Franklin Life Insurance v. Villeneuve

68 S.W. 203, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 128, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 245
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 68 S.W. 203 (Franklin Life Insurance v. Villeneuve) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin Life Insurance v. Villeneuve, 68 S.W. 203, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 128, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 245 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

*129 COLLARD, Associate Justice.

The statement of the nature and result of the suit in appellant’s brief is correct, and we adopt it as follows:

Appellee sued appellant to recover a balance with interest, claimed to be due upon a life insurance policy issued by it upon the life of her husband and payable to her as beneficiary. The balance was the difference between $5000, the face of the policy, and $3900, the amount appellant paid appellee in compromise of her claim under the policy. Appellee sought to set aside the compromise agreement on the alleged grounds (1) that she was fraudulently procured to make it; and (2) that the compromise was without consideration. She further prayed for the recovery of the statutory 12 per cent penalty and reasonable attorney’s fees. In a trial by jury she obtained judgment for the unpaid balance with interest and for penalty and attorney’s fees, amounting to $1581.86, and judgment was accordingly entered. Appellant made a motion for new trial, and took the other necessary steps for an appeal to this court.

Facts Proved.—We find the facts, briefly stated, as follows: That on the 29th day of March, 1898, the appellant issued the policy sued upon for the sum of $5000 on the life of Celestin Villeneuve, payable to his wife, Mrs. Sweetie Villeneuve, as beneficiary. He died May 12, 1899, and satisfactory proof was made thereof by the appellee and received by the appellant. As a part of the contract of assurance, the assured represented and stated, in effect, that he was a man of temperate habits, and that he had not applied for insurance upon his life in other companies and been rejected. These statements were warranted to be true, and in the event they were false it was agreed that the policy should become void. We find that the statement concerning the application for insurance in other companies was false, and but for the following provision contained in the policy this false statement would have rendered the entire policy void: “If the terms of this contract be complied with, it shall be incontestable after one year from its date.” The compromise settlement pleaded by appellant was made October 6, 1899, upon which occasion the appellee executed the following receipt and release: “Dated at Austin, Texas, October 6, 1899.—Eeceived of the Franklin Life Association, of Springfield, 111., four thousand dollars, in full of all claims under and to the within certificate of membership, Ho. 21,969, on the life of the late Celestin Villeneuve, and hereby surrender all my right, title and interest under and to the same, and releasing said association from all liability; also warranting and defending said payment against any and all claimants whatsoever. Mrs. Sweetie Villeneuve. [Seal.] ■Attest before W. W. Harris, H. Clausen.” The receipt states that she received the sum of $4000 from the appellant as settlement in full of the entire policy, but we find, as a matter of fact, that she only received the -sum of $3900. The compromise settlement was made and this receipt was executed by the appellee based upon the representations made by the agent of the company, who then and there had the power and *130 authority to represent the company in negotiating the settlement, to the effect that the entire policy was void, by reason of the fact that her deceased husband had made the false statements, as above set out, concerning his habits of temperance and not making an effort to procure a policy in other companies. At the time these representations were made the agent of appellant knew that the policy contained the incontestable clause, as above set out. He at the time was representing the company, and occupied towards the appellee no confidential or fiduciary relationship. The appellee, at the time the representatives were made and the settlement effected, relied upon these representations, and believed they were true, and had no actual knowledge that the policy contained the incontestable clause.

We also find that the home office of the insurance company is in the State of Illinois," and that there is a provision of the contract that makes the policy payable there, and that there is’no statute of that State, similar to ours, allowing the recovery of the penalty and attorney’s fees sued for by the appellee in this case. We further find, from statements contained in the application for .the policy and from indorsements on the policy, that it was issued to Celestin Villeneuve, a resident of Austin, Texas.

The same facts were in evidence on the first trial of the case, as far as above stated. The court below instructed the jury on the question of consideration for the settlement made by plaintiff and the company, whereby she accepted the amount paid her in satisfaction of her claim on the policy, “that the effect of the settlement does not depend alone upon the question as to whether or not the contention made by defendant’s agent that the policy was void was made by him in good faith in the belief that the contention was well founded, or presented a doubtful question. Hence the question as to whether or not there was any consideration for the settlement binding on the parties must depend upon the answer of the jury to the question: Did the plaintiff’s [evidently meaning defendant’s] agent in making said contention do so in good faith, believing that his contention was well founded, or presented a doubtful question, or did he make such contention in bad faith, knowing that such contention was not well founded F If the jury believe from the evidence that defendant’s agent urged said defense in good' faith, believing it to be a substantial defense, or a doubtful question, and thereby raised a dispute or controversy as to the liability of the company, then the settlement between plaintiff and defendant company of such controversy for a less amount than that which was actually owing was binding on the plaintiff, the settlement of such bona fide controversy, if it existed, being a sufficient consideration to support the contract to accept less than the full amount as a payment in full, and if the jury so find, they will return a verdict for defendant. On the other hand, if the jury do not believe from the evidence that said contention was made in good faith by defendant’s agent in the belief that it was well *131 founded or presented a doubtful question, but believe that it was simulated for the purpose of forcing a compromise or escaping liability for the entire amount due, when said agent did not believe said contention to be well founded or to present a doubtful question, then there was no consideration to support the agreement to settle for less than the full amount of the policy, and if the jury so find they will return a verdict for plaintiff for the unpaid part of said policy, with 12 per cent damages added thereto, in accordance with the statutes of this State, as a penalty, from the 6th day of October, 1899, until this time, and the further sum of $250 as attorney’s fees, which the parties have agreed in this case is a reasonable attorney’s fee for plaintiff to be allowed in case she recovers at all, making the total amount of your verdict for plaintiff the sum of $1585.86, if you shall render any verdict for plaintiff on the issue submitted to you herein.”

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W. 203, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 128, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-life-insurance-v-villeneuve-texapp-1902.