Esber v. New York Life Ins.

25 Ohio Law. Abs. 318
CourtStark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 15, 1937
DocketNo 73072
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 318 (Esber v. New York Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Stark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Esber v. New York Life Ins., 25 Ohio Law. Abs. 318 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By SWEITZER, J.

1. This case is before the court on plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, and on plaintiff’s demurrer to the second amended cross petition. Questions similar to, if not identical with those now presented arose earlier in the case. Further study of §§9387, 9388 and 9389 GC, in connection with this motion and demurrer clarifies the mind of the* court some with reference to apparent inconsistencies between different provisions of the statutes. No attempt will be made to harmonize the conclusion now reached with reference to the answer of the New York Life Insurance Company to plaintiff’s petition with an earlier conclusion announced, as they are recognized by the court- to be inconsistent. The difficulty encountered earlier in this particular probably arose from giving too much attention to judicial construction of the insurance statutes in cases where the facts differ from those presented here and in permitting such construction to obscure the language of the statutes l-hemselves, in relation to the questions here presented.

2. These three statutes arise out of a legislative act appearing in 74 Ohio Laws at page 181, the purpose of the enactment of which is announced to be “For the better protection of policy holders in life insurance companies.” The act should, of course, be construed in the light of its announced purpose, but in determining the extent of the “better protection” the Legislature intended to provide policy bolders, the language of the statutes affords our only guide. Any possible construction placed on said statutes, in truth, does afford policy holders better protection than they had prior to the passage of the act. The original act is found helpful in construing the statutes in their present form. It is plain that §§9387 and 9388 GC relate [319]*319to policies issued prior to the passage of the act May 5, 1877; and that §9389 GC relates to policies issued since that date. §§1 and 2 of the original act relate to policies issued before May 5, 1877; and S3 of that act relates to policies issued since said -.¡ate. §1 of the act provides that life insurance companies shall furnish copies of certain papers, on application of policy holders. ?2 provides that failure to comply with such application for thirty days bars the issuing company from setting up as a defense, certain matter otherwise available as such. To this point the meaning of the act seems clear.

3. Section 3 of the original act now appears as §9389, GC. Originally it consisted of a single sentence. In its present form, it consists of three separate sentences The second sentence injects into §9389 GO a featuie not found in §9388 GC. Sentences 1 and 3 of §9389 GC seem to correspond roughly with the provisions of §§9387 and S388 GC, except that the later section, §9389 GC. relates to policies issued since the original act was passed, and the earlier ones, §§9387 and 9388 GC, to policies issued before the act was passed.

4. The Ohio statutes on the subject under consideration seem to be of broader scope than those of other states, examined. Ordinarily statutes of the sort seem to relate, only, to original applications impolicies, and do not comprehend “each application or other document,” as do the Ohio statutes. In this particular, the Ohio act protects policy holders in accordance with the announced purpose of the act, carrying that protection beyond the limits provided generally by statutes of other states.

5. Sec 9389 GC must be construed, if possible, to give effect to each of the three sentences composing it. The meaning of the first sentence seems clear and piain. It in no wise conflicts seriously with either the second or the third sentence. This first sentence seems to establish a rule of conduct for life insurance companies in certain particulars, but in no way penalizes a company issuing a policy, for failure to conform to this established rule of conduct. That subject, penalty for failure to comply with said established rule of conduct, seems to be covered by the second and third sentences of the section. It must be assumed the legislature had a purpose in inserting in the section each the second and third sentences thereof. Can reasonable meaning be attached to each the second and third sentences, without doing violence to the section as a whole, olio the announced purpose of the act? The language of the third sentence seems clear and plain. It seems to provide a permanent bar against the use by the insurer of certain documents under certain circumstances.

G. Coming to the second ■ sentence, “A company which neglects so to do, so long as it is in default for such copy, shall be es-topped from denying the truth of any such application or original document.” The original act uses this language, “and any life insurance company neglecting so to do, shall as long as it is in default for such. copy or copies aforesaid, be estopped from denying the truth, etc.”

7. Can this second sentence be given reasonable meaning without rendering the first and third sentences of the section meaningless or inconsistent? The first sentence providing the rule of conduct with reference to furnishing the policy holder the copy of the instrument in question, as observed, provides that the copy be returned “to any person taking such policy.” Not to the personal representative or the heirs of the taker of the policy, or to the named beneficiaries, but to any person taking the policy.

8. In the case under consideration, the insurer contends it returned the copy of the application for reinstatement to the taker of the policy, Namer Esher, bur in that connection, concedes the return was not made for 9 or 10 months after the policy was re-instated on December 1, 1934. The first sentence of the section uses this language: “Shall return with, and as part of any policy issued by it, to any person taking such policy, etc.” The plaintiff concedes the policy in question has been in his possession ever since it was first issued to him. Thus the insurer was precluded from returning a copy of the application for reinstatement “with” the policy. However, it could have returned it “as part of” the policy on or about December 1, 1934.

9. Does this delay in returning the copy to the holder of the policy, which the insurer claims it has cured by said belated return, taking into consideration sentence 2 of the section, preclude the insurer from setting up the untruth of the application for re-instatement in its said answer and its said cross petition, the plaintiff conceding tha't demand for return of the copy in question was at no time made by him?

[320]*32010. No case from any foreign jurisdiction affording assistance in the matter here presented has been found, accounted for in part, no doubt, by the fact that statutes of this nature in other states relate to original applications, only. No reported Ohio case determining the precise questions here raised, has been called to the court’s attention by counsel or has been found by the court. However, m two reported Ohio cases are found suggestions oii the subject. In Dickmeier v Prudential Insurance Company, 4 O.N.P. 13, decided about 1897. in Judge Wilson’s opinion are these sentences: “That the copies referred to in §3621 GC must be delivered to the insured in his lifetime, the object being to enable him to examirie them, and if mistakes are found, to have them corrected. That the object of this section would be defeated by allowing the company to deliver copies after the death of the insured.

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Related

State v. Miles
69 N.E.2d 39 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1943)
McReynolds v. Washington National Ins
27 Ohio Law. Abs. 316 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Ohio Law. Abs. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esber-v-new-york-life-ins-ohctcomplstark-1937.