Braun v. New York Life Insurance

55 A.D.2d 99, 389 N.Y.S.2d 927, 1976 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 14550
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 17, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 A.D.2d 99 (Braun v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braun v. New York Life Insurance, 55 A.D.2d 99, 389 N.Y.S.2d 927, 1976 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 14550 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Goldman, J.

In this action plaintiff Francis J. Braun seeks to recover the proceeds of a life insurance policy issued by defendant New York Life Insurance Company (Company) and allegedly sold by its agent and representative, defendant Geoffrey E. Parker, to Michael F. Braun, the now-deceased son of the plaintiff. The parties cross-appeal from an order which denied their respective motions for summary judgment.

At the time of his death, 23-year-old Michael F. Braun was in his final year of study at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. He resided in an apartment in Schenectady. On June 9, 1972, Michael was killed in an automobile accident. Thereafter a $25,000 life insurance policy, written by the defendant Company and naming plaintiff as first beneficiary, was found in Michael’s room among his personal effects. The policy recited that it was "executed as of April 21, 1972, which is its date of issue”. Attached to the policy was an application which contained, in the paragraph immediately above Michael’s signature, the provision that "no policy applied for herein shall go into force or take effect unless and [101]*101until it is delivered to the Applicant and the first premium for it is paid in full during the lifetime of the person or persons proposed for coverage under it”. Plaintiff furnished the company with proof of his son’s death and sought payment of the proceeds. The Company refused to make payment on grounds that the policy never became effective because no premium was ever paid. Plaintiff thereafter commenced the instant action.

The complaint alleged six causes of action, which in somewhat overlapping and redundant fashion set forth the following alternative theories: (1) that Michael had paid the premium during his life; (2) that he made part payment and that the defendants waived the policy’s provisions as to the time for payment of the rest; (3) that defendants waived prepayment of all or part of the premium by issuing and delivering the policy prior to such payment, and extended credit to Michael, which they are now estopped to cancel, for a term which did not expire prior to his death; (4) that defendants extended credit to Michael until such time as they might demand payment or return of the policy, which they never did, and that Michael, relying upon their representations that the policy was in effect, refrained from buying other insurance, so that defendants are now estopped to cancel or rescind the insurance contract; (5) that defendant Parker received payment of the premium from Michael and negligently or intentionally failed to forward the payment to the Company. All allegations of payment and of dealings between Michael and the defendants were upon information and belief. Plaintiff’s bill of particulars, and no fewer than three amended bills, also upon information and belief, add little detail to those allegations, for they consist largely of denials that plaintiff had knowledge of the requested particulars.

The answer denied all allegations that payments were made, waived or postponed, and alleged as an affirmative defense that defendant Parker left the policy with Michael solely for inspection purposes under the terms of a "policy inspection receipt”, and that Michael failed to make the first premium payment so that the policy never became effective. A copy of the inspection receipt, dated April 21, 1972 and bearing what purports to be the signature of Michael Braun, was annexed to the answer. The receipt contained, inter alia, the following language:

"I hereby acknowledge and agree
[102]*102"(1) that I have not paid the full first premium on the policy * * *
"(2) that the policy has been left with me temporarily and solely for inspection purposes * * *
"(3) that the Company shall incur no liability under the policy unless and until the full first premium thereon is paid * * *
"(5) that I will return the policy to the Company upon demand by it at any time prior to payment of the full first premium.” (Italics in original.)

Also before Special Term upon the cross motions for summary judgment was the transcript of an examination before trial at which three witnesses testified. The first was defendant Geoffrey E. Parker, who stated that he talked with Michael Braun about life insurance on March 23, 1972, at which time Parker filled out the policy application. The meeting took place at Michael’s apartment with no other persons present. The premium was discussed, and Michael said that "He couldn’t pay it at that time”. Parker saw Michael read and sign the application. Parker later received the policy from the Company, and he took it to Michael’s apartment on April 21, 1972, at which time he and Michael, with no others present, reviewed the policy’s provisions. Parker asked Michael "if he wanted to take the policy, put it in force, or inspect it”, and Michael answered that he wanted to inspect it. Parker had Michael sign the policy inspection receipt, which Parker took and kept in his file. Parker explained to Michael that the Company would incur no liability under the policy until the first premium was paid in full. Afterward Parker had several telephone conversations with Michael, and once, in early June, 1972, Parker called on Michael at his apartment and asked him "if he wanted to take the policy”, and Michael replied "that he had a job coming up in a week, that he would be in a better position then than right at that moment”. Parker stated that he never sent Michael a bill for the premium and he did not recall asking for the return of the policy; that he never at any time received any payment from Michael. Parker testified that he was authorized to collect the first premium when a new policy was sold, but that bills for subsequent premiums were mailed by the Company. It was Parker’s practice, when collecting a premium, to remit the payment to the Company in the form in which he received it [103]*103from the client. Parker did not make such payments to the Company through any checking account of his own.

Richard C. Leonard, assistant vice-president in the life underwriting department of the defendant Company, also testified at the examination before trial. He stated that he did not know whether the local branch office of the Company had ever billed Michael Braun, but that the home office computer files indicated that the policy issued to Michael Braun was "not taken” and "not paid for”. Leonard indicated that policy inspection receipts were in routine use by his Company and had been for many years.

The plaintiff also testified at the examination before trial. He stated, with commendable frankness, that the sole source of his information that payment had been made on the policy was a telephone conversation between his wife and Michael, which plaintiff had partly overheard and which his wife had related to him. In plaintiffs words, "a week previous to [Michael’s] death, my wife called him and spoke to him. I was at the kitchen table at the time, and I overheard the conversation to the respect that one of his friends was trying to sell him insurance, and Mike said that it all had been taken care of. And she also stated that if he needed any help, we would give him a hand with the payments, and Michael said it had already been taken care of and that’s the only thing I know about the policy”. Plaintiff did not dispute the authenticity of Michael’s signature on the policy inspection receipt.

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Bluebook (online)
55 A.D.2d 99, 389 N.Y.S.2d 927, 1976 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 14550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braun-v-new-york-life-insurance-nyappdiv-1976.