Gross v. Home Life Insurance Co. of America

170 A. 432, 112 Pa. Super. 96, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 14, 1933
DocketAppeal 418
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 170 A. 432 (Gross v. Home Life Insurance Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross v. Home Life Insurance Co. of America, 170 A. 432, 112 Pa. Super. 96, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadtbeld, J.,

The Home Life Insurance Company of America, defendant below and appellant here, on August 24,1923, issued a policy of life insurance on the life of Antonio Gross for one thousand ($1,000) dollars in which Mary Gross, his wife, was named the beneficiary. The premiums were payable quarterly in the amount of eight dollars and fifty-seven cents ($8.57) per quarter and fell due on the 24th day of February, May, August and November of each year. The premiums were collected by the duly authorized agents of the defendant at the home of assured and plaintiff. Until November 24, 1924, all premiums were paid when and as they fell due. The premium due on November 24, 1924, was not paid and was in default until February 13, 1925, when the defaulted premium was paid and policy was reinstated without any physical examination. The premium due February 24, 1925, was not paid but on May 7, 1925, the policy was again reinstated upon payment of the overdue premium and without any physical examination. The premium due May 24, 1925, was not paid when 'due and on August 21, 1925, the policy was again reinstated upon payment of the overdue premium and without any physical examination. The premium due August 24,1925, was not paid when due, but on December 1, 1925, an application for reinstatement was made and the overdue premium paid and the application and premium promptly forwarded by the local agent to the executive office of the defendant company in Philadelphia. The defendant company received the application December 1,1925 and, after its receipt, had stamped upon it, with a rubber stamp, the following: “Date O. K., Medical Fee, Reinsurance, Loan, Entered, File.” After each of these subjects there was entered a check mark, and then stamped upon the application with a rubber stamp were the words, “Approved Dec. 14, 1925.” The previous applications for insurance were likewise *99 stamped but tbe stamp was put on by a clerk and then initialed by fhe company doctor, Dr. Cyle, according to tbe testimony of William Flores, agent of tbe company. The final application was not initialed.

The assured died December 21, 1925, twenty days after he signed the application for reinstatement. There was no further communication between the defendant company and the insured from December 1, 1925, until the date of assured’s death. At the time of the payment of the arrearages, a receipt was given which provided that the “payment is no way binding upon said company except, that said company agrees to return the amount mentioned hereon in case the company declines to revive the said policy.”

At the end of the receipt was a note reading as follows: “Note. Unless your policy is revived or your money is returned within six weeks from the date of this receipt, please notify the Company, giving the name of person to whom paid, the amount and date of payment.”

The application for reinstatement provided, inter alia, as follows: “I further agree that said policy shall not be reinstated by reason of any money paid or settlement made in payment of, or on account of, said premium until this Certificate shall be duly approved by an Executive Officer at the Executive Offices.” The policy provided: “2. Re-Instatement. In case of default in the payment of any premium or interest, the Company will reinstate the policy at any time upon written application by the Insured to the Company at its Executive Offices, with evidence of insurability satisfactory to the Company, payment of all premiums that would have been paid in the intervening time, if no default had been made, with interest thereon at a rate not exceeding six per centum per annum, computed from the premium due date, and payment on reinstatement, with interest at a like rate of any in *100 debtedness existing at the time of default, or of any sum paid as a cash surrender value.”

The defendant company declined to pay under the policy and, thereupon, suit was brought by Mary Gross, beneficiary, to recover the amount of the same. Appellant defended upon the ground that the policy had lapsed by reason of the non-payment of the premium due August 24, 1925, and had never been reinstated. Plaintiff contended that the company had retained the application and arrearages of premiums from December 1, to December* 21, without requesting the insured to submit to a physical examination, and had reinstated the policy by again waiving the requirement of evidence of insurability.

The court submitted the case to the jury on the question whether the company had reasonable time within which to determine whether it would accept the application for reinstatement upon the evidence already in its possession, and it accompanied that submission with the following instructions relative to the effect of the retention of the money: “After the lapse of that reasonable time, if the company retained the money, then it is for you to say whether or not the purpose of the retention of the money was not to express their approval of the policy as it existed, and indicate a determination to revive it.”

The learned trial judge refused the request for binding instructions and submitted the case to the jury.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. A motion for judgment non obstante veredicto and motion for new trial were made by the defendant and dismissed by the court en banc in an opinion by Stotz, J. Prom the judgment entered on the verdict this appeal was taken.

The assignments of error may be divided into two classes: (1) to the refusal of binding instructions and the overruling of motion for judgment non obstante *101 veredicto, under which defendant seeks to have judgment entered in its favor, and (2) alleged errors in the charge of the trial judge to the jury.

1. The main proposition in behalf of appellant under the first division of its assignments is that the trial judge erred in refusing binding instructions and in submitting to the jury the question whether the defendant had reinstated the policy and whether it was in force at the time of decedent’s death. The question for us in disposing of these assignments is whether binding instructions would have been proper. The material facts are not in dispute. The testimony shows that the defendant company on December 21, 1925, when the insured died, had in its possession sufficient premiums to reinstate the policy; that prior applications had been approved without a physical examination having been requested or made; that no request for such examination was made in the last instance ; that the application for reinstatement was held from December 1, 1925 to December 21, 1925, when decedent died without any communications between the company and the insured; the application for reinstatement had on it the rubber stamp impression: “Approved December 14,1925.” Flores, the agent of the company, called by plaintiff, testified that the previous applications for reinstatement were likewise stamped, but the stamp was put on by a clerk and then initialed by the company doctor, Dr. Cyle. The last application was not initialed.

Edgar T. Miller, assistant superintendent of defendant company, testified on cross-examination, when shown Exhibit No. 8, the disputed application, that it indicated as having been approved by the company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 A. 432, 112 Pa. Super. 96, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-home-life-insurance-co-of-america-pasuperct-1933.