Garrett v. Pyramid Life Ins. Company

121 S.W.2d 898, 197 Ark. 193, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 28, 1938
Docket4-5267
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 S.W.2d 898 (Garrett v. Pyramid Life Ins. Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrett v. Pyramid Life Ins. Company, 121 S.W.2d 898, 197 Ark. 193, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 345 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Mrs. Lizzie Garrett, hereinafter referred to as appellant, brought suit on May 5, 1937, against the Pyramid Life Insurance Company, hereinafter referred to as appellee, to collect a policy of insurance issued by appellee, under date of September 30, 1935, on the life of Tome J. Garrett, her son, in which she was named as beneficiary. The insured was killed September 12, 1936.

In response to a motion to make the complaint more definite and certain, the court, on September 24, 1937, sustained a motion to require appellant to state the date of premium payments, to whom paid, and to set out the receipts for the payments made. On April 15, 1938, appellant stated, in answer to this order of the court, that a premium payment, amounting to $22.82, was made by the insured, Tome J. Garrett, on the.day of October, 1935, and that the payment was made to appellee’s general agent, Kenneth S. L. Cooke, and a receipt given therefor. Appellee filed an answer, alleging that only one premium payment had been made, that being a payment for á quarter of the year, and that the policy had lapsed on account of nonpayment of other required premiums.

Practically no attempt was made to prove a premium payment in the amount and manner alleged except by the testimony of Ben Cockerill. • This witness testified that the insured met Cooke, the agent, in' Hot Springs, and paid Cooke the premium and' took a receipt therefor. When asked, “Did the receipt say it was for balance on premium, for annual, semi-annual or quarterly?”, he answered, “Annual,” and that Cooke said “it was the annual premium for the year.”

This testimony was in conflict with all the other testimony previously offered by appellee upon the question of the payment of premium, the other testimony being to the effect that the payments made were all quarterly premiums. This contradiction was qualified by Cock-erill’s answer “Yes” to the following question: “I believe you said this receipt stated ‘the remaining part of the annual premium’?”.

When the first testimony was offered conflicting with the allegations of the response to the motion to make definite and certain, the following colloquy occurred between .the court and counsel for appellant: “Court: I know. We had this matter up in my office sometime ago. Mr. Talley, in your original complaint, there was no allegation as to the payment of this premium, and the court was of the opinion that the defendant should have some notice of what your contention was in that respect and granted defendant’s motion to make the complaint more definite and certain, by setting up when these payments were made. Now, you did that by way of an amendment and response to the motion. Now, let me see your response. You allege in here that the premium was paid by the insured, Tom G-axrett, in the amount of $22.80, and that the premium was paid sometime in October. Now, your proof would be confined to that allegation. Mr. Talley: At this time I want to amend the complaint to include that the premiums were paid in the month of October, 1935, as set out in the amended complaint, as well as of July 30, or in July or August, 1936. It is a universal rule that you can amend. Court: It might be if it was the first time the matter was called to the attention of the attorneys, but we spent considerable time in trying to get the issues in this case in such condition that both parties could be ready for trial today. Now, when yon come up and allege a different method of payment, then the defendant is not put upon notice. What is he expected to meet by way of proof 1”

However, tlie court permitted testimony to be offered that the premiums had 'been paid quarterly, and upon that issue the following testimony was heard.

Edward W. Garrett, a brother of the insured and a son of the beneficiary,’ testified that he knew that his mother paid two premiums. He did not recollect whether they were quarterly premiums, but it “ seemed to me like the first one was two dollars and something,” and he did not recollect the amount of the second payment, but he had seen four different receipts. He identified a receipt offered in evidence dated October 10, 1935, for $3. Another receipt was offered in evidence elated February 11,1936, for $2. And, when asked, “Did she (Mrs. Garrett) make any payments other than these, or was that the extent of her payments?” answered, “I don’t think she did.” He was further interrogated as follows: “Q. Did you state that later, other payments were made to Mr. Cook? A. Yes. Q. Where was that? A. I don’t exactly know, but I think it was made in the CC'C camp. Q. How do you know?- Were you there at the time? A. No. Q. Then you couldn’t testify to that? A. He came home with a receipt in his pocket. Q. Do you remember the dates on the receipts that you saw after these two — the dates of them? A. No. My mother took care of all that and I never paid much attention to it. Q. What was the amount of the receipts ? A. Those two? Q. No, the other one you saw; what was the amount of it? A. I think it was $6. Q. You stated one of these subsequent receipts was for $6. What were the others -for? You stated you saw two other receipts, didn’t you? A. No, Í just only saw one. Q. About when was the date you saw this last receipt that was paid; and for what period was that? A. The best I recollect, it was in July, but I am not sure about it. Q. Of what year? A. 1935. Q. You said 1935. This policy was issued in 1935. A. 1936, it was. Q. But you do know this: you know that premium was paid in July, 1936 — that $6 premium, do you not? A. Yes, I saw that; he had it in his pocket. ’ ’ When asked if he saw the date when the receipt was issued which he saw in July, the witness answered: “I don’t recollect just exactly.”

• The witness Cockerill, above referred to, identified the time when he saw the receipt which he mentioned as being during the time he and the deceased were working in the HOC camp in July, 1935. . In answer to repeated questions he was very definite that the time was in July, 1935, in fact, July 30, 1935. In a final attempt to have the witness place the date a year later, he was asked, on his redirect examination: “Q. Was it 1935 or 1936? Refresh your memory by something and give the date. A. It was 1935 when we were in camp. Q. You went into the 'COC camp in 1935? A. Yes.” The inquiry was not pursued further, and the witness was excused.

The widow of deceased testified that her husband paid as much as $5, and she didn’t know how much more. Her husband went to the courthouse to make the payment to the agent, and she went with him, but did not go in the courthouse and did not see the payment made, but her husband had a receipt for $5, which he placed in his pocketbook, and after his death she kept it with her things, and it was still in the pocketbook the last timé she saw it, but does not know where it now is, and she did not know who had signed the receipt and was not sure as to the amount receipted for.

The guardian of the insured’s children testified that he took charge of deceased’s effects and his papers, which were in a box, and “there was one receipt, I guess you would call it, for the money he had paid in, was all I know anything about.” He testified that the receipt he saw in the box ‘ ‘ was something similar to the receipt here. ”

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136 S.W.2d 175 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W.2d 898, 197 Ark. 193, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrett-v-pyramid-life-ins-company-ark-1938.