Eames v. New York Life Insurance

114 S.W. 85, 134 Mo. App. 331, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 648
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 85 (Eames v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eames v. New York Life Insurance, 114 S.W. 85, 134 Mo. App. 331, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 648 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

A policy of insurance was issued December 19, 1894, on the life of Charles B. Eames, respondent’s husband, and payable to her at bis death. The amount of insurance was one thousand dollars written for an annual premium of $53.60, falling due December 7th of each year. The insured died December 17, 1905, and this action was instituted to recover the insurance money. Only one issue of fact was joined in the case, i. e., whether the premium which fell due December 7, 1897, was paid when it matured. If it was, it is conceded the policy was in force as extended insurance when Mr. Eames died. If it was not, then the policy had lapsed for non-payment prior to the death of the insured and respondent would not be entitled to recover. It is contended for appellant the evidence adduced to prove payment of the premium was insufficient, and respondent should have been nonsuited; and it is also contended the court erred in ruling on the evidence offered, pro and.con, on the issue. The first evidence introduced on the issue by respondent was the following letter written by the deceased to the vice-president of appellant company, under date of January 16, 1899:

“January 16, 1899.
“George W. Perkins, Esq.,
“Vice-President New York Life Insurance Company, New York City.
“Dear Sir: — Your letter of December 6th was duly received and in reply would advise that I have concluded to discontinue payments under my policies numbers 652098 and 698308 in the New York Life Ins. Co., [334]*334and will allow them to continue in force for their full amounts as provided in the policies. I understand that policy number 652098 will continue in force for one thousand dollars to November 7, 1908; and policy number 698308 will continue in force for two thousand dollars until November 21st, 1901.”

It was admitted the paper offered was a carbon copy of the signed original which had been sent by the deceased to Vice-president Perkins, but appellant excepted to its admission for the reason it had no tendency to prove the premium in dispute was paid. Over the exception of appellant the following letter was admitted, written by A. E. Thompson, acting cashier for appellant company in St. Louis, under date of February 1, 1899, and purporting to be in response to the first letter:

“Feb: 1, 1899.
“Mr. Charles B. Eames,
“Odd Fellows’ Building, City.
“Dear Sir: — Your letter of the 16th inst. relative to policies number 652098 and 698308 was received by this Company direct. Policy 652098 was issued December, 1894, and 698308 was issued in October, 1898, respectively. If the policies are not returned for indorsement of full paid up value of reduced amount within the time stipulated, they will be automatically carried as term extended insurance for one thousand dollars for nine years and eleven months from December 7th, 1898, in the case of policy, 652098, and for two thousand dollars for three years and one month from October 1st, 1898, in case of policy 698308. It will be necessary to return the policies if you desire them indorsed for extended insurance or paid up insurance. Please advise me on receipt by letter, and oblige,
“Yours truly,
“A. E. Thompson,
“Acting Cashier.”

[335]*335One instruction requested by appellant- and refused was, that Thompson, the acting cashier of the St. Louis office, whose letter of February 1, 1899, to the insured, was read in evidence, had no power to waive payment of the premium due December, 1897, or to set aside a default or lapse for non-payment, and said letter should be considered only as bearing on the question of whether the premium was paid on December 20, 1897.

1. Appellant has not briefed its exception to the admission of the letter written by deceased to its vice-president but insists on the exception to admitting the letter in response, written by Thompson as acting cashier and sent from the St. Louis office. The objection to this letter is twofold: first, that the statement of an agent unless made Avhile acting within the scope of his agency will not bind his principal as an admission; and, second, the policy in suit expressly declared in one paragraph that no agent had power to make or modify the contract of insurance, extend the time for paying premiums, waive a forfeiture, “or bind the company by making any promises, or making or receiving any representations or information.” Said paragraph of the policy contains this further clause: “These powers can be exercised only by the president, vice-president, second vice-president, actuary or secretary of the company, and will not be delegated.” The letter written by Mr. Eames to the vice-president, shows previous communications between those persons had led the former to decide to discontinue payment on his two policies, including the one in suit (No. 652098), and that he did so with the understanding said policy would continue in force for $1,000 to November 7, 1908. This letter called for an answer by appellant’s vice-president; or at any rate an answer was given; not by the vice-president in person, but through Thompson, the cashier in St. Louis, clearly acting pursuant to authority delegated by the vice-president. In the answer [336]*336Thompson said if the policy was not returned for in-dorsement of the full paid up value of reduced amount, within the time stipulated, it would be automatically carried as extended insurance for nine years and eleven months from December 7, 1898, a period which included December 17, 1905, when Mr. Eames died. We have seen the policy permitted certain officers, among whom were vice-presidents, to waive defaults and forfeitures and to bind the company by representations and information, but declared the power would not be delegated. In this instance power to impart information to the insured was delegated to the acting cashier in St. Louis; and hence said official was acting within the scope of his agency, and also within the terms of the policy, when he wrote the answer to Mr. Eames’ letter. It follows said answer was competent evidence though not necessarily as an admission binding the company provided it tended to prove payment of the premium in question, which, if paid, extended the insurance beyond the date of Mr. Eames’ death. Its tendency to prove this fact is apparent; for it stated the policy would be Carried automatically as extended insurance for nine years and eleven months from December 7, 1898, which the company was not bound to do unless said premium had been paid prior to the date of the letter (Feb. 1, 1899), and would not have been promised by Thompson unless he believed it had been paid. But it is said Thompson merely took the payment for granted because of the tenor of Mr. Eames’ letter to the vice-president. This might be argued to a jury, but it was a fair inference that, as Perkins had referred Eames’ letter to Thompson to answer, he had also furnished Thompson with information needed to answer it correctly; especially as appellant undertook to prove by its cancellation clerk in the comptroller’s department of the home office in New York, that the only data in the company’s possession from which to ascertain whether or not the [337]*337premium had been paid, was at the New York office. We hold there was no error in admitting Thompson’s letter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 85, 134 Mo. App. 331, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eames-v-new-york-life-insurance-moctapp-1908.