Gibralter Colorado Life Co. v. Taylor

123 S.W.2d 318, 132 Tex. 328, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 216
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1939
DocketNo. 7218.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 318 (Gibralter Colorado Life Co. v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibralter Colorado Life Co. v. Taylor, 123 S.W.2d 318, 132 Tex. 328, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 216 (Tex. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge Harvey

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This suit was instituted by W. W. Taylor, the defendant in error, to recover the amount of a life insurance policy in which his son, Dewey Taylor, now deceased, was insured and the defendant in error, the father of Dewey, was named as the beneficiary. The suit was instituted against the Colorado Life Company but after the case was tried the name of the company was changed to “Gibralter Colorado Life Company.” The case was tried before a jury, upon special issues submitted to them; and upon the answers of the jury to said special issues the court rendered judgment for the defendant in error for the amount sued for. The Insurance Company appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals and that court affirmed the judgment of the trial court. 99 S. W. (2d) 1084. The Insurance Company has been granted the writ of error.

The policy in question was issued April 4, 1932. A premium installment, amounting to $50.36, was paid the date the policy issued, and the policy provided that a like amount be paid an *331 nually thereafter on April 4th. It also provided, in effect, that in case of default in any annual premium installment when due, and the default should continue for thirty-one days, the policy would lapse. The premium installment which fell due April 4, 1933, was not paid and on April 21st of that year the defendant in error wrote a letter to the Insurance Company asking for an extension of time for the payment of the past due premium. On April 28th T. M. Watlington, who was the Manager of the Renewal Department of the Insurance Company at Denver Colorado, where the home office of the Company was located replied by letter of that date, in which he enclosed a typewritten form of extension agreement and said that when the instrument was received back at the home office; duly signed by Dewey and Mr. Taylor, the time for payment of the past due premium installment would be extended as provided in the said instrument, upon the terms and conditions therein specified. Dewey and Mr. Taylor duly signed the instrument and mailed it to the home office of the Company and same was received there in due time, and the proposed extension agreement was duly effected as of date May 4, 1933. By the terms of said agreement the payment of the past due premium was extended to October 4, 1933, subject to the conditions hereinafter mentioned, among others not presently material. It was provided, in substance, that an extension fee of $2.00 was to be paid to the Company, at its home office, on the 4th day of each succeding month up to and including September 4, 1933. It was further provided, among other things, that in case any such extension fee was not paid when same fell due, twelve days of grace would be allowed, and if at the end of this grace period the extension fee still remained unpaid the extension agreement was to be of no further force or effect, and the policy would lapse. The extension fee which fell due June 4, 1933, was not paid when due or within twelve days thereafter. The extension agreement terminated and the policy lapsed on June 16, 1933. Dewey Taylor was shot and fatally wounded about ten o’clock on the morning of July 10, 1933, in the town of Wills Point, Van Zandt County, Texas, and his parents reached him about an hour afterwards. Dewey died about 8 o’clock that night. Among other special issues submitted to the jury, the trial court submitted the following special issue:

“Question No. 5: Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant company, its agents or representatives, in writing agreed that the plaintiff or the insured could have an extension to July 12th, 1933, within which to pay the *332 extension fee due and owing June 4, 1933?” The jury answered this special issue in the affirmative.

The Insurance Company contends, in effect, that there is no competent evidence of sufficient probative force to raise the fact issue submitted to the jury in the special issue set out above. The defendant in error contends that said fact issue was raised by testimony, hereinafter shown, respecting a certain letter which was received at the Taylor home on July 5, 1933, which letter has been destroyed. The Insurance Company denies writing said letter and disputes its genuineness. It appears that Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, the father and mother of Dewey Taylor, lived on their farm a few miles from the town of Elmo in Kaufman County. A rural mail route leading out of Elmo passed their home. On July 5, 1933, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, and Mrs. Taylor’s sister, Mrs. Clara Welsh, and Mr. R. E. Clemmons, a neighbor, worked in Mr. Taylor’s cotton field. Dewey Taylor’s two little children were staying at the home of his parents. Dewey was engaged in the business of hauling by truck and was away on a hauling trip. When' Mr. and Mrs. Taylor and Mrs. Welsh and Mr. Clemmons came from the cotton field to the Taylor home for lunch that day, a letter, addressed to Dewey, was found in Mr. Taylor’s rural mail box. The letter had been delivered by the rural mail carrier that day. Mr. Taylor opened the letter and read it. Each of the other three read it. After lunch all four returned to the cotton field. The letter was left lying on the table in the house. When Mr. and Mrs. Taylor returned from the field late that evening they found that the two little children, who had been left in the house by themselves, had cut up the letter in making paper dolls. That night in cleaning up the litter made by the children, Mrs. Taylor swept up the bits of paper and burnt them in the kitchen stove. All four of the witnesses mentioned above testified that the letter was written on a sheet of letter paper which bore the letterhead of the Colorado Life Company, and that the signature to the letter was in a handwriting which they could not read. Each of said witnesses was shown the letter, heretofore mentioned, which T. M. Watlington wrote on April 28th, in reply to Mr. Taylor’s letter of the 21st of that month, and which bears the handwritten signature of Watlington. All of them testified that the signature to said letter was the same as the signature to the letter which they had read at the Taylor home on July 5, 1933. They further testified that the letterhead of the last mentioned letter was the same as that of the other letter. The letterhead of the Watlington letter of April 28th was in printed words as follows: “J. M. Campbell, President.— *333 Colorado Life Company.— (An Old Line Life Insurance Company.) — Continental Oil Building, Denver, Colorado.” All four of said witnesses were permitted, over the objection of counsel for the Insurance Company, to testify that the disputed letter said in substance “We cannot let the policy take care of itself, but will extend to the 12th of July.” All of said witnesses testified that this was the substance of all that was said in the letter. Besides the testimony stated above, it further appears from the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, that prior to July 5, 1933, Mrs. Taylor, at the request of Mr. Taylor, wrote a letter to the Insurance Company, and signed his name thereto, and that same was at once mailed to the Insurance Company at Denver. This letter, omitting the signature, reads as follows:

“Elmo, Texas, R. 1, July 3rd.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 318, 132 Tex. 328, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibralter-colorado-life-co-v-taylor-tex-1939.