Girard Life Insurance, Annuity & Trust Co. v. Mutual Life Insurance

97 Pa. 15, 1881 Pa. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 4, 1881
DocketNo. 3
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 97 Pa. 15 (Girard Life Insurance, Annuity & Trust Co. v. Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Girard Life Insurance, Annuity & Trust Co. v. Mutual Life Insurance, 97 Pa. 15, 1881 Pa. LEXIS 36 (Pa. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Paxson

delivered the opinion of the court, January 24th 1881.

This record presents some questions which were not considered, when the cause was here upon a former writ of error (see 5 Norris 236). The assignments are too numerous to be discussed in detail, without extending this opinion to an unreasonable length. I will endeavor, as briefly as is consistent with the importance of the case, to indicate the principles upon which it should be ruled.

The first question relates to the proofs of death furnished the defendant. It is necessary to a proper understanding of this [22]*22matter, that the facts, as they occurred at the trial, should be stated. The defendant was a foreign corporation, having its principal'place of business in the city of New York. It had a branch office in the city of Philadelphia, and an agent there. It had issued two policies upon the life of Edward Magarge, deceased, one of them No. 73,712 for the sum of $5000, the other No. 28,375 for $10,000. The former policy was paid-soon after Mr. Magarge’s death; payment of the latter was resisted, and forms the subject of the present contention. The defence was the non-payment of the premium on the day it became due. The facts are, that a quarterly premium of $51 fell due upon January 14th 1871, which was neither paid nor tendered on that day; that on the 16th of the same month, the full amount of said premium was tendered in cash, refused by the company, and the policy declared forfeited.

Upon the trial in the court below, the plaintiff, after giving in evidence the policy in suit, called upon defendant’s counsel to produce the “ notice and proofs of death of Edward Magarge given to defendant and filed in defendant’s office.” To this call defendant’s counsel replied, “there are no proofs of death under this policy.” The plaintiff then called William N. Lambert, agent of the defendant, who admitted that a subpoena duces tecum had been served upon him, to produce the books and papers relating to this case; that he informed the person who served the subpoena, that he would produce the papers; that the proofs of death had been furnished under policy No. 73,712, which had been paid, that the proofs were filed by us (the agents), in the office of the company in New York, and were brought on here for the trial of this case; that the witness did not know where the proofs were, but supposed them to be in the hands of the counsel of the company. The plaintiff then called the defendant’s counsel to the stand, and the result of his somewhat extended examination, may be embodied in a single question and answer.

“ Question. Have you in your possession, proofs of the death of Edward Magarge, that were filed with the defendant company ?

“Answer. I have not in my actual possession, nor had I when the subpoena was served upon me within a few minutes, any proofs of death of Edward Magarge ; and I never have had in my possession any proofs of the death of Edward Magarge, which purported to relate to the policy now in suit.”

Some other questions were then asked of the counsel, a portion of which it would have been in better taste to have omitted, and then we have this inquiry: “ Where are those papers and those proofs of death you had at the last trial ?” This question was objected to, and, according to the bill of exceptions, remained unanswered. The plaintiff then called John J. Ridgway, Jr., whose testimony is so important that I give it in extenso.

“ I knew Edward Magarge. I knew of his death on the 21st of [23]*23February 1872. I called at the company’s office, and informed them of Magarge’s death. They gave me three blanks to have filled up and sworn to by a friend of Magarge’s, the doctor who attended him in his last illness, and the undertaker who buried him. I either filled them up or caused them to be filled up, but they were filled up and returned in proper -form to the company, sworn to by the parties as directed.

“ Question. Did you ever obtain the original proofs of death from Judge Porter?

“ Answer. I did, and h-ad a copy made of them. I can swear that those (witness here points to the papers) are true copies, made by Mr. McAdam, who is in my office, and compared by me, of the proofs of death of Edward Magarge, furnished to defendant. There have been some papers attached.”

I quote further from the bill of exceptions.

“ Copy of proofs of death of Edward Magarge offered in evidence as identified by witness (marked Exhibit A). Objected to. Objection sustained, because the paper itself shows that it referred to another policy. Exception to plaintiff.

“ Plaintiff now offers in evidence, the identified copies containing statements of doctor, friend and undertaker, all certified under oath, being copies of the proofs of death of Edward Magarge, sworn to by doctor March 6th 1872, by the friend on March 9th 1872, and the undertaker’s statement sworn to February 29th 1872. Papers Nos. 1, 2 and 8 of Exhibit A. Offer overruled, unless it be shown they were furnished under the special policy in suit. Exception to plaintiff.”

It will be observed, the court below placed the exclusion of this evidence upon the sole ground that the proofs were not furnished under the policy in suit.

No-evidence appears to have been offered upon this point. Mr. Eidgway, who furnished the proofs, does not say under which policy they were made. There is nothing upon the face of the papers, copies of which are printed in the paper-book, to indicate under which policy the proofs were furnished, except a reference in the “friend’s statement” to the number and amount of the policy which the company paid, and an indorsement, evidently by an officer of the company, of the number (73,712) on the back of the papers.

It appears to have been assumed by the company and the court below, that it was necessary for the plaintiff to have made -separate proofs of death under the policy in suit, notwithstanding the admitted fact, that such proofs had been furnished, which the company had accepted, and under which it had paid the §5000 policy.

It is undoubtedly competent for a company to contract with the assured, that, in case they issue more than one policy on his life, separate proofs shall be’furnished under each policy in case of his [24]*24death. There was no such contract here. The policy provides for the payment of the sum thereby insured, “in sixty days after due notice and proof of the death of the said Edward Magarge.” Upon the death of the assured, the company were entitled to notice and due proof thereof. The plaintiff having once made such proof, there was no object in proving it again, and the company had no right to demand second proofs. The assured was dead, not under one policy, but under both ; the fact had been communicated to the company, with the cause of death, and all the circumstances connected therewith they desired to know, and as to which it was important they should be informed. A demand that all this should be repeated, merely because two policies had been issued upon Mr. Magarge’s life, is as unreasonable as it is foreign to the contract between the parties.

.Had the different policies called for different modes of proof, there would have been more force in the demand for proofs under each policy. • Such is not the case, however, and if it were, it was too late for the company to insist upon this point. Mr.

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97 Pa. 15, 1881 Pa. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/girard-life-insurance-annuity-trust-co-v-mutual-life-insurance-pa-1881.