Capitol Hill Burial Ass'n v. Oliver

1939 OK 227, 91 P.2d 673, 185 Okla. 261, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 2, 1939
DocketNo. 28734.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1939 OK 227 (Capitol Hill Burial Ass'n v. Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capitol Hill Burial Ass'n v. Oliver, 1939 OK 227, 91 P.2d 673, 185 Okla. 261, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 318 (Okla. 1939).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This case is presented on appeal from the court of common pleas of Oklahoma county, where it was tried de novo on appeal from a justice of the peace court.

The Capitol 1-Iill Burial Association, hereafter referred to as the “Association,” is an Oklahoma corporation. It accords to its members burial benefits and issues to them certificates evidencing their rights thereto.

On the 29th day of April, 1937, an agent of the association received from Oían O. Oliver, a resident of Capitol 1-Iill, Oklahoma City, an application for a burial certificate to cover burial expenses of the applicant and members of his family. The application was accompanied by the initial payment for the service contemplated.

It was understood, as expressed in the application, that the funeral service to be provided should be furnished by the Hunter Funeral Home. , The value of the benefits contracted for was $100 per person over five years of age and $50 per person under five years of age.

The agent had not yet delivered the application to the association when, on May 3, 1937, Wilson Oliver, a 12-year old son of the applicant, was killed. The application was approved and the certificate issued without including the deceased son after the boy’s death.

The burial services for the son were furnished by another funeral home. The charge was $135.

On the 30th day of June, 1937, this action was commenced by Olan Oliver, as plaintiff, against the association, as defendant, in the justice of the peace court,. pnd thereafter on August 2, 1937, an appeal was perfected to the court of common pleas of Oklahoma county. The cause was therein tried de novo without the intervention of a jury on the 14th day of January, 1938. The judgment of the trial court was for the plaintiff in the sum of $100. The defendant association appeals, appearing herein as plaintiff in error. We shall continue to refer to the parties by their trial court designation.

The theory of plaintiff’s action is that the defendant company is engaged in the insurance business; that its delay in acting upon plaintiff’s application was unreasonable, and that by reason of such unreasonable delay it is liable in damages to the applicant. Plaintiff invokes as applicable the rule announced by this court in Great Northern Life Insurance Co. v. Scott, 181 Okla. 179, 72 P.2d 790, wherein we said in the syllabus, “An insurance company may be held liable in damages to an applicant for insurance where there has been unreasonable delay in acting upon his application for insurance, and the question of unreasonableness of the delay is a question of fact for the jury under proper instructions of the court”; and the rule in Security Ins. Co. of New Haven v. Cameron et al., 85 Okla. 171, 205 P. 151, wherein we said in paragraph 4 of the syllabus:

“An insurance company may be held liable in damages to an applicant for insurance where there has been unreasonable delay in perfecting and forwarding an application to the company for acceptance or rejection, by the soliciting agent of the company or other agent who has authority to supervise the solicitation and preparation of applications, and the question of the unreasonableness of the delay is one for the trier of the facts in each particular ease under proper instruction of the court.”

In support of his position the plaintiff calls our attention to evidence in the record establishing that the custom of the association was to “check” on its agents and the applications procured by them every day, or at least every two days, but that in this instance the agent was not “checked” for some five days, and this belated action was a result of inquiry prompted by the death .of applicant’s son. The agent’s excuse for not reporting the application was that he was suffering from a bad cold or the “flu.”

The question of whether the delay was unreasonable was one of fact for determination in the trial court. Like other decisions upon questions of fact in actions at law, it is not to be disturbed in this court *263 on appeal if supported by competent evidence. The evidence above outlined sufficiently supports tbe decision of tlie trial court.

Tbe defendant seeks to avoid tbe application of tbe rule announced in Great Northern Life Insurance Company v. Scott, supra, and other cases therein cited on tbe theory that “it is not an insurance company.” This position is not tenable. Tbe provision of burial benefits is a form of insurance and in this jurisdiction burial associations are classified as insurance companies. Southwestern Burial Association v. State ex rel. Reed, Ins. Com’r, 135 Okla. 151, 274 P. 642; State ex rel. Read, Ins. Com'r, v. Midwest Mutual Burial Association, Inc., 176 Okla. 468, 56 P.2d 124. They are by legislative grace exempted from compliance with and the application of the general statutory provisions relating to insurance companies. Section 10453, O. S. 1931, chapter 33, S. L. 1929. They are not, however, by such legislative act deprived of their character as insurance companies and are subject to constitutional provisions relating to such companies. State ex rel. Read, Ins. Com’r, v. Midwest Mutual Burial Association, Inc., supra. The duty of an insurance company to pass on applications without unreasonable delay does not arise from any specific statute defining the same, and thus the fact that burial associations are granted special privileges under our law in the matter of nonobservanee of general statutes does not lessen their legal obligation to act with reasonable promptness in passing on applications, especially where, as in this ease, the application was accompanied with payment of the initial fee. Security Insurance Co. of New Haven v. Cameron, supra.

The defendant in the trial of this cause asserted as an additional defense that when notified of the death of plaintiff’s son it stood ready and willing to furnish the burial service through the Hunter Funeral Home, but that it could not procure the body from the other funeral home to which it had been taken without payment of services rendered at that home.

The evidence discloses that the body was by mistake and without direction of the applicant taken to another funeral home. As to whether the association or the Hunter Funeral Home promptly offered to take care of the same when it was notified, there is a distinct dispute in the evidence. According to the applicant’s testimony, the association first denied liability and the offer to take care of the burial service occurred as an afterthought the next day and after the body had been allowed to remain at the other funeral home during the night. By reason of this conflict in the evidence, we deem it unnecessary to consider such legal questions as might have been appropriate for decision had the defendant’s evidence upon the point been uncontradieted, as, for instance, the asserted right of an undertaker to a lien on a corpse, and which of the parties to this litigation should suffer from the wrongful assertion of such a lien, if such a lien does not exist.

In support of the judgment it will be presumed that the association denied liability in the first instance and its inability to procure the body at a later date was due to its own delay in expressing a willingness to take care of it.

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Bluebook (online)
1939 OK 227, 91 P.2d 673, 185 Okla. 261, 1939 Okla. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capitol-hill-burial-assn-v-oliver-okla-1939.