Illinois Life Ass'n v. Wells

65 N.E. 1072, 200 Ill. 445
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 65 N.E. 1072 (Illinois Life Ass'n v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Life Ass'n v. Wells, 65 N.E. 1072, 200 Ill. 445 (Ill. 1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee recovered a judgment in the superior court of Cook county against the appellant on a life insurance policy issued by the latter to her husband, Charles B. Wells. The Branch Appellate Court for the First District having affirmed that judgment, the company prosecutes this appeal.

The policy contained the usual provision that if the installments of premiums were not paid on or before the day when the same should fall due the insurance should lapse and the policy become null and void. The policy was dated January 27, 1898, and provided for the payment of quarterly installments of §9.76 in advance. The insured died on the 14th day of November, 1898, having been sick but a few days. For the installment due July 27,1898, he had made his promissory note, due and payable in thirty days, with a provision that if the note was not paid at maturity the policy should become void. That note was never paid. On October following, another installment became due, which also remained unpaid at the time of his death.

The declaration averred that Charles B. Wells, at all times prior to the day of his death, had" paid the premiums on his policy according to the terms thereof. 'The defendant filed a plea of the general issue and two special pleas, the first averring the non-payment of the above mentioned note and also of the installment due October 27,1898; the1 second, the forfeiture of the policy for the non-payment of the last installment. To these special pleas no reply whatever was made. Upon the trial, which was by jury, the plaintiff, conceding the nonpayment of said installments, relied upon a waiver by the defendant and introduced evidence for the purpose of proving the same. That evidence was not objected to by the defendant upon the ground of variance. At the close of the- evidence the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict in its favor, which was refused. Thereupon, among others, it asked the following instructions, which were given:

4. “In this case the plaintiff is required to aver in her declaration, and prove upon this trial, performance of the agreement sued on, or a waiver of such performance by the defendant; and such promissory conditions in the policy as were undertaken to be performed on the part of the insured are conditions precedent, unless waived or dispensed with by defendant, and the plaintiff is bound to prove them on the trial, and if no evidence of such performance is shown the plaintiff cannot recover.”

6. “By the terms of the policy in this case the premiums were payable quarterly, in advance, on the 27th day of April, July, October and January in each year during the life of the insured, and the failure to pay any premium on or before the day it became due will prevent a recovery in this case unless such payment was waived by the defendant.”

The seventh is to the same effect, but refers specially to the note, and informs the jury that unless the note was paid as provided or payment thereof waived or dispensed with, the verdict should be for the defendant. Other instructions were given and refused, but for the purposes of this opinion they need not be set out, but will be hereafter noticed.

At the time the policy was taken the name of the company was “The Bankers’ and Merchants’ Life Association.” The declaration alleges that on January 19, 1898, at a meeting of the policyholders of said association, the name of the corporation was changed to “The Illinois Life Association,” defendant herein.

It is first insisted on this appeal that there was no evidence offered upon the trial tending to prove a waiver of the payment of said note and delinquent installment, and therefore the trial court erred in refusing to give the peremptory instruction asked by the defendant. The in.sured acted as an agent for the company in soliciting insurance during the time his policy ran. The company kept an account with him for commissions due as such agent, and at least some of the installments on his policy were paid out of such commissions. After his death a number of notes taken up, receipts and other memoranda were found in his desk relating to transactions with the company, and from these it sufficiently appears that none of the installments were paid on the dates they fell due, and we think they also tend to show that at least a part of them were paid some time after they became due. From this documentary evidence, and the reasonable inferences and intendments to be drawn therefrom, it appears the company, by its dealings with the insured, waived, from time to time, the prompt payment of premiums. But it further appears that a friend of Wells and his family called on the company soon after his death, and he testified: “I went right down to the insurance company’s office in the Fort Dearborn building, that was the Illinois Life Association, and inquired for the manager, * * * and one of the gentlemen, Mr. Brown, * * * assured me that the manager was busy for the moment but would be at leisure to see me. I said, ‘Possibly you can give me the information. * * * Has Mr. C. B. Wells any insurance policy here?’ I said, T make a business of loaning money, and I want to inquire the fact concerning it. Mr. Wells has often applied to me for loans, and I want to know just what shape it is in.’ They said, ‘Yes, he has; but then there are some unpaid premiums that are still due upon his policy that is a lien against it,’ and I said, ‘What are they?’ They then picked out some notes they had before them, and at this juncture the manager came in, and this gentleman repeated, and I repeated, my inquiries to him, * * * and they said, ‘Why, yes, he has a policy here, and here are the notes, and do you want to pay them?’ I says, T don’t know as I do at this time; how much are they?’ I inquired the amount, which was told me. I don’t just remember what they were at this time, and I says, ‘But hasn’t he insurance coming in right along,—some credit account that balances these notes?’ and they said, ‘Yes, he has; but that is rather an uncertainty, but if you will take up the note they will be the only lien against this policy. To be safe, take up and pay the notes,’ and I says, T will see about it,’ and with that I left the office. They had the notes and showed them to me. They put them back in the file where they had got them from. I didn’t have the notes in my hands, but they held them so I could see' the lines. That is all the conversation I remember. This was two or three days after the death of the insured.”

It is true this witness is flatly contradicted by Mr. Brown and the manager as to this conversation, they denying that they told him that Wells had insurance in the company or that the notes could be paid, but the weight of the testimony was a question for the jury and the Appellate Court, and not' for us. This evidence being accepted as true, shows that at that time the company did not consider the policy as having lapsed, and did not intend to declare a forfeiture for the failure to make the payments when they became due. The witness says that he did not tell either Brown or the manager that -Wells was dead, but assumed or understood they knew it. Whether they did or not could’ make no difference as to the competency of this testimony and its legal effect.

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.E. 1072, 200 Ill. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-life-assn-v-wells-ill-1902.