Eclectic Life Insurance v. Fahrenkrug

68 Ill. 463
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 68 Ill. 463 (Eclectic Life Insurance v. Fahrenkrug) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eclectic Life Insurance v. Fahrenkrug, 68 Ill. 463 (Ill. 1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

A reversal of the judgment of the court below is asked on two grounds: First, that the policy was caused to be issued by means of the fraudulent representations of the assured, in reference to the health of Fahrenkrug, upon whose life the insurance was effected; second, that the policy was forfeited for the non-payment of premium.

We think the evidence fails to show any false representations in relation to Fahrenkrug’s health. It is, on the contrary, proved that he was in good health at and previous to the time when the policy was issued. The mere fact that he was, shortly after, stricken with the disease which ultimately caused his death, does not disprove the evidence of previous good health. The circumstance might, in connection with other evidence tending to show that the disease existed when the policy was applied for, be material; but, standing as it does, in the present case, unsupported by such evidence, it is insufficient to raise even a presumption of fraud. Cases are constantly occurring where those in perfect health on one day are, on the next day, stricken by fatal disease. We can not assume that the existence of disease -after a policy is issued upon the life of a person, however short may be the time, is, of itself, satisfactory proof of fraud in the assured. It may or may not, depending upon other facts in the case, be a circumstance tending to prove fraud.

The defendant is a non-resident corporation, having a general office in Chicago, which, when the facts transpired that are involved in the present suit, was under the control of one Johnson, whose official designation by the defendant was that of “manager.” We are not informed as to the precise extent of his powers or scope of his duties. He was, however, regarded as a general agent, and had in his employ a clerk and a book-keeper. The office was indicated to the public by a sign, on which were, in conspicuous golden letters, the words, “'Eclectic Life Insurance Company, August Johnson, Manager.” One Stiller was authorized by Johnson to solicit applications for policies, to deliver the policies, when issued, on applications made through him, and collect the amount of premium named in the policies; and for such services he was to receive a commission of 40 per cent on the amount collected.

Application for the policy now in controversy was made through Stiller, and when it was issued he delivered it and collected the premium then due—§25.49. This was in the early part of May, and the next premium was, by the terms of the policy, due on the 17th of the following July. Some two days after the policy was delivered, Stiller again applied to the assured, and requested her to then pay him the premium due on the 17th of July, recommending that it should be done, and assigning as a reason that if her husband should die, and this premium not be paid, she would get nothing on her policy. She borrowed the money from a cousin of her’s, and then paid Stiller the amount of the premium due on the 17th of July, $25.49, and obtained from him, as agent of the defendant, a receipt, embracing both payments. A few days after this, one Tiedmann, acting for the assured, went to the office of the defendant, in Chicago, taking with him the policy and Stiller’s receipt, and asked that the July payment be refunded to the assured, because it was not then due. A clerk engaged behind a desk in the office, after looking over the papers, informed Tiedmann that he would have to wait until Johnson returned, who, he said, was then at Detroit, but would return in three or four days. At the expiration of the time designated for Johnson’s return, Tiedmann again repaired to the office, for the purpose of having the July payment refunded. He was then informed by the clerk with whom he had previously conversed that Johnson had not yet returned, but that the money could not be refunded ) that the assured had elected to make the payment, and that it was “all right.”

Johnson denies that the July payment was made to the defendant, and says that the policy was forfeited because of its non-payment. The clerk in the office at the time Tiedmann called, in some respects contradicts Tiedmann’s version, but he admits he told Tiedmann that Stiller had authority to collect. We are inclined to think Tiedmann’s version is entitled to most respect. He is, to all appearances, disinterested, and his evidence is unequivocal, and to matters which there is every reason to suppose he would accurately remember.

The court instructed the jury, with reference to this evidence, as follows:

“The jury are instructed by the court, that if they find, from the evidence, that one Stiller was employed by the defendant to deliver the policy in question, and to receive a half year premium .thereon, and that said policy was delivered by him in May, 1871, and a half year premium thereon then received by him, and that thereafter, during the same month, the said Stiller represented himself to the plaintiff or to her husband as having authority from the defendant to receive the premium from the plaintiff for the second half year, making up a full year’s premium, and that, relying upon such representations, the plaintiff or her husband caused such payment to be made for a full year, and took from the said Stiller the receipt therefor offered in evidence by the plaintiff; and if the jury further find, from the evidence, that afterwards and during the same month the witness, Tiedmann, acting on behalf of the plaintiff, called at the office of the defendant in Chicago, and exhibited this policy and the receipt of Stiller, aforesaid, to a clerk of the company, then in charge of the office, and inquired of him in regard to second payment and receipt, and was then and there informed by such person in charge that it was all right, or words to that effect, then the jury are justified in finding, from this fact, that the plaintiff had a right to rely on the sufficiency of such payment, and to find that the same was binding upon the defendant, unless this jury also find, from the evidence, that the defendant afterwards, within a reasonable time, repudiated such payment to and receipt by said Stiller, and informed the plaintiff of such repudiation.”

It is insisted that this instruction is erroneous; that, by the terms of the policy, the agents are prohibited from altering or discharging contracts, or waiving forfeitures.

This objection we do not deem tenable. The question in cases of this kind is not what power did the agent in fact possess, but what power did the company hold him out to the public as possessing. F. and M. Ins. Co. v. Chestnut et al. 50 Ill. 118; The N. E. F. and M. Ins. Co. v. Schettler, 18 id. 170; Ætna Ins. Co. v. Maguire, 51 Ill. 342. It is immaterial what may have been said in the policy in regard to the payment of the premium. It was within the power of the company, acting through its agents, to change entirely the mode of or dispense with the payments, as provided" by the policy, and adopt a different mode and time of payment. It was said by Comstock, J., in The Trustees of First Baptist Church v. The B. F. Ins. Co. 19 N. Y. 305 : “A provision in a policy already executed and delivered, so as to bind the company, declaratory of a condition that premiums must be paid in advance, manifestly has no effect, except to impart convenient information to persons who may wish to be insured.

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Bluebook (online)
68 Ill. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eclectic-life-insurance-v-fahrenkrug-ill-1873.