Claypool v. Continental Casualty Co.

112 S.W. 835, 129 Ky. 682, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 8, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 112 S.W. 835 (Claypool v. Continental Casualty Co.) 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
Claypool v. Continental Casualty Co., 112 S.W. 835, 129 Ky. 682, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 207 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Lassing —

Affirnu ing.

Appellant, Claypool, in the summer and fall of 1905 was living in Dyersburg, Tenn., where he was the local agent of the Provident Savings Life Insurance Company on a salary of $50 per month. In addition to this, employment, he represented the Continental Casualty Company of Chicago as its local agent. In September of the same year he took out with the said [685]*685casualty company a policy known as an “industrial” policy, by the terms of which the liability of the company was limited to $700 for loss of life by accident, and one-half of this sum for the loss of a hand. On the 9th of November of the same year he wrote a letter to the Continental Casualty Company, in which he made application for a policy with said company on what is known as the “commercial” plan. The liability of the company on this policy was limited to $5,000. At the time this last application was made out, he had a policy of accident insurance on his life for $5,000 in the Aetna Insurance Company. The application for the commercial policy, which was dated November 9th, was received by the home office of the company in Chicago on November 11th. As the applicant already had a policy in force with their company on the industrial plan, it declined to accept the application on the commercial plan during the life of the policy on the industrial plan, and so wrote the applicant, Claypool, telling him that they would not issue another policy, but suggested that, inasmuch as the policy he then had would expire on December 1st following, the matter should lie over until that time; that they would hold his check for $3.75, which he had sent with his application on November 9th, in their “suspense account.” Claypool testifies that he received this letter, in which his application was returned to him, on the 14th of November, and that On that day, in the early morning, he wrote another letter to the company, in which he returned the application which he had originally made, and notified the company that he understood that, when he made the application for the commercial policy, in so doing he canceled the industrial policy, according to its terms, and that the company could, therefore, either return [686]*686Ms check or issue its policy under the commercial plan, as he had indicated he desir'ed. On the 15th of November, about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, while attempting to unbreech a gun with which he had been hunting, in order that he might clean it, Claypool had his hand shot off. Notice of the accident was, in the course of time, brought home to the company and payment of $2,500 was demanded by Claypool, according to the terms of the commercial policy, which had been sent to him after the accident. This was refused by the company on the ground that the application which Claypool testified he mailed to them on the 14th of November was not received by them until the morning of the 16th, and that the policy was not issued until the 18th, and, as at that time the injury had already occurred, no liability existed on the part of the company therefor. Being unable to effect a settlement, Claypool sued the Continental Casualty Company for $2,500 for the loss of his hand, to which he was entitled, if anything, under the terms of the policy. The answer of the defendant -denied liability, and set up several defenses, among others that the policy or contract was obtained by plaintiff through fraud and misrepresentations,'intentionally made, in the following particulars: First, that the plaintiff was at the time the defendant’s agent, and was guilty of fraud in delivering to himself the policy after he knew he was injured; second, that he fraudulently represented his weekly earnings as exceeding his weekly indemnity; third; the application when it was returned by the plaintiff was not received by the defendant until November 16th, the day after the plaintiff was hurt; fourth, after receiving the injury plaintiff made proof of his claim under the industrial policy; fifth, that the plaintiff in handling the gun as [687]*687lie did voluntarily exposed himself to an obvious risk of danger. Upon the filing of this answer, the ease was, on motion of the defendant, transferred to equity. The allegations of fraud in the answer were traversed by appropriate pleading. Thereafter the plaintiff moved the court for a new trial before a jury upon certain issues of fact. The motion was granted, a jury was impaneled, and plaintiff and defendant each submitted certain questions for the determination of the jury, proof was heard, and, the jury having-answered said questions, the defendant moved for a new trial, thereupon the court, on its own motion,, entered a judgment in favor of defendant, and dismissed plaintiff’s petition.

The questions submitted to the jury and the answers thereto are as follows:

Plaintiff’s Questions.
(1) Did the gunshot wound alleged in the petition necessitate the amputation of plaintiff’s right hand at or above the wrist, and was his right hand so amputated? Yes.
“ (2) Did the plaintiff at the time he received said, injury unnecessarily expose himself to obvious risk of such danger? No.
“(3) Did the plaintiff’s weekly earnings at the-time he applied for policy No. 834133 exceed his. weekly indemnity under the policy sued on and all other policies (exclusive of No. 930916, surrendered, by him) ? Yes.
“(4) Had the defendant at the time of plaintiff’s injury received from plaintiff the first installment of the premium for policy sued on? Yes.
"(5) After application for policy No. 834133 had been returned by the defendant to plaintiff, when did. [688]*688plaintiff mail same back to the defendant? November 14, 1905, between 6:30 and 7 o’clock a. m.”
Defendant’s Questions.
“ (1) When, under the evidence in this case, was the letter of C. C. Claypool to the Continental Casualty Company, of date November 14, 1905, returning the application, received at the office of the Continental Casualty Company, at Chicago, 111.? We believe this letter was received at company’s office by noon November 15, 1905.
“{2) When and by what officer, or agent, of the defendant company, was the application inclosed in said last-mentioned letter of date November 14, 1905, accepted, and when was policy sued on written and issued? We believe that this application was accepted by defendant company when plaintiff complied with company’s conditions in giving the required amended application, when said plaintiff remailed application on November 14, 1905, and by such officer as passed upon it before the application was returned to plaintiff.
■*‘(3) What was the income or money plaintiff received from all sources from May 15, 1905, to November 15,1905, six months’ time? We believe it was over $50 per week.”

Conceiving that the court erred to his prejudice, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

A great deal of testimony taken in this case bears upon the question of the weekly earnings of appellant; it being the contention of appellee that appellant had intentionally stated in his application that his weekly earnings exceeded his weekly indemnity, when, as a matter of fact, they were not nearly equal [689]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 S.W. 835, 129 Ky. 682, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claypool-v-continental-casualty-co-kyctapp-1908.