Holloman v. Jefferson Standard Life Ins.

188 So. 500, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 216
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1939
DocketNo. 5770.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 188 So. 500 (Holloman v. Jefferson Standard Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holloman v. Jefferson Standard Life Ins., 188 So. 500, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 216 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

On August 15, 1935, defendant issued to Joseph Gerald Holloman a policy of ordinary life insurance for $1,000 in which his wife, plaintiff herein, is named beneficiary. The insured was then in the employ of the Victoria Sash & Door Company, located in the city of Shreveport, herein referred to as the Company. At the same time a dozen or more of said Company’s employees effected like insurance with defendant. All of them, including Holloman, subscribed to the “Salary Savings Franchise” agreement which defendant was offering and made available under such policies. By this agreement each insured authorized the employer to deduct from his compensation and transmit to the insurer the premiums as they fell due. Holloman desired to pay his premiums monthly. The monthly amount was fixed at $1.91. It was due on the 15th of each month. A grace *501 period of one month for the payment of each installment was stipulated in the policy. It contains the additional provision that so long as the premiums were paid monthly, “notice of any premium or installment due” was waived. The insured was given the right to abrogate said mode of payment of premiums and to personally assume the duty of discharging same.

The modus operandi under said agreement was this: in the early part of each month, defendant would make up what is referred to as an invoice or deduction list containing the name of each insured who was due a premium for that month, with the amount thereof, and forward same by mail to the Company. The amount was then supposed to be deducted by the Company from the wages or salary due to the insured and immediately forwarded to the insurer’s office in New Orleans. A slip showing the name of the insured, the number of his policy, the amount of premium and date due, was delivered to the insured. This was his receipt.

The insurance policy also contains a stipulation whereby the insurer agreed to pay to the designated beneficiary, in event of the death of the assured “through external, violent and accidental means,” etc., an additional amount equal to the face of the policy.

Joseph Gerald Holloman, the assured, was injured in an automobile collision on January IS, 1937, from which he died two days later. His widow, the beneficiary, instituted this suit to recover double the face of the policy. The insurer has consistently denied liability.

The last premium paid under the policy was made on October 15, 1936. All premiums due to that date were paid but some payments were not made within the “grace period”. The installment due December 15, 1935, was paid on January 22, 1936, or seven days late. The installment due Feb- ’ ruary 15, 1936, was paid on March 21, 1936, or six days late. The installment due April 15, 1936, was paid on May 22, 1936, or seven days late and the installment due July 15, 1936, was paid on August 19, 1936, or four days late. As a condition precedent to acceptance of the second and third of the above named overdue payments, defendant required the insured to execute formal applications for reinstatement of the policy which was declared therein to have lapsed on account of non-payment of the premiums when dúe nor within the grace period. No such application was required prior to acceptance of delinquent premiums in the other two instances.

On the face of the record the policy lapsed on the 15th day of December, 1936, thirty-three days prior to Holloman’s death (for non-payment of premium due November 15th). Plaintiff contends that the right to declare the policy forfeited on account of non-payment of said premium was waived by defendant. We epitomize, so far as necessary, the allegations of her petition designed to circumvent the apparent obstacles to the success of her suit:

That the Company depended upon defendant to provide it with information pertinent to the status of all of said policies, and required defendant to furnish it with a monthly deduction list, including the deduction to be made from the salary or wage of said insured; that defendant followed the invariable practice of sending this information to the Company by a collector or by mailing the same “when and as they pleased”; that when said list was received by the Company proper deductions were made from the assured’s salary or wages to cover the premiums due, the total of which being then delivered to defendant’s collector or immediately mailed to it; that no deductions whatever were made by the Company until it was presented with said deduction list; that for reasons unknown to petitioner, defendant, for more than one-half of the time, did not present said deduction list to the Company for monthly premium payments by Holloman until after such payments were past due and the “grace period” had elapsed.

That the Company invariably made deductions on the day or the following day on which a deduction list was furnished it under the policy issued to Holloman; that the tardy delivery to the Company of said deduction lists caused the policy holders much uneasiness and annoyance about which they registered many complaints with defendant without effect.

That the insured tried to obtain a monthly deduction from his salary or wages at all times to pay premiums due by him, including the months of November and December, 1936, and January, 1937; and during said months he had wages in the hands of his employer, the Company, sufficient to discharge said premiums.

*502 It is further alléged:

“16. That this long continued practice of delayed collection of these premiums without exacting' a reinstatement or any formality was calculated to deceive and did deceive, the insured into the honest belief that the defendant not only waived the monthly payment of premiums according to the terms of the policy, but it actually desired that the payments be made at greater intervals than thirty days and that no forfeiture of the rights of the insured or his beneficiary would occur by the delayed payments of the premiums.
“17. That by reason of its conduct and of its representations and course of action in accepting delayed premium payments, as hereinbefore described, the defendant is legally and equitably estopped to claim the forfeiture of this policy for non-payment of premiums when due and, plaintiff especially pleads estoppel against defendant.” '

In an amended petition it is alleged that on the day following Holloman’s death, a tender to defendant’s local agent of the premiums then past due on the policy was refused; that defendant from said date has held to the position that the policy had lapsed.

Defendant, after admitting issuance of the policy, payment of premiums thereunder as above mentioned and the death of the assured, denied generally and specially the other allegations 'of the petition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 So. 500, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloman-v-jefferson-standard-life-ins-lactapp-1939.