan made after the policy was subject to communtation under the nonforfeiture statute. . . . It would have been perfectly proper for the defendant to have waived the prompt payment of the 1933 premium, if it had stopped there, but it did not do that. It went further and attempted to use up the policy reserve by switching it from reserve to premium and interest payments, in such way as to eat it up about four times as fast. . . . We concede that if the defendant company had received a premium in cash from Harley Bramble after the lapsed date, then it would have waived the forfeiture and the nonforfeiture statute might not apply. . . . Depletion of the policy reserve after lapse for the payment of premiums in advance is not permitted by the statute."

It will be noted that plaintiff's arguments are based upon the theory that there was in fact a default in the payment of premiums; that the policy actually lapsed; and that there was and could be no reinstatement of the policy thereafter by applying reserve to premium and interest.

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 746, 349 Mo. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bramble-v-kansas-city-life-insurance-mo-1942.