Coleman Mut. Life Ins. Ass'n v. Lasseter

173 S.W.2d 321, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 484
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 21, 1943
DocketNo. 2371
StatusPublished

This text of 173 S.W.2d 321 (Coleman Mut. Life Ins. Ass'n v. Lasseter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman Mut. Life Ins. Ass'n v. Lasseter, 173 S.W.2d 321, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 484 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by Mrs. Norma Acuff Las-seter against the Coleman Mutual Life Insurance Association (a local mutual) to recover on a certificate, or so-called policy of life insurance, issued May 10, 1938, to Mrs. Sarah A. Acuff, with loss payable to plaintiff, her daughter, in the sum of $1,000, being policy No. Z-370.

The defendant answered by exceptions, general denial, and specially denied it had taken over and assumed all liability under the terms of the policy and alleged that assumption, if any, was conditional, and that in taking over said policy it agreed to carry the same in a separate group known as the “Winters Mutual Policy Group”, with the understanding that the same would be paid from funds derived from policy holders of Winters Mutual Group policies, and to the extent only that such group of policy holders paid assessments levied upon the same for that purpose.

The defendant further denied that it had on hand at date of the death of Mrs. Acuff or at date of trial any funds from said Winters Mutual Group subject to the payment of the policy and it did not allege it had made an assessment on the group for that purpose.

Plaintiff alleged proper notice, presentment of claim, and prayed for judgment in the sum of $1,000, less monthly premiums at $10.12 per month from November, 1939, to August, 1941, inclusive, and for such legal and equitable relief as she might show herself entitled to.

The trial was before the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the face amount of the policy, less the monthly premiums tendered. There are no findings of fact and conclusions of law. The defendant appeals from the judgment, resisting the same on different grounds, the material and controlling ones of which will now be considered.

The purported insurance appears to have been carried for many years. It was first taken out with an Abilene Mutual (1928), thereafter transferred to the Winters Mutual, and later transferred by that company to the Coleman Mutual Life Insurance Association, defendant herein. In the trial it developed that the defendant had also sold the group to the Bankers Life of Waco, but did not transfer Mrs. Acuff’s policy therewith.

At first the monthly premium was $6.75. Later, the amount was raised to $10.12. When the alleged liability accrued, past premium payments aggregated more than the face of the policy.

When plaintiff’s father died in March, 1938, she became beneficiary in the policy and in a sense assumed responsibility for the payment of the monthly premium, as her mother had become aged and deceased.

[322]*322Plaintiff continued to pay the $10.12 monthly premiums until the month of November, 1939, at which time and without any default having occurred in such payments, she mailed check for said amount to the defendant, but the defendant rejected same and returning it to her with the statement that they had issued her mother a $500 policy, which took the place of the $1,000 policy, and that the new premium was $6.50.

Mrs. Sarah A. Acuff, the mother, refused to accept the $500 policy, and never paid any premiums on the same. In noway did she or the plaintiff agree to abandon the $1,000 policy, on which premiums had been promptly paid for many years. After the defendant refused to receive the last $10.12 premium tendered it on the $1,000 policy and indicated a like course in the future, neither the plaintiff nor her mother tendered further monthly premiums thereon, but held themselves, as found by the trial court, ready, able and willing to pay same. In the trial court the plaintiff alleged tender of such unpaid premiums down to the death of the mother, and asked that the judgment be offset by such amount. The judgment was so rendered.

On April 25, 1939, after due notice to its policy holders, the Winters Mutual held a meeting of its members, and all present voted in favor of the transfer of its membership, mortuary funds, etc., to the Coleman Mutual, according to the terms of an agreement or contract which those two companies entered into that day and which was approved by the Insurance Commission April 27, 1939. After the resolution authorizing such merger and transfer was adopted unanimously by the Winters Mutual policy holders, they adjourned. Thereafter, the action so taken was disclosed to Mrs. Acuff by the Coleman Mutual’s letter of May 17, 1939, which is in part as follows :

“Dear Friend: This letter will be your notice of the merger of the Winters Life Insurance Company, at Winters, Texas, and the Coleman Mutual Life Insurance Association, of Coleman, Texas.
“The Coleman Mutual Life Insurance Association assumed the liability of the Winters policy holders as a group, and the group will be known as ’Winters Group’.
“The Coleman Mutual Life Insurance Association thus assumes liability on any and all Winters policies now in force held by you, which is in accordance with the reinsurance agreement entered into by and between the two companies (April 25, 1939) and approved by the Insurance Department of the State of Texas (April 27, 1939).
“File this letter with your policy for your receipt of assumption. Yours very truly”, etc. (Italics and parenthetical expressions ours.)

Looking to said insurance agreement (of April 25th) for the measure of defendant’s liability, if any, under the policy, we find the following stipulations therein:

“Said Coleman Mutual agrees in consideration of said assignment and transfer that it does hereby take over all said members and policy and certificate holders of said Winters Mutual and agrees to become liable for the policies and contracts with said members of said Winters Mutual in the following manner and to the following extent, to wit: That is that said Coleman Mutual will pay all liabilities now existing or hereafter accruing in favor of said policy holders in said Winters Mutual in full so far as the same can be paid out of the assets of said Winters Mutual and the premiums collected by said Coleman Mutual from policy holders of said Winters Mutual; and that said Coleman Mutual will carry and retain said policy holders in said Winters Mutual Group to be known as Winters Mutual Life Insurance Company Group.
“Provided further, however, that said Coleman Mutual shall have the right with the consent of any of the policy holders in said Winters Mutual to reissue such policy upon forms used by said Coleman Mutual, and in the event of such reissuance to take up and cancel existing policies so reissued, and thereafter and upon the issuance of such renewal policies the liability of said Coleman Mutual to such policy holders receiving such renewal certificates the policies shall be governed by such renewal certificates and by the Constitution and By-Laws and rules governing the Coleman Mutual and its liability to its policy holders.
“This assignment is upon the further understanding and agreement that as to all such policies not renewed or reissued premiums collected shall be construed as now fixed with respect to each of said policy holders in the Winters Mutual respectively, but as to such reissued policy the rate shall be governed by the rules and regulations of said Coleman Mutual.”

From the first paragraph of said insurance agreement just set out, it is obvious [323]

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.2d 321, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-mut-life-ins-assn-v-lasseter-texapp-1943.