Hayes Truck Lines v. Investors Insurance Corp.

525 P.2d 1289, 269 Or. 565, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 414
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 525 P.2d 1289 (Hayes Truck Lines v. Investors Insurance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes Truck Lines v. Investors Insurance Corp., 525 P.2d 1289, 269 Or. 565, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 414 (Or. 1974).

Opinion

BRYSON, J.

Plaintiff, assignee of the estate of Sidney M. Hayes, brought this action to recover the proceeds of a policy of group credit life insurance issued by defendant on the life of plaintiff’s deceased president, Sidney M. Hayes. The trial court sitting without a jury awarded judgment to plaintiff in the sum of $8,016.64, together with attorney’s fees. Defendant appeals.

Credit life insurance is a relatively new form of group insurance in which there are three principal parties: the insurer; the creditor and policyholder-beneficiary; and the insured, debtor. In a typical *567 credit life insurance transaction an insurance company issues to a retail seller, lender or other creditor a master policy of life insurance. Upon the occurrence of a credit transaction, the debtor, either at his option or at the insistence of the creditor, is charged a predetermined premium as set by the Oregon Insurance Commissioner and receives a certificate of life insurance stating that the debtor’s life is insured under the master policy for an amount equal to the declining balance of the debt. If the debtor dies before the debt is paid, the policy proceeds are applied in satisfaction of the debt.

The credit life insurance transaction in the present case varied somewhat from this basic pattern. On March 11, 1968, plaintiff executed a lease and option to purchase (the security agreement) with Northwest Acceptance Corporation, hereinafter NAC, covering commercial trucks purchased from Automotive Equipment Company. Plaintiff’s president and principal shareholder,-Sidney Hayes, signed a “guarantee” clause in the lease-option. Plaintiff corporation was under-capitalized and NAC required the guarantee agreement by the officers and credit life insurance on each of the officers’ lives. NAC agreed that they would obtain the credit life policies and add the premium cost to the lease-option indebtedness.

At that time, NAC had not been issued a master policy of credit life insurance by defendant. A master life policy allows the creditor to issue certificates of credit life insurance to the creditors and debtors on a particular transaction. Defendant subsequently issued *568 such, a master policy to NAC. At the request of NAC, William Preble, a general agent for defendant, issued the certificate of credit life insurance on the life of Sidney Hayes showing NAC as the beneficiary. This is the policy involved in this litigation.

The Hayes certificate of insurance, received in evidence, shows it was issued on general agent Preble’s master policy number 538 in the amount of $9,250 for 60 months at a premium charge of $277.50 with NAC as the creditor-beneficiary and Hayes as the insured debtor. After charging the premium cost to plaintiff’s lease-option, NAC paid defendant the $277.50 premium, which defendant accepted. Subsequent to Hayes’ death the defendant tendered the premium back to NAC but NAC refused the tender. Plaintiff corporation paid off the lease-option balance to NAC and succeeded NAC as beneficiary under the insurance policy.

Preble testified that he was a general agent for defendant and held the master policy under which Hayes’ certificate of life insurance was issued. The record discloses he was paid a commission on the premium collected.

Hayes died on November 2, 1968, from an illness he was aware of at the time he signed the lease-option and at the time the certificate of insurance was issued. NAC filed its “Claimant’s Proof of Death” as to Sidney Hayes on November 2, 1968, and requested payment of $8,016.64, the balance of the lease-option debt. By letter of February 18,1969, defendant denied the claim because Hayes was not “in sound health” at the time of issuance of the certificate of insurance.

Defendant on appeal contends (1) “* * * no policy of credit life insurance had been issued by de *569 fendant on the life of Hayes. Although the existence of such a policy was evidenced by the home office copy and the creditor’s copy of a certificate referring to insurance on the life of Hayes, this certificate was not in itself a contract of insurance” (original emphasis) ; (2) if there was a master policy of insurance, Hayes was not covered because (a) he was not in sound health; (b) Hayes was “not an eligible debtor as required by their master policy” because he was not “in sound health at the time the policy was purportedly issued”; (c) plaintiff’s action was barred by the three-year period of limitations provided in the specimen of master policy (Exhibit 11); and (d) there can be no attorney fee awarded under OBS 743.561 (1) “because no policy of insurance was issued by defendant on the life of Hayes.”

The following facts are important to the decision of this case. There were two types of insurance issued by defendant in this case: (1) the master policy, issued to its general agent Preble, which the creditor, NAC, and the debtor, plaintiff or Sidney Hayes, guarantor, never saw or new the terms of; and (2) the certificate of insurance issued and delivered by the general agent Preble to the creditor-beneficiary, NAC, which advised that insurance was issued on the life of “Insured-Debtor Sidney Hayes,” showing the “Group Number,” “Contract Date,” “Insured’s Contract Balance,” “Monthly Payment,” “Premium,” “Contract Term Mos.,” “Age” (of Hayes), and “Creditor Northwest Acceptance Corporation.” This certificate, as distinguished from the master policy, shows none of the conditions such as “DEBTOBS ELIGIBLE—Any natural person who is in sound health # *

The evidence conclusively shows that the general *570 agent Preble knew nothing of Hayes’ health condition and made no inquiry thereof or asked Hayes to sign an application for insurance. Further, the agent failed to ask if Hayes was the principal debtor to NAC and failed to inquire if Hayes was a guarantor to the lease-option. The defendant received a “Home Office Copy” of the certificate of insurance when it was issued, accepted the premium and made no inquiry as to whether Hayes was an “eligible debtor” in sound health. The president of defendant testified that

“A. * * * [T]he credit insurance policy is not underwritten. We don’t require evidence of insurability * * *.
a* * # # *
“Q. But your agents goes ahead and issues a policy to people who are not of sound health and not obligors, and the person who is insured and who pays the premium for this when he repays his loan doesn’t know that he wasn’t eligible unless he dies?
“A. He should have known he wasn’t eligible.
“Q. How would he know?
“A. He would know at the time the insurance was issued. The agent should inform him correctly. We are relying on the agent to do the proper job, you bet.”

Mr. MeCarney, supervisor of defendant’s credit life department, testified:

“Q. O.K. Now, of the eligibility requirements under the credit life insurance which Investors writes, has it changed over the years ?

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Bluebook (online)
525 P.2d 1289, 269 Or. 565, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-truck-lines-v-investors-insurance-corp-or-1974.