Ervin v. Mutual Life Insurance

53 Pa. D. & C.2d 82, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County
DecidedJune 29, 1971
Docketno. 3026 Equity Docket
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Pa. D. & C.2d 82 (Ervin v. Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ervin v. Mutual Life Insurance, 53 Pa. D. & C.2d 82, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

LIPSITT, J.,

In this proceeding in equity, Dr. Carl E. Ervin and Marjorie Read Ervin, his wife, ask the court to direct defendant, The Mutual life Insurance Company of New York (hereinafter called “Mony”), to cancel a certain insurance policy and refund premiums paid in connection therewith and to restore the status of another policy.

A factual background is necessary to understand the nature of the law suit. Plaintiff, Dr. Carl E. Ervin, owned a Mony insurance policy dated October 1,1925, in the face amount of $10,000. Under this policy, dividends were accumulated. Late in 1963, an agent for defendant company, Thomas Allison, met with Dr. Ervin. There is some dispute as to how this meeting was initiated and its intended purpose. Mr. Allison testified it was a service call. At the time, he said, the dividends were being used to buy additional insurance, and he wanted to discuss the possibility of increasing Dr. Ervin’s or his family’s insurance protection. Dr. Ervin testified he contacted the company because he desired to obtain paid-up additions to the amount of his insurance for Federal income tax reasons. According to Dr. Ervin, Mr. Allison said Mony procedures did not provide for the desired arrangement but suggested the same result could be reached if [84]*84another life insurance policy was purchased and the dividends , accumulating on the older policy as well as the dividends accruing on the new policy were used to pay the premiums. As a result of the discussions between Dr. Ervin and Mr. Allison, a second policy dated March 30, 1964, in the amount of $10,000 was purchased in the name of Marjorie Read Ervin insuring the life of her husband, Carl E. Ervin. Dr. Ervin was then 73 years old and fortunately has remained in good health. But because of his age, a large premium was necessary to maintain the policy in force. Sources other than accumulated dividends were required to pay the premiums. By borrowing on the policies, Dr. Ervin will eventually reduce the amount of the gross proceeds from the policies to a point where there is less for his estate and family than there would have been if he had retained only the original policy. The seeds of a legal action become apparent. Plaintiff's feel a bad bargain was made. They urge that the agent involved was in a position of trust and used the confidence reposed in him to secure an advantage and that Dr. Ervin was a victim of fraud and misrepresentations. Defendant argues that when the second policy was purchased, there was insurance protection in an amount in excess of $20,000 and contrary to the contentions of plaintiffs, defendant claims Dr. Ervin was not defrauded and, moreover, even after he was fully aware of the reality of the situation by his own testimony, the premiums were paid and the protection afforded by the new policy continued.

A hearing was held and arguments submitted on briefs. After due consideration of the pleadings, the testimony and the arguments, we make the following

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff, Marjorie Read Ervin, is the owner of Mutual life Insurance Company of New York policy [85]*85No. 8973129, dated March 30, 1964, and issued April 14, 1964, insuring the life of her husband plaintiff, Carl E. Ervin, in the amount of $10,000.

2. Plaintiff, Carl E. Ervin, a physician in the active practice of medicine with offices located in Harrisburg, Pa., is both the owner and insured of a Mony policy No. 3418486 dated October 1, 1925, in the face amount of $10,000.

3. Dr. Ervin’s 1925 policy provided for reinvestment of dividends to purchase paid-up insurance, and he received annual statements showing the cash value of accumulated dividends and the value of paid-up insurance he had purchased with accumulated dividends.

4. Dr. Ervin desired all dividends accumulated under his insurance policies to be used for additional paid-up life insurance.

5. In the latter part of 1963, Dr. Ervin met with the representatives of Mony, one of whom was defendant’s agent, Thomas Allison.

6. In 1963, Dr. Ervin, under his 1925 policy, owned additional paid-up insurance in the amount of $2,449 purchased from accumulated dividends.

7. At the initial meeting between Dr. Ervin and Mr. Allison, an additional insurance policy in the amount of $5,000 was proposed.

8. Several weeks later, Dr. Ervin was advised by Agent Allison that the company would not approve a $5,000 policy but would issue a $10,000 policy if Dr. Ervin could pass a physical examination.

9. Prior to taking the physical, Dr. Ervin was presented with a chart analyzing the amount that Dr. Ervin would be required to pay for premiums on the new policy over and beyond the amount that he would have available in new or accumulated dividends, and the chart showed the annual premium of $1,234 would be covered by dividends only during the first year of [86]*86the policy and thereafter he would have to raise various amounts to cover the premium after deducting dividends.

10. Dr. Ervin passed the required physical examination and at the time the policy was delivered he was also given a revised schedule of payments which subsequently served as the basis for payments by Dr. Ervin and which also showed amounts that would be needed to pay for the premiums each year. This statement was delivered by Agent Allison personally and reviewed with Dr. Ervin.

11. The annual amount of the premium also appeared on the policy as delivered.

12. Although the forms or charts presented to Dr. Ervin were not completely clear and contained some language not readily understood by a layman, including on the first form presented a profit column, a designation not usually associated with insurance, it is discernible that the use of the cash value of dividend additions on the 1925 policy and future dividends from both policies were contemplated to aid in the financing of the premiums on the new policy.

13. Mr. Allison recommended to Dr. Ervin aprogram whereby the premium on the new policy was financed by surrender of paid-up additions, dividends on both policies and loans on both policies. He personally delivered to Dr. Ervin the necessary surrender and loan forms in 1965 and 1966.

14. Dr. Ervin contacted Mr. Allison to make arrangements for obtaining funds to pay the premiums needed and was supplied with forms he signed for this purpose.

15. Marjorie Read Ervin joined with her husband, Dr. Ervin, in signing a loan agreement to pay for premiums on the new policy, said loan form being dated June 3,1966.

[87]*8716. Mr. Allison never advised Dr. Ervin that the funding method being used to pay the premiums on the new policy would, after a period of years, reduce the combined death benefits of the two policies below the benefits receivable under the old policy.

17. Dr. Ervin paid the premiums and signed the loan forms for four years without expressing dissatisfaction under the arrangement.

18. All premiums have been paid on the new policy.

DISCUSSION

The first contention advanced by plaintiffs is that Mr. Allison was an insurance counselor and, as such, a confidential relationship existed between him and Dr. Ervin.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Pa. D. & C.2d 82, 1971 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ervin-v-mutual-life-insurance-pactcompldauphi-1971.