Brown v. Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance

247 S.W. 47, 197 Ky. 430, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 649
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 26, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 247 S.W. 47 (Brown v. Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance, 247 S.W. 47, 197 Ky. 430, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 649 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

OpinioN op the Court by

Judge Moorman

Affirming.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Laurel circuit court dismissing the petition of appellant, Grace H. Brown, in an equitable action filed by her to recover two thousand dollars on an insurance policy issued December 31, 1903, by the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company on the life of her husband, W. L. Brown.

On May 11, 1886, the predecessor of appellee issued its policy No. 9673 for $2,000.00 on the life of W. L. Brown for an annual premium of $5.00, plus the payment of such assessments as might be required by the company to pay the death claims of its policyholders. That policy was carried for sixteen years at a total cost to the insured of $864.05. In 1903 it was surrendered and appellee issued in the place of it a $2,000.00 yearly renewable term policy. The latter policy, No. 146439, contained a graduated scale of annual premiums ranging from $89.50 at sixty-three years of age to $318.58 at eighty years of age. Neither policy had any loan or cash surrender value or paid-up benefits, the purpose of both policies being to provide protection for the insured at the lowest possible premium rate. The second policy, which is the one involved here, contained the provision, “If any [432]*432premium be not paid when due, this policy shall be extended and remain in force for thirty days from due date, and if not then be paid with interest for the time taken at the rate of five per cent per annum, or if any obligation given for premium be dishonored or not paid when due without grace this policy shall be absolutely void, and all moneys paid hereon shall be forfeited to the company, and after said period of thirty days or nonpayment of such obligation, if can only be revived if the insured be in good health upon presentation of a reinstatement certificate signed by said insured, and upon the approval of the same by the president or the vice-president and medical director, but not otherwise. ’ ’ The days of grace were later extended by the company to thirty-one.

Brown paid the premiums on this policy, generally in quarterly installments, from 1903 to November 1, 1912, the total amount paid being $1,092.73. He failed to pay the quarterly installment due February 1, 1913, and on March 4th, thirty-one days thereafter, the policy was forfeited. No effort was made by Mr. Brown to obtain a reinstatement of the policy. After his death on June 7, 1917, this action was instituted by his wife, the beneficiary, to recover the full amount of the insurance.

The pleadings show the issuance of the two policies, the aggregate payments made by Brown on each of them, and the cancellation of policy 146439 on March 4, 1913, for failure to pay the quarterly premium due February 1, 1913. They present issues of fact (1) as to whether by its course of dealings with the insured the defendant had established a custom of accepting premiums after their due dates without requiring a health certificate or a revival of the contract, whereby the insured was induced to believe, as a reasonable man, that the installment due February 1, 1913, would not be demanded on that date, but that he might pay it within a reasonable time thereafter; and (2) whether defendant had waived the right to collect the premium due February 1, 1913, on or before the last day of grace — March 4, 1913 — because the insured had lost his policy and had requested that defendant furnish him a copy of it, and also whether, by reason of that fact, defendant had caused the insured, as a reasonable man, to believe that no payment of pre[433]*433miums would be required pending Ms effort to procure a copy of the policy. On motion of plaintiff a jury trial was allowed on these issues; and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the jury was directed to return a verdict for the defendant and a judgment was rendered dismissing the petition.

It is the contention of plaintiff that the trial court erred in refusing to submit to the jury the twenty-one separate issues of fact embraced in her motion made after she had introduced her evidence and the court had indicated that defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction would be sustained; and also that it was error to direct a verdict for defendant on the two issues on trial before the jury. The first suggestion may be disposed of by saying that the twenty-one minor questions of fact upon which the plaintiff asked a jury trial were included in the two issues on wMch a jury trial was granted; and that being true, it was manifestly proper to refuse separate hearings on the included questions. The second contention involves a question of fact. If sustainable at all, it is on the theory that the issues were exclusively legal, and there was sufficient evidence on behalf of plaintiff to submit them to the jury. Assuming, therefore, without deciding, that the questions were purely legal and not cognizable concurrently in law or equity, we come to a oonsideration of the evidence with the view of ascertaining whether it was such as to require a submission of the issues to a jury.

The proof shows that the insured, on a number of occasions after taking out the second policy, did not pay the premium within the tMrty-one days of grace allowed; and it also shows a similar practice on Ms part with reference to the first policy. We do not, however, regard the conduct of the parties in respect to the first policy as having any evidential effect on the custom or practice in regard to the second policy, since the latter policy was a separate contract and the custom as to extending the time of payments of premiums thereon, if one existed, must be determined from the conduct of the parties in reference to that contract and none other. As to that policy, it is in evidence, as we have observed, that the insured frequently did not pay the premiums witMn the thirty-one days of grace allowed, but it appears that in such instances it was exceptional when he was not required to apply for a reinstatement of the policy and to execute a health certificate. It is shown that on one occasion a [434]*434check for a note was received within the time but the check was postdated ten days, and on another a note was not paid until one day after it was past due, -and in each case a health certificate was not required. On three or four occasions checks in payment of notes were accepted a day or two after the due dates of the notes, although in every case the check was mailed before the maturing1 date of the note. In those instances the company treated the payments as having been made as of the dates the checks were mailed and the policy was not forfeited. All other payments were made on time or, when not so made, the insured was required to apply for a reinstatement of the policy and to execute a health certificate. The quarterly premium due November 1, 1912, was not paid within the thirty-one days and the insured was required to make application for a revival of the policy and to sign a revival contract. On December 10, 1912, the insured asked the company for a loan of $500.00 on his policy. The request was declined on the ground that the policy was a yearly renewable policy, having no loan or other surrender value. Shortly thereafter the insured requested a copy of his policy 146439 and also of the old policy, stating that his copies had been burned or misplaced. Within a few days he wrote to the insurer, threatening to bring suit in the United' States court to enforce a loan or obtain a paid-up policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 47, 197 Ky. 430, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-fidelity-mutual-life-insurance-kyctapp-1923.