Inter-Southern Life Ins. Co. v. Stephenson

56 S.W.2d 332, 246 Ky. 694, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 56 S.W.2d 332 (Inter-Southern Life Ins. Co. v. Stephenson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inter-Southern Life Ins. Co. v. Stephenson, 56 S.W.2d 332, 246 Ky. 694, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 14 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Creal, Commissioner

Affirming.

On July 21, 1928, O. D. Estes solicited and secured from Ernest Smith an application to the Inter-Sonthern Life Insurance Company for an insurance policy for $2,000 on his life. The policy applied for was issued and at the request of insured was delivered to his sister, Mrs. Frankie Stephenson, the designated beneficiary, who signed or caused a receipt to be signed therefor in the name of insured. On September 9, Ernest Smith was found dead some distance from the home of his father and near the body was a fruit jar containing a small quantity of moonshine liquor.

On October 25 following the death of insured, Mrs. Stephenson, as the beneficiary, instituted this action in equity in the McCracken circuit court, and in.addition to the foregoing facts alleged in her petition that at the time of the death of insured, the policy was in full force and effect; that in due time she caused notice of his death to be given to the company, which sent one of its agents to make settlement with her. She further alleged, in substance, that the agent and representative of the company admitted liability to the extent of the premium paid on the policy, but denied any further liability and represented to her that her brother had procured the policy by making false and fraudulent state- *696 merits which rendered the policy contract void and of no effect; that the policy had not been delivered to the insured or personally accepted by him during his lifetime, and further that the policy was void because insured destroyed his own life before the policy had been in force for one year; that unless she surrendered the policy and accepted the premium which had been paid thereon, he would institute suit against her and she would have to employ a lawyer and incur costs for more than she would be able to recover; that being illiterate and ignorant of her rights under the contract, she relied solely on the statements made by the company through its agent and representative and accepted the sum offered and surrendered the policy. She further alleged that all the statements, made to her by the company’s agent to induce her to surrender the policy were false and untrue and but for which she would not have accepted the amount paid or surrendered the policy; that the company had wrongfully procured possession of the policy, but that she was entitled to its. possession and asked that it be required to file same in the action. She tendered to the company the amount which she received on surrender of the policy and asked that the settlement which it had secured from her be set aside and that she be adjudged the full amount of the policy with interest from the 12th day of October, 1928, subject to credit by the amount paid to her by the company.

The answer of the company consisted of six paragraphs, the first of which is a general denial of the allegations of the petition and the other five set up certain affirmative defenses which it is unnecessary to now enumerate, since in so far as pertinent, they will be referred to in the discussion of the grounds relied on for reversal.

Evidence was heard on the issues as completed by subsequent pleadings, and judgment was rendered setting aside the settlement by which Mrs. Stephenson was paid the sum of $95.90 in consideration of her surrender of the policy and adjudging that she recover of the company the sum of $2,000 subject to a credit of $95.90 as of date October 19, 1929, with interest from November 10, 1929, and this appeal followed.

In bar of appellee’s right of recovery, appellant pleaded as a full settlement of the matter in controversy that it had paid to appellee the sum of $95.90 in *697 consideration of her surrender of the policy and that the court erred in setting aside that settlement as invalid.

The facts as disclosed by the evidence, in substance, are that appellant maintained a district office at Paducah, Ky., in charge of its agent, L. B. Massie. O. D. Estes was one of its soliciting agents working out of that office, and previous to the time the application for the policy in question was made, had talked to Ernest Smith on the subject of insurance and had solicited him to make application. Ernest Smith was about 25 years old and lived with his father, Richard Walter Smith, in a rural district some miles from Paducah. On July 21, 1928, 0. D. Estes requested L. A. Stephenson to direct' him to the home of Ernest Smith. Stephenson told him he would have difficulty in finding the way and at the solicitation of Estes accompanied him to the Smith home. While there the agent procured Richard Walter Smith and his two sons, Ernest Smith and James William Smith,. to make application to appellant for life insurance. He procured the name of Ernest Smith to bo signed to a blank application; however, the name was signed by Minnie Lee Smith, mother of applicant, at his request. The applicant paid $20 on the premium and Stephenson, either then or later, gave his check to the agent for the remainder. Estes- testified that he asked applicant all the questions in the application and reduced the answers to writing on a separate sheet of paper. Mrs. Frankie Stephenson, sister of Smith, was designated as beneficiary. After the applications were taken, the agent, accompanied by Stephenson, went to the office of the company in Paducah, where, according to the evidence of Estes, the answers made by Ernest Smith were read to and inserted in the application by Massie. In addition to the amount paid by Ernest Smith at the time his application was taken, Stephenson gave his check and a note to cover the balance of the premiums on all the policies applied for by the Smiths. The company had a plan whereby it issued policies of $2,500 or less without medical examination and the policy issued to Ernest Smith was under this plan. Estes further testified that Ernest Smith told him to deliver the policy to Mrs. Stephenson, and when informed he would have to sign a receipt for the policy, he directed him to have Mrs. Stephenson sigu his name *698 to the receipt, and the policy was delivered and receipted for as directed by insured.

After the company received notice of the death of insured, a representative from the legal department of appellant, accompanied by an attorney from Paducah and the district agent who had supplanted Mr. Massie at Paducah, went to the home of L. E. Stephenson, where he procured Mrs. Stephenson to surrender the policy, paying to her the sum of $95.90 and surrendering a note for something over $100 which had been executed by Mr. Stephenson in satisfaction of the balance of the premiums on the policies issued to the Smiths.

The representative from the home office testified, that before going to the Stephenson home, he procured an affidavit from Mrs. Minnie Smith, mother of insured, to the effect that L. A. Stephenson had been trying to get her to take out insurance on all her children and her husband ever since he had married her daughter; that she protested that she was not able to keep up the premiums, whereupon he told her he would keep them up if she would agree to let him keep the amount of the policies above burial expenses in case one of them died; that Ernest Smith-'had suffered from rheumatism ever since he was about four years .of age and it was necessary to have doctors to attend him practically all his life,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 S.W.2d 332, 246 Ky. 694, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-southern-life-ins-co-v-stephenson-kyctapphigh-1933.