Gilbert v. Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Ass'n

241 P.2d 768, 172 Kan. 586, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 8, 1952
Docket38,572 and 38,573, Consolidated
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 241 P.2d 768 (Gilbert v. Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert v. Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Ass'n, 241 P.2d 768, 172 Kan. 586, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 368 (kan 1952).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

Two actions were filed by a man and his wife to reform a health and accident policy and to enforce it as reformed. Judgment was for plaintiffs, George E. and Katheryn Gilbert. The defendant, Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Association, appeals.

The only reformation sought was the correction of the effective date of the policy in order to make it reflect the alleged agreement pursuant to which the application for insurance was signed and the first quarterly premium paid. Appellees were injured in an accident the day after making such payment and before the home office of the insurer had issued the policy. The same proof applied to each case. The actions were consolidated below and the appeals are consolidated. The trial court made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

“1. The defendant is organized and in existence for the purpose of selling and writing policies of Insurance, and was doing business as such in the State of Kansas, during the year 1950.
“2. That during the year 1950 the defendant’s Kansas City, Missouri, office was a so-called ‘direct dealing’ office and the Kansas City, Kansas, office was a so-called ‘sub-office’ of the Kansas City, Missouri, office, and Frank Stephens, Jr., was the assistant manager of the Kansas City, Missouri, office and a general agent of the defendant, and Melvin Colhour was a soliciting agent of the defendant, and Donna Ashley was a clerk in the Kansas City, Kansas, office of the defendant.
“3. That on the 29th day of June, 1950, defendant’s agent, Melvin Colhour, *588 sold the plaintiffs defendant’s so-called Hospital Expense Policy of Insurance and filled out an application for such a policy; said Melvin Colhour informed the plaintiffs that they would be covered by insurance as of the day they paid the first quarterly premium, if the defendant Company issued a policy of Insurance; and further informed the plaintiffs that the first quarterly premium of $24.80 to be paid by them would pay for insurance until October 1, 1950, if the premiums were paid on the next day as plaintiffs had agreed to do.
"4. That Melvin Colhour when filling out the application prior to plaintiff George Gilbert signing same, filled in the blanks at the bottom of said application as follows, ‘premium pays insurance to October 1, 1950, this June 30th, 1950’; and that after signing the application plaintiff George Gilbert did not again see the application nor hear from the defendant Company in regard to the application until he received a policy in August of 1950.
“5. That on the 30th day of June, 1950, Katheryn Marie Gilbert, one of the plaintiffs, paid $24.80 to Donna Ashley in the Kansas City, Kansas, office of the defendant Company, as the first quarterly premium for said Hospital Expense Policy.
“6. Donna Ashley, prior to June 30th, 1950, had been instructed by Frank Stephens, Jr., general agent of the defendant Company, that she was to write in the word ‘received’ and stamp in the date on the upper middle margin of such an application upon receiving the first quarterly premium, and she had been further instructed by said general agent, that the date she was to stamp on the upper middle margin of the application should correspond to the date at the bottom of the policy which had been entered by the soliciting agent when filling out the application; Donna Ashley followed these instructions of the general agent when she received the plaintiff’s premium and wrote the word ‘received’ and stamped in a date on the upper middle margin of plaintiff’s application, but in stamping in the date Donna Ashley mistakenly stamped in ‘July 3, 1950,’ rather than the proper and true date of ‘June 30, 1950.’
“7. Plaintiffs had a serious accident on the evening of July 1, 1950, resulting in their being hospitalized.
“8. In October of 1949 the defendant Company issued a procedure bulletin to all managers which was in effect at the time of the application and policy here in question and which reads in part as follows:
“ ‘To All Managers:
Procedure Bulletin 172
Applications H&A
Underwriting H&A
Dating of Policies
Full Premiums collected with Applications, Partial Payments and C. O. D. Applications.
It has become necessary to establish a uniform practice of dating policies. The following rules have been established for the Home Office in order that this may be accomplished.
1. Full First Premium. Collected at Time Application is Signed.
The policy will bear an issued date which agreed with the date the application u>as received in the State Managers office or any direct dealing *589 District Office, to become effective at 12 o’clock noon on that date, subject to the acceptance of the risk by the Home Office.
In order to prevent any misunderstandings it is important that your office exercise extreme care to see that . . .
1. The face of the application is stamped (center margin near top of application) to show the date it was received in your office, or . . .’
“It was pursuant to these procedure rules that Frank Stephens, Jr., instructed Donna Ashley to receive the applications and to stamp the date of receiving in the center margin near the top of the application.
“9. On the 5th day of July, 1950, the abovesaid application was received in defendant’s home office at Omaha, Nebraska, and in due course of business came into the hands of Frank A. Mech, one of the defendant’s underwriters, who, as per his instructions in processing an application, determined that the defendant Company should assume the risk and thereupon issued a policy; to establish the policy date’ or the date of which insurance would be in effect, said Frank A. Mech looked to the upper center margin of the application and made the policy date’ correspond to the date stamped there under the word ‘received’ which was the precise method said underwriter was instructed to use in each case to establish the ‘policy date.’ In as Donna Ashley had mistakenly stamped in July 3, 1950, in the upper middle margin under the word ‘received’ instead of the true date of June 30, 1950, said underwriter also mistakenly made the ‘policy date’ July 3, 1950, rather than the correct date of June 30, 1950.
“10. The policy of defendant as contained in instructions from its home office to its agencies, at all times material to this suit, was, in cases in which no binding receipt is issued, to issue policies bearing policy dates identical to the dates on which application for said policies are received in direct reporting offices of defendant.
“11.

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Bluebook (online)
241 P.2d 768, 172 Kan. 586, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-mutual-benefit-health-accident-assn-kan-1952.