Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance v. Rudolph

45 Tex. 454
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 45 Tex. 454 (Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance v. Rudolph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance v. Rudolph, 45 Tex. 454 (Tex. 1876).

Opinion

Gould, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought on an alleged contract of defendants to insure the life of White M. Richards, for the benefit of plaintiffs, his wife and children. The petition, as amended, alleges and exhibits the application of Richards of date November 11, 1870, the payment of the premium to the company’s agent, setting out the receipt therefor, in which it is provided that the “insurance takes effect from the date thereof, provided the application therefor be approved and accepted by said company; ” that the contract was-completed by the acceptance of the application by the company, but that afterwards, hearing of the death of Richards, they refused to deliver the policy.

The petition was excepted to on the ground that the general averment of the acceptance of the application, without specifying the particular acts or facts relied on as constituting such acceptance, is insufficient. Counsel have adduced no authority in support of the exception ; and, on principle, we think the averment sufficient.

The defense relied ón, consisted in the denial of the acceptance of the application and in the alleged false statement of Richards in his application, and in response to a question which he was required to answer, that he was not and had not been addicted to the use of stimulants to excess, but was temperate. The jury found a verdict for plaintiffs, and the principal question in the case is the sufficiency of the evidence of the acceptance of the application.

The application was made by Richards at the solicitation of Garter and Bristol, agents of the company, acting under Hopkins and Graham, general agents at Leavenworth, Kansas. [458]*458The answers to the usual questions were written by Bristol, and the question, Has any company ever declined to grant insurance on your life ? was answered in the negative. The signature of the applicant was not written uniformly in places where his full signature was required, being in one place White McLennan Richards, in another White McLelland Richards. On'the 11th of ¡November, 1870, the application was completed and the following receipt executed, the premium having been arranged to the satisfaction of the agent:

“ General Agency of Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
Sherman, Texas, 1870.
“Received the sum of one hundred and nineteen dollars and eighty-five cents on account of premium on an insurance of five thousand dollars on the life of WTiite M. Richards, of Whitesboro, county of Grayson, and State of Texas, for which an application, dated the 11th day of ¡¡November, 1870, has been made to the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company of Hartford. Said insurance takes effect from the date hereof, provided the application therefor be approved and accepted by said company. The policy, if issued, to be delivered by me, when received, to the applicant on the return of the receipt to me. It is expressly understood that if the application for the above insurance be declined by said company, it shall then he held that no insurance has ever been created under this receipt, and the amount paid hereon shall be repaid to the applicant on the return of his receipt to me. Dated at Whitesboro, Texas, this 11th day of November, A. D. 1870.
“ (Signed) . J. Q. A. Carter,
General Agent, Sherman, Texas,
for North Texas and Indian Territory.

The application was forwarded first to Hopkins & Graham, and by them to the office of the company, at Hartford, Connecticut, where it was received on ¡¡November 22, 1870. On ¡¡November 28 the application was returned, through Hopkins [459]*459& Graham, with this memorandum attached: “ This man spells Ms middle name in two very distinct ways, making two different names in signature to application and medical examiner’s" certificate. What does he give as a reason? Let him give his own statement.”

When thus returned, certain blanks in the application, which agents were proMbited from filling, and which in the regular course of business would only be filled at the home office, were filled as follows: “No. 108,501; age, 30 years; amount, $5,000; annual prem., $119TsT5n; policy date, Nov. 22, 1870.”

Before the application with these indorsements and the attached memorandum reached Carter, indeed, before it was started back, Richards was dead. The evidence is that he was wounded in a personal rencontre, and wlfilst in a state of intoxication on or about Hovember 23, and died of his wounds in two or three days thereafter. The papers appear to have been returned by Carter with information of the death of Richards, and he appears, from the following answer returned to Mm, to have made some claim that the company was bound:

“Hartford, December 28, 1870.
“Mr. J. Q. A. Carter, Sherman, Texas:
“ Dear Sir : In returning the application of WMte M. Richards, you assume that policy was issued. In tMs you are mistaken. Ho policy was written. The final decision in tMs case was reserved for after consideration. The application was rejected. Tours, respectfully,
“W. J. Olmstead, Secretary.”

In a subsequent letter, after stating that the application had been returned for amendment as to the different names of the applicant, and explaining that the numbering of the policy was a common' practice, the agent, is directed to tender Mrs. Richards the premium, “ wMch we understand was paid in advance.” The agent Carter testifies that tMs premium [460]*460was included in a remittance made by him to Hopkins and Graham. There is no evidence that he ever proffered back the premium, though it appears that he had funds of the company in his hands when this suit was brought, nor is there any evidence that any one in behalf of plaintiffs ever proffered to give up the receipt on return of the premium. The instructions of the company to its agents were ¡out in evidence by plaintiffs, and amongst other things contain the following:

“ 2d. Issue of policy. If the application when received at the home office be recommended by the company’s medical examiner, and be otherwise acceptable to the officers, a policy will be forthwith issued and sent to the agent for delivery, upon payment of the advance premium, a receipt for which will accompany the policy. * * * Applications which, when received at the home office, are found imperfect or requiring addition or correction in any respect, will be returned for completion to the agents transmitting them. Ho policy will in any case be issued before the application shall have been received at the home office fully completed.

“ 3d. In case of any application being declined the fact will be communicated to the agent from whom it was received.

“ 8th. Advance premium receipt. If an applicant desires to make a payment on account of premium at the time of making an application, the agent may give a receipt therefor in the following form, and no other, (except that forms already in use, approved by the company, may be used until the printed supply is exhausted,) and the fact and amount of such ¡3ayment are to be stated in the letter of transmittal accompanying the application.” (Here follows a form of receipt, being the same given by Carter to Richards.)

“ On the part of the defense, Jacob L.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Tex. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-mutual-life-insurance-v-rudolph-tex-1876.