Hagins v. Life Insurance Co.

51 S.E. 683, 72 S.C. 216, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 28, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 51 S.E. 683 (Hagins v. Life Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hagins v. Life Insurance Co., 51 S.E. 683, 72 S.C. 216, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 109 (S.C. 1905).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The defendant issued an accident insurance policy to J. R. Hagins, a fireman on the Southern Railway. The date of the policy was August 20, 1903, and to provide for payment of the premiums, the defendant took orders from Hagins on the Southern Railway Company for $5 for each of the months of September, October, November and December, to be paid out of his monthly earnings. The *218 policy contains this provision: “The payments specified in said order are premiums for separate and consecutive periods of two, three and five months, and each shall apply only to its corresponding insurance period. No claim for injuries sustained during any period for which its respective premium has not been actually paid in full shall be valid under this policy, except in case of just claim for injuries sustained before the end of the week or month from the wages of which the first premium is to be deducted, as provided in said order.” There are similar stipulations in the application for insurance, and in the order on the railroad company for monthly payment of the premiums. Hagins was accidentally killed October 28, 1903, and his wife, the beneficiary, brought this action on the policy. The defense was that, though the order for monthly payments from wages was filed with the railroad company and payment demanded, the company refused to pay the instalment of $5 for the month of September, Hagins having earned for that month only $2.60, and for this reason, under the provision of the policy above quoted, the insurance was at an end and the company not liable. The verdict was for the defendant. The exceptions charge error in the admission of testimony, in instructing the jury, and in refusing a new trial.

1 The Circuit Judge, after reading the stipulation of the policy which was in controversy and which we have quoted above, charged the jury: “If you find that this is the agreement, that provides that if any of those insurance periods are not paid according to the terms that- the policy lapses. That is what it provides, if you find that this is the agreement.” The plaintiff’s position as to this instruction, that the term “injuries” used in this provision of the policy does not refer to injuries resulting in death, and that the accident having produced death, the insurance company is liable to the beneficiary at all events without respect to this stipulation, is untenable, because the *219 contract, by its terms, expressly embraces death resulting solely from injuries.

The Circuit Judge charged at plaintiff’s request: “Where a party gives an order for the premium and the same is returned not paid, good faith requires the insurance company to notify the party that his order has not been paid before it can insist on a forfeiture for non-payment,” but with the modification, “unless there is some stipulation in the agreement that does away with the necessity for that notification.” The plaintiff submits the request should have been charged without modification. We think the Circuit Judge was right in his view of the law.

Evidence was admitted tending to prove that for the month of September the insured only earned $2.60, and for that reason the railroad company refused to pay his order of $5 premium for the first insurance period of two months. Nothing can be clearer than that by each of the three papers which covered the entire negotiation and contract, it was agreed the insurance for each period was to depend on the actual payment of the orders on the railroad company out of the earnings of the insured for the months specified. The case is thus distinguished from Stepp v. Association, 37 S. C., 417, 16 S. E., 134, and Dargan v. Assurance Society, 71 S. C., 359; and if a note had been given for the premium under such a stipulation, and not paid, the policy would have failed. Thompson v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S., 257, 26 E. ed., 765. The general rule, however, is that when a check or order is taken for the premium, even where it is agreed the policy shall not be effective until it is paid, it is the duty of the insurer to use due diligence to collect it. Whether it is his duty to give notice of non-payment and return the order or check depends upon the circumstances and the relation of the parties. Here the orders were on credits which the insured expected to have with his employer, but which he well knew never would exist except for wages actually earned by his labor. If he néglected to perform the labor for the month mentioned in the order, he *220 could not fail to know that the order was worthless. Even if he had credit for labor performed for some period other than that embraced in the order, this would not have been available, because the railroad company had no right to apply his wages except as he directed, and if it had done so it would have had no defense against his demand for the wages for any month except that mentioned in the order. To hold that, though the insured failed to earn the wages upon which he gave the order, yet it was necessary that the insurance company should give him notice of his failure and the consequent non-payment of his order, would be to strike down the business in which the defendant is engaged and deprive those employed in the lower grades of railroad service of the opportunity to insure. They constantly change from place to place, and it would be an impracticable business enterprise for an insurance company to insure them on the credit of wages to be earned, if upon every failure to earn the wages the company should be required at its peril to find them, notify them of that which they already knew, and return the order. The plaintiff was, therefore, not entitled to the unqualified instruction that the defendant could not avail itself of the defense of non-payment of the order without proof of notice to insured of non-payment. This view is supported by a number of well-considered cases. 1 Cyc., 242; Bane v. Travellers’ Ins. Co., 4 S. W., 787 (Ky.) ; McMahon v. Travellers’ Ins. Co., 42 N. W., 179 (Ia.); Insurance Co. v. Walker, 53 S. W., 675 (Ark.); Assurance Corporation v. Rochelle, 35 S. W., 869 (Tex.); Reed v. Ins. Co., 43 S. E., 433 (Ga.); Landis v. Insurance Co., 33 N. E., 989 (Ind.).

The cases relied on by appellant are not in conflict with this conclusion. In Benefit Association v. Jackson, 2 N. E., 414 (Ill.), it was held the evidence showed the order was actually accepted as payment, and that it was refused for lack of funds by mistake of the paymaster of the railroad.

In Eury v. Insurance Co., 10 L. R. A., 534 (Tenn.), the stipulations in the policy, application and order here present *221 do not appear, and the decision was placed on the peculiar circumstances under which the policy was taken and the failure of the insurance company to show that there was nothing due insured applicable to the order.

It was held in Lyon v.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.E. 683, 72 S.C. 216, 1905 S.C. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagins-v-life-insurance-co-sc-1905.