Houston Life Ins. Co. v. Dabbs

95 S.W.2d 484, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 660
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 1936
DocketNo. 10066.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 484 (Houston Life Ins. Co. v. Dabbs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston Life Ins. Co. v. Dabbs, 95 S.W.2d 484, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 660 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

Upon a jury’s verdict on special issues, as well as upon its own conclusions upon the law and evidence, the trial court gave the appellee a $1,620 judgment against the appellant, pursuant to a certificate or contract of insurance that had been extant between them since the date of its issuance on May 10 of 1928, $1,000 of it being for the total disability indemnity provided for in the contract, the remaining $620 being for the 12 per cent, penalty and reasonable attorney’s fees provided for in R.S. art. 4736, as amended by Acts 1931, c. 91, § 1 (Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 4736), in the amounts of $120 for the penalty and $500 for the attorney’s fee.

The record and. the briefs of both sides are needlessly long, thereby imposing undue labor upon a court the normal grist to which from a very productive hinterland is far greater than the mental and physical limitations of any three-member body could ever currently dispose of; however, the appellant company’s main contentions for reversal may be boiled down to these presentments, in substance:

(1) That it had been chartered and had conducted its business as a local mutual aid association under Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 4875a- — 1 et seq., hence, under the express provisions of article 4875a- — 24 of that statute, it was exempt in any event from liability for the attorney’s fees and statutory penalty so imposed upon it under article 4736, to which it was not amenable;

(2) That it at all times had conducted its business as such local mutual aid association in accordance with such article 4875a — 1 et seq., also pursuant to R.S. art. 4859, and under its permits to conduct such a mutual aid business under assessments only against its members by virtue of permits for that purpose to it from the commissioner of life insurance of the state of Texas; that it had never so conducted its affairs as to lead either the appellee or any one else ttf believe that it was operating any other kind of business than such a mutual aid association, hence it was not amenable to any other statutes than those so invoked by it;

(3) That under the specific provisions of the contract between the parties herein sued upon, it was in no event liable to the appellee in any sum of money whatever, but was only bound to levy assessments against Group A of its members and pay the proceeds of the assessment to appel-lee, in an amount not to exceed $1,000;

(4) That the policy herein, under its clause providing therefor, had not .become incontestable, because the insurance thereunder started anew in March of 1931 on account of a health warranty executed by the appellee on that date, hence one year thereafter had not elapsed before appellant’s answer in this suit was filed;

(5) That the policy sued upon was invalid because in the application therefor, which is a part of the same, the appellee had untruthfully warranted that at that time he was in good health and neither under the care or treatment of any one for, i;or was in fact suffering from, any ailment whatever;

(6) That the findings of the jury, wherein they determined that the appellee had been totally disabled from disease since September 15 of 1931, such total disability having begun on May 1 of 1931, that such total disability would continue during the remainder of his life, that his wife in his behalf had given notice of appellee’s claim of disability prior to September 15 of 1931, that the appellee had been in good health at the time of his reinstatement 'on February 19, of 1931, and that a reasonable attorney’s fee to the appellee herein was $500, were all without sufficient support in the evidence and should have been set aside;

(7) That even if appellant had violated the terms of article 4875a — 1 et seq., under which it claimed to have been organized, by doing business outside of the territorial limitation therein specified, as the appellee charged, such violation did not make it amenable or subject to the penalties of the general insurance statutes of Texas, since the article 4875a — 27 itself provides a penalty for such a violation, which is an action in the name of the state of Texas, through its Attorney General, for the forfeiture of the charter of the offending corporation, etc.;

*487 (8) That the trial court erred in admitting the testimonies of the witnesses, Miss Berner, Mrs. Saladiner, and George F. Conant, to the general purport, respectively, as follows:

(a) That-.of Miss Berner as to the records of the Jefferson Davis Hospital, when it appeared that she had no personal knowledge of the matters stated therein,' did not know who made the entries she was testifying to, nor who kept the records, nor whether such records had been correctly kept, and when 'the absence of the person who had kept them had not been accounted for;

(b) That of Mrs.' Saladiner to the effect that she had observed the appellee since his illness, that is, since April 4, 1931, and that there is quite a bit of difference now in his physical appearance from what it was prior to April 20, 1931, and when the subject of such statements, the appellee himself, was then in attendance upon the court, and hence was available for observation direct by the jury;

(c) That of Mr. Conant, which was brought out on cross-examination by the appellee’s counsel, tending to show that the address of himself the appellee had given the insurance company at the time he took out the policy involved should be the one where notices from it to him might be mailed was not his correct address, since the face of.the insurance policy, together with the application therefor also, thus provided otherwise;

(9) That the court erred in refusing to permit Dr. 'Westmoreland to testify as to whether or not he would have recommended the appellee as an insurable risk for life insurance on May 10 of 1928, after having examined him during the preceding April following injuries the appel-lee had then sustained in an automobile accident, when Dr. Westmoreland as a duly qualified physician who made numerous physical examinations for life insurance companies, recommending the acceptance or rejection of applicants therefor, and having thus been familiar with appellee’s condition at that time;

(10) That the appellant was not liable for the predetermined lump sum of $1,000, since the certificate sued upon merely bound it to pay such proceeds as were derived from an assessment against its members of $1 each, not to exceed a total of $1,000, when the evidence showed there were only 874 members in the assessable group, and hence the total that could have been raised in the manner agreed upon by the parties would not have exceeded $874;

(11)In no event was the appellant liable for the attorney’s fees, the 12 per cent, penalty, and interest visited upon it as pursuant to article 4736, for its alleged failure to pay the disability claim within 30 days after demand therefor had been made, because in this instance the insured’s contract with his attorneys was to allow them one-third of any recovery he might obtain from the appellant for the prosecution of this suit against it.

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 484, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-life-ins-co-v-dabbs-texapp-1936.