Haag v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co.

179 S.W.2d 215, 297 Ky. 132, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 687
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 24, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 S.W.2d 215 (Haag v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haag v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co., 179 S.W.2d 215, 297 Ky. 132, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 687 (Ky. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Perry, Commissioner

Affirming.

This appeal is prosecuted' from a judgment of the *133 Jefferson circuit court, common pleas branch, fourth division, entered pursuant to a directed verdict in favor of the appellee, Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. (hereinafter referred to as the company), in an action brought by the appellant, Grace O. Haag, against the company to recover, as beneficiary, on the policy of life insurance issued upon the life of her deceased husband, Lee K. Haag.

This “whole life policy” was issued by the company to Lee K. Haag on November 19, 1923, in the sum of $2,500, in consideration of the payment of $35.33 and the payment of a like sum on or before the 19th day of November and May in every year during the lifetime of the insured and further therein providing that immediately upon receipt of the policy and due proof of the insured’s death, the company would at its home-office pay the said sum of $2,500, less “any unpaid premium or premiums to the end of the current policy year and any other indebtedness on account of this policy” to his wife, Grace O. Haag, as beneficiary. Further the policy recited that it was issued by the company and accepted by the parties in interest subject to the provisions stated on “the consecutively numbered pages hereof which are hereby made a part of this contract. ’ ’

Thereafter, in December, 1924, at the insured’s request, the premium installment payments were changed from a semi-annual to a quarter-annual basis in the amount of $17.85 each, due and payable on February 19, May 19, August 19 and November 19 of each year during the continuance of the policy.

It further appears that during the period of years extending from 1924 to and including November, 1932, the annual dividends due on the policy’s November 19 anniversary date were applied, at the insured’s election, to the payment of the quarterly installment of premium falling due on each November 19.

Also it is disclosed by the record that during this period of years the insured, in order to meet these quarterly premium installments, had from time to time borrowed from the company, upon the security of its policy, various amounts of money, which by August 14, 1933, amounted to $360.49, including interest, which was approximately the then full loan value of the policy. Further the insured had found it difficult to meet his *134 February 19, 1933, quarterly premium and had suffered it to go unpaid until in May, 1933, and did further fail to meet his May, 1933, installment of premium when due, but having obtained an extension of time in which to pay it, on August 14, 1933, he effected a loan arrangement with B. F. Clendenin, the general agent for the company in Kentucky, whereby he secured an increase of his then policy loan of $360.49 to the sum of $372, the policy’s then full loan valué, and also at the same time secured a personal loan from Mr. Clendenin in the amount of $24.19, with which he paid the company’s then outstanding debt and interest,. amounting to the said $360.49, the then overdue May 19, 1933, quarterly installment of premium of $17.85 and his imminently approaching August 19, 1933, quarterly installment of premium of $17.85.

Simultaneously with the negotiating of these new loans on August 14, 1933, the insured assigned, his policy to the company to secure his increased $372 debt to it and at the same time executed and delivered to Mr. Clendenin his note for,the amount borrowed from him, with interest at 6%> per annum, payable on November 18, 1933, and therein also assigned to Mr. Clendenin, as security for his loan, “the above numbered policy and all proceeds or money which may become due and payable under or by reason thereof” and also at the same time delivered to Mr. Clendenin an undated but signed ‘ direction ’ ’ to the company to pay him the dividend due November 19,1933, on his policy.

This undated letter or “direction” remained in the possession of Mr. Clendenin until November 20, 1933.

It appears that this procedure, in giving Mr. Clendenin his undated but signed “direction” to the company to pay him the dividend due November 19, 1933, was' adopted and followed by the insured because he did not want his August 14, 1933, “direction” to the company to be used by Mr.' Clendenin unless the insured failed to pay “out of his own pocket funds” his $24.19 debt to Mr. Clendenin at its November 18, 1933, maturity date. Therefore Mr. Clendenin withheld giving the company notice of that undated “direction” until after Mr. Haag failed to pay his note at its maturity date, it being the insured’s intention to himself pay the Clendenin note, if he had the money, at its maturity on November 18, 1933, but if it so happened that on or before the date *135 he did not have the money with which to pay the note, Mr. Clendenin thereafter had a lien on his November 19, 1933, dividend. Mr. Clendenin, in keeping with such understanding had between him and the insured, retained the insured’s signed but undated “direction” to the company until he could tell whether or not the insured would himself pay that note, with the result that the company had no.knowledge of the existence of the insured’s undated “direction” given Mr. Clendenin until some time subsequent to November 20, 1933.

About October 27, 1933, Mr. Clendenin mailed the insured a notice stating that his note would become due on November 18 and that his prompt attention would be appreciated. Mr. Haag ignored this notice and demand for payment made by Mr. Clendenin. Consequently on the next business day after the note matured, Monday, November 20, Mr. Clendenin (1) mailed to the company (a) Mr. Haag’s August 14, 1933, $24.19 note given him and (b) Mr. Haag’s written “direction” to the company to pay the November 19, 1933, dividend to Mr. Clendenin and requested that the November 19 dividend be paid, in accordance with Mr. Haag’s “direction,” to Mr. Clendenin as a credit on that note.

The company strictly complied with the insured’s “direction” to it, by applying the whole of the insured’s November 19, 1933 dividend as a credit on the insured’s note to Mr. Clendenin and on November 29, 1933, Mr. Clendenin, as state agent of the company, notified the insured that, in accordance with the insured’s explicit direction, “we- used the dividend due November 19 of $24.38 to pay the (Clendenin) note of $24.19 and interest.”

It will be noted that Mr. Clendenin states this notice was given the insured on November 29, 1933, although Mrs. Haag, the beneficiary under the policy, denies she ever received it. However, it is conclusively shown that' it was then, nearly three weeks before the expiration of the 31 day grace period for payment of the November 19, 1933, quarterly installment of premium, mailed Mr. Haag.

Thus it appears that the insured was, by this notice sent him on November 29, 1933, duly informed during the grace period that the November 19, 1933, dividend was no longer available to pay the November 19 premium installment. He was also otherwise than by this *136 notice advised of this fact, because he knew, at all times after November 18, 1933, that he had not paid the Clendenin note and that his failure to pay it would and had caused Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W.2d 215, 297 Ky. 132, 1944 Ky. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haag-v-northwestern-mut-life-ins-co-kyctapphigh-1944.