Equitable Life Assur. Soc. v. Worthman

67 F.2d 721, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4606
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 1933
Docket4925
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 67 F.2d 721 (Equitable Life Assur. Soc. v. Worthman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Equitable Life Assur. Soc. v. Worthman, 67 F.2d 721, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4606 (7th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

ALSCHULER, Circuit Judge.

Appellee, surviving widow of Harry L. Worthman, brought this suit as his beneficiary under a policy of group life insurance issued by appellant to the employer of deceased for the benefit of its employees. The question is whether the insurance ever became effective as to Worthman.

The plan was to issue a single policy to the employer upon the lives of all its employees who would signify their acceptance of the insurance and agree that the employer might deduct from their earnings periodical premium payments for a certain proportion of the premium, the employer assuming to pay the balance.

Under the policy, effective June 1, 1929, Worthman had been carrying $2,000 of life insurance, with provision for disability compensation and for conversion of the policy into some other form of insurance with appellant in ease his employment ceased. Only one policy was issued, which remained with the employer at its New York office.

Effective as of July 1, .1930, there was attached to the policy a rider dated June 10, 1930, under which all salaried and supervisory employees of the employer became eligible for extended insurance in amounts dependent upon the employee's salary and length of service. One of the conditions of this rider was that employees who on its effective date were not working full "time and for full pay should not be eligible' for the extended insurance until their return to work at full time and for full pay.

Worthman, an old employee, with a salary of $6,000, could thus, if otherwise eligible, have $6,000 of additional insurance. Under date of May 2,6, 1930, Worthman executed appellant’s form manifesting his election to take the extended insurance, and authorizing the employer to'deduct from his salary the stipulated monthly contributions toward his premium payments, and naming his wife (appellee) as beneficiary. Under date of June 17, 1930, there appears, .upon what purports to be a blank of appellant, a statement of the names of the employees who had accepted this extended insurance (which includes that of Worthman) and other information) certified by the employer and delivered to appellant:

Worthman kept,up his payments under the original coverage, and bn his death the amount of it ($2,000) was paid appellee. He also made the original and all maturing premium payments which became payable on the extended insurance from the time he accepted it until he died.

The defense is that, as to Worthman, this extended insurance never took effect, in that he became ill before the effective date (July 1, 1930) of the rider for the extended insurance, and that he was not employed full time from the time this illness began until his death on September 16, 1930. The jury found for appellee for .the amount of the extended insurance and interest, and judgment went accordingly.

The precise issue upon which the ease was tried is indicated by the special interrogatory which, at appellant’s request, the court submitted to the jury: “Was Harry L. Worth-man working full time and for full pay for his employer, the Northwestern Fuel Company, on July 1st, 1930, or at any time between July 1st, 1930, and the date of his death, September 16, 1930 ?”

Appellant’s brief also states the one contested issue to he: “Was the assured, Harry L. Worthman, 'working full time and for full pay’ for his employer ‘on July 1,-1930, or at any time between July 1, 1930, and 'the date of his death, September 18, 1930?”

As to the pay, there was no issue, Worth-man having been regularly paid his full salary up to his death. The jury answered the submitted interrogatory affirmatively, but appellant contends there is no evidence fairly tending to support the answer.

Had deceased been a daily wage worker, with regular duties to perform at particular' times and places, the question might be morn easy of solution. He was long the assistant superintendent of the Northwestern Fuel Company, a subsidiary of the Consolidation Coal Company of New York, with which the policy had been negotiated and to which it was delivered, • He had charge of the employer’s very extensive three coal docks at Sirperior, Wis., and Duluth, Minn., employing normally from 200 to 250 men. His duties were supervisory, not involving physical labor, and his usual headquarters were at an-office near one of the docks.

On April 12, 1930, Worthman went to the Mayo Clinic' at Rochester, Minn., where it was concluded that hife tonsils should he removed. ■ He returned to'his home at Superior, where this operation took place on April 24. He went to his office about April 30, and was there most of the time until May 22,' when *723 he again went to the Mayo Clinic for a hernia operation, returning to his home about June 23. He did not go to the office, but it was testified that at the urgenee of his superior he remained at his home, where he was up and about and was visited by various of the employees, with some of whom he took up the matter of the employer’s business. It was testified that his duties were such that no continuing regular time was necessary therefor, but that he was subject to call at any time, and that whatever was required of him he did during this interval of time. It was testified that the absence from his office was at a time of the year when the work at the coal docks was light, and supervisory employees quite occasionally took vacations, some going fishing. He was thus at his home until July 12, when he went with his wife to Solon Springs, a nearby resort, where he owned a summer cottage, remaining there about three weeks, and about August 12 went to a sanatorium where, about four weeks thereafter, he died of gastric carcinoma.

There appeared in evidence receipted drafts signed by Worthman for disability payments under the policy covering a period of thirteen weeks ending July 17,1930, wherein it was recited that he was under disability during that time. As to that his superior testified that part of that time he was away from his work, but that he was drawing his salary and was subject to call or consultation as needed. The superintendent testified that during part of that time Worthman was on leave of absence, and was on duty part of that time. While he said that Worthman was not working full time during that period, he did not say that at none of the time during that period was he a full-time employee; indeed, the fair inference from all his evidence is that at times Worthman’s service was the equivalent, for the time being, of full-time work.

It must be considered that, under the terms of the extended insurance, if on the date it became effective, July 1, Worthman was not working full time, it would become effective at any time thereafter when he did render what would amount to full-time service, even if only for a brief period, and that, once effective, it would so remain while the premiums were paid and the employment continued.

The superintendent also testified that during the period the employer constructed and put into operation a new 250,000-ton capacity coal dock at Milwaukee, and that Worthman, on account of his long experience with coal docks, was called on in advisory capacity respecting this new dock.

In the case of such an employee, what might reasonably be considered as full-time service depends largely upon the relations and transactions between employer and employee.

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Bluebook (online)
67 F.2d 721, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/equitable-life-assur-soc-v-worthman-ca7-1933.