Depositors Trust Co. v. Farm Family Life Insurance Co.

445 A.2d 1014, 1982 Me. LEXIS 687
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 3, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 445 A.2d 1014 (Depositors Trust Co. v. Farm Family Life Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Depositors Trust Co. v. Farm Family Life Insurance Co., 445 A.2d 1014, 1982 Me. LEXIS 687 (Me. 1982).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

In Superior Court (Kennebec County) plaintiff Depositors Trust Company won a general jury verdict for $100,000 against defendant on a life insurance policy. The Superior Court denied plaintiff’s motion for penalty interest and attorney fees under 24-A M.R.S.A. § 2436 (Supp.1981), and plaintiff appeals. Defendant cross appeals, seeking to have the judgment set aside on various grounds of error. We deny both the appeal and the cross-appeal, and affirm the judgment in all respects.

Prior to his death in an automobile accident on November 2,1977, Brainard E. Cav-erly III owned and operated a dairy farm in Clinton in partnership with his brothers Frank and Edgar. In July, 1976, the three brothers entered into a buy-sell agreement whereby the life of each would be insured, with the insurance proceeds to be applied for the purchase by the survivors of the decedent’s share of the farm. In event of the death of one brother, Depositors Trust, *1016 the named beneficiary on the life insurance policies, would collect and distribute the proceeds of the insurance on his life in order to carry out the terms of the buy-sell agreement. The insurance policies were obtained from defendant Farm Family Life Insurance Company (“FFLIC”). Each policy contained a standard provision governing reinstatement in the event that the policy should lapse for nonpayment of premiums, stipulating that the policy would be reinstated within five years if the insured submitted a written application for reinstatement, produced evidence of insurability satisfactory to the insurer, and paid all overdue premiums. 1

Brainard’s policy lapsed after the quarterly premium was not paid when due on July 21, 1977. Thomas Foster, the FFLIC agent who had sold the Caverlys their policies, visited the Caverly farm on October 3, 1977, to tell them that Brainard’s policy had lapsed. The insurance agent filled out a reinstatement application, which Brainard signed, and collected a check for the unpaid premium. Foster did not tell Brainard that another physical examination would be required, but he later testified that he did tell him that the reinstatement application was “conditional.” According to Thomas Arn-stein, an FFLIC official who testified at trial, the information on the reinstatement application showed no increase in risk for purposes of Brainard’s insurability.

FFLIC began processing the renewal application. Had the policy been in force, another premium would have come due on October 21. A premium notice would have been sent in advance of that due date, and overdue notices would have been sent had the due date passed without payment. No such notices were sent; FFLIC made no attempt to collect the premium because its officers had not decided whether to reinstate the policy.

On Friday, October 28, Foster went to the farm again and told Brainard that he would have to take a physical examination. On the following Monday, October 31, by Foster’s prearrangement, Brainard was examined by a nurse working for a concern that made a business of performing physical examinations for insurance companies. She filled out a FFLIC examination form that was subsequently admitted in evidence.

Only two days later, Brainard was killed in an automobile accident. As of that time the FFLIC home office had not yet received the report of the physical examination, and FFLIC took the position that the policy was not in force at the time of Brainard’s death. About a week later, Foster and an FFLIC regional representative, Roger Ennis, went to the Caverly farm and orally denied coverage to the surviving brothers.

Depositors Trust, the named beneficiary, sued both FFLIC and Foster. At trial, the court granted a directed verdict for Foster but denied a directed verdict for FFLIC. The court also denied plaintiff’s motion to proceed against FFLIC for statutory interest and attorney fees. Both plaintiff and defendant have taken timely appeals. Plaintiff has not appealed the judgment for defendant Foster.

*1017 I. The appeal: interest and attorney tees.

Under 24-A M.R.S.A. § 2436 an insurer may be required to pay penalty interest and attorney fees if it fails to pay an undisputed claim within a prescribed time. 2 The Superior Court, in ruling that the statute was inapplicable, relied on Burne v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., Me., 403 A.2d 775 (1979), in which this court held that section 2436 did not apply to life insurance policies. Burne construed an earlier version of section 2436 that by its terms governed “[cjlaims made by a named or other person insured thereunder for payment of benefits under a policy of insurance against loss.” 3 We held that the quoted language excluded life insurance from the coverage of the statute because a life insur-anee policy is collected upon only when the insured is dead and cannot himself make any claim. Plaintiff argues that because the language found critical in Burne has been amended to read “[a] claim for payment of benefits under a policy of insurance against loss,” without limiting the identity of the person by whom the claim is made, the statute must now be construed to cover all kinds of insurance, including life insurance.

We disagree. Initially we point out that, whatever the motivation behind the change in the statutory language, it was not u reaction to our decision in Burne. Section 2436 was enacted in its present form in 1977, while Burne, which interpreted the original version of section 2436, was not decided until 1979.

*1018 The Burne decision depended in part upon a Statement of Fact attached to the 1973 bill that became 24-A M.R.S.A. § 2436 in its original form. That Statement of Fact, supplied by the Committee on Business Regulation, stated that “[t]he purpose of the new draft is to limit the bill to claims for first-party coverage.” See 403 A.2d at 778. The Statement of Fact attached to the 1977 bill that became the present section 2436, L.D. 1247, 108th Me.Legis., 1st Reg.Sess. (1977), gives no indication that the legislature intended to change that basic limitation, which excludes life insurance. The 1977 Statement of Fact reads in its entirety: “This bill clarifies the requirements regarding timely payment of insurance claims.”

There are also internal indications that no extension of section 2436 to cover life insurance was intended. Even though the 1977 amendment eliminated the language, “[c]laims made by a named or other person insured,” that we found critical in the Burne case, that amendment introduced other limiting language in the same first sentence that has a comparable consequence in construing the statute: the 30-day payment period starts to run only after “ascertainment of the loss is made either by written agreement between the insurer and the insured or by filing with the insured of an award by arbitrators .... ” (Emphasis added) The reasoning of

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Bluebook (online)
445 A.2d 1014, 1982 Me. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/depositors-trust-co-v-farm-family-life-insurance-co-me-1982.