Hare v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. of Hartford

173 S.E. 772, 114 W. Va. 679, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 188
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1934
Docket7765
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 173 S.E. 772 (Hare v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. of Hartford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hare v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. of Hartford, 173 S.E. 772, 114 W. Va. 679, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 188 (W. Va. 1934).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge :

This action involves the effect of a worthless check given in payment of an insurance premium.

Plaintiffs (residents of Wheeling, West Virginia) were the beneficiaries in a life insurance policy of defendant insurance *680 company held by F. A. Hare of Washington, Pennsylvania. The insured elected to pay the premiums in quarterly installments. The second installment for the year 1929, which fell due on September 12th, was not .paid when due, nor within the thirty-one days of grace thereafter permitted by the policy. By the terms thereof, the policy then lapsed. On October 22nd, the insured delivered to a local agent of the defendant his check on a local bank for the installment. The check was payable to defendant’s general agent at Pittsburgh to whom the check was forwarded. On October 24th, the general agent entered the check on his books as a cash payment and sent a receipt for the payment to the insured. He then forwarded his personal check for the premium to the defendant. The check of Mr. Hare was presented to the local bank on October 25th. Payment was refused on the ground of insufficient funds. The general agent received notice of the refusal on October 26th. He immediately wrote to the insured that the check had been protested. The insured did not answer the letter or make the check good. By offers which were improperly rejected (the record being vouched) the defendant would have shown that the general agent directed the local agent to secure either payment of the premium or return of the receipt from Mr. Hare; and that the local agent attempted to do so, but was baffled by Mr. Hare. “Within four days” after October 24th, the general agent crossed out the entry of payment on his records and made an entry that the policy had lapsed. Upon being notified that Mr. Hare’s check had been dishonored, the defendant returned the premium to the general agent. The insured departed this life on October 31, 1929.

Plaintiffs brought suit on the policy in May, 1930, in the common pleas court of Washington County, Pennsylvania. A trial was had in May, 1931, and the plaintiffs were required to take a “compulsory non-suit”.

Plaintiffs brought the instant suit upon the same policy in the circuit court of Ohio County, West Virginia, in November, 1931. The defendant pleaded (1) the ruling of the Pennsylvania court as res judicata, and (2) lapse of the policy. A verdict was returned and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiffs. The defendant secured a writ of error.

*681 1. Cleary v. Cab Co., 285 Pa. 241, 249, 132 A. 185, 188, holds that, despite decisions elsewhere, it is settled in Pennsylvania that “the mere entry of a non-suit even on the merits of a ease renders none of the issues involved res judicata

2. The premium is the price of the insurance and payment of the premium is of the essence of the insurance contract. No payment — no insurance. A worthless check is not a payment of anything. Plaintiffs do not controvert these general principles, but say that the acts of the general agent (i.e. entering the Hare check on his records as payment, issuing a receipt as for cash, and sending his personal check to defendant) constituted payment of the premium to defendant, and made further transactions between him and Mr. Hare concerning the latter’s check, personal matters.

Lebanon Ins. Co. v. Hoover, 113 Pa. 591, 598-9, 8 A. 163, is relied on especially by the plaintiffs. In that case, however, it was arranged between the company and its local agent that he should be personally liable to the company for the premiums on all policies procured through him. Pursuant to that arrangement the agent extended personal credit to the assured for premiums and periodically accounted therefor to the company whether he had received payments from the assured or not. No such arrangement existed here. The general agent testified without contradiction that the entries on his records were routine; that he extended no credit to Mr. Hare but dealt with the Hare check solely on the supposition that it was good; and that he did not become liable to the defendant for the Hare premium in any sense whatever. So the Lebanon case has no bearing here.

Snyder v. Ins. Co., 202 Pa. 161, 51 A. 744, is also relied upon by plaintiff. There, the policy was forwarded by the company to a local agent “under the agreement that the com missions which he should earn should be applied by the company to the payment of the premium.” The policy was delivered to the assured by the agent without exacting payment of premium. It was held to be a valid delivery binding on the company, notwithstanding the fact that the agent “never earned any commissions.” In that case the court was careful to distinguish Brady v. N. W. Ass’n., 190 Pa. 595, 42 A. 962, *682 (hereinafter referred to) and for apparent reasons the instant case is also distinguished.

Plaintiffs cite Goodbar v. Ins. Co., 89 W. Va. 221, 108 S. E. 896. In that ease plaintiff did recover, although the assured was in arrears on the premium. The recovery was based, however, on evidence that an authorized agent of the company had expressly waived cash payment (in full) of the premium. There is no claim here of express waiver. Even if West Virginia decisions were pertinent, the Goodbar case would have no application to this case.

Plaintiffs cite numerous cases in support of their position from jurisdictions other than Pennsylvania and West Virginia. We do not deem it necessary, however, to comment further on their citations. They all have vital points of difference from the instant ease. Since the transactions herein happened entirely within the State of Pennsylvania, they must be judged by the laws of that state. The following Pennsylvania decisions make actual payment essential in the absence of an understanding to the contrary:

(a) “A lapsed policy can be restored to life, so far as the assured is concerned, only by actual payment and acceptance of the premium, or by a contract based upon a sufficient consideration. ” Lantz v. Ins. Co., 139 Pa. 546, 21 A. 80, 84 (b) “ * * * the mere acceptance by a creditor from a debtor of a check is not an absolute, but a conditional payment de-feasible on the non-payment of the check. To make the check an absolute payment there must be an express agreement to receive it as such, and the burden of proof is on him who asserts such contract.” Wedmore v. McInnes, 69 Pa. Super. Ct. 220. Accord: Kilpatrick v. Association, 119 Pa. 30, 36, 12 A-. 754; Philadelphia v. Neil, 211 Pa. 353, 60 A. 1033. (Incidentally, the West Virginia decisions are in entire accord with those of Pennsylvania on this point. See Cox v. Boone, 8 W. Va. 500; Garrett v. Patton, 81 W. Va. 771, 774, 95 S. E. 437.) (e) “Where * * *

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.E. 772, 114 W. Va. 679, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hare-v-connecticut-mutual-life-ins-co-of-hartford-wva-1934.