Johnson v. Pilot Life Insurance

7 S.E.2d 475, 217 N.C. 139, 128 A.L.R. 1375, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 191
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 28, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 7 S.E.2d 475 (Johnson v. Pilot Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Pilot Life Insurance, 7 S.E.2d 475, 217 N.C. 139, 128 A.L.R. 1375, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 191 (N.C. 1940).

Opinion

Seawell, J.

Tbe appeal of tbe plaintiff is from a judgment as of nonsuit made at tbe conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence and at tbe conclusion of all tbe evidence.

Plaintiff sued on an insurance contract containing provisions for tbe payment of fixed installments to tbe insured on proof of total and permanent disability, as defined in tbe contract and, upon tbe conditions named, waiving further payment of premiums.

Plaintiff claims tbat by reason of an accident, presently described, be was disabled witbin tbe meaning of tbe insurance policy and liability tbereon bad accrued. He further complains tbat while be was physically weak and without mental capacity to make a contract, tbe defendant, through its representatives and agents, came to see him and fraudulently procured from him a release from liability on tbe payment to him of tbe sum of $5,000.00, which be alleges is.an unfair and inadequate consideration. He seeks to have this settlement rescinded and to recover tbe amount alleged to be due on bis insurance down to tbe institution of this action — $13,500.00, subject to tbe credit of $5,000.00 received in tbe challenged settlement.

Tbe defendant admits tbe contract, denies liability upon it, pleads tbe release, and claims that tbe settlement was fair and unaccompanied by *141 any fraud or undue influence or unfair practice in its procurement. Defendant avers that plaintiff was mentally competent to execute the release and contends that the settlement, as it appeared at the time, was not unfavorable to plaintiff.

Defendant further pleads the bar of the statute of limitations, alleging that-the plaintiff’s cause of action did not accrue during the three years next preceding the commencement of this action.

The plaintiff, seeking to repel the bar of the statute, alleges that he was wanting in mental capacity, in fact was insane, and, therefore, under disability to sue from the time he sustained his injury, which resulted in his disablement under the terms of the policy, until a time well within the period of three years next preceding the institution of the action, and could not be held, therefore, to have discovered, during that period, the fraud perpetrated upon him.

In view of the conclusion we have reached in this case, much of the evidence need not be restated. We think the ease boils down to a consideration of the bar of the statute of limitations and the evidence pro and con upon this point.

From the record, it appears that the plaintiff sustained his injury on 20 May, 1929. On that day he was run over and trampled by a mule on his farm. The upper vertebra of his neck was broken and he sustained other injuries which necessitated hospital treatment. He was put in a cast which reached from the base of the skull almost to the lower end of the spinal column, and remained in this condition for a long while.

Nurses at the hospital and certain persons who came in contact with him from that time on testified that he was mentally incapacitated from that time down to the trial of the case, and the evidence had sufficient body and probative force to be submitted to the jury on that point, if there is no legal impediment to its consideration. Against this evidence, and in contradiction thereof, the defendant offered much evidence to the effect that the plaintiff was mentally competent to transact business, not only at the time the release was procured, but for a time outside the three-year period, during which, as it contends, his cause of action must have accrued, if he had knowledge of the fraud perpetrated upon him or was put upon inquiry as to it. In support of this contention, the defendant introduced testimony of experts and evidence of many business transactions had between the plaintiff and others during that period which tended to prove him of sound mind.

Also, the defendant introduced records showing that the plaintiff had been committed to the State Hospital as an insane person and guardians appointed for him on 21 March, 1933, and the record of a lunacy proceeding had on 1 November, 1933, in which a jury found the plaintiff to be of sound mind, following which the guardianship ended and he *142 was restored to the management of his own affairs. In this connection, the defendant contends that under the evidence plaintiff’s cause of action accrued during this guardianship, and, in support of that, introduced correspondence between the guardians and the insurance company relating to the insurance and settlement had with plaintiff. The defendant further contends that the order in the lunacy proceeding in which plaintiff was pronounced sane and restored to the management of his affairs is res judicata on this point in the present case and bars the plaintiff from asserting a condition of insanity contrary to that finding.

To summarize, the defendant insists, (a) that plaintiff is now barred from maintaining this action, since the statute began to run during the guardianship, and that the bar was effective, therefore, long before plaintiff sued, and (b) that the lunacy proceeding definitely established his status as a sane person; and whether or not the statute had begun to run before that, it must have' run from that time, which was several days over the three-year period. This action was begun-28 November, 1936, and the adjudication was 25 November, 1933. This would have left the plaintiff only a part of three days in which to piece together the mental picture and make whatever investigation might be necessary before discovery might be said to be complete.

Defendant points out that since plaintiff is endeavoring to repel the statute, because of fraud practiced upon him, he must show affirmatively that such discovery was made, or that the' circumstances putting him on inquiry occurred within the three-year period, and that upon this the record is silent.

Nothing else appearing, this is true; but all of these conditions may be met by proof of mental incapacity until within the statutory period, unless, as a matter of law, the plaintiff is precluded from the benefit of such evidence.

1. The mental capacity of the plaintiff was a fact, capable of proof as any other fact, regardless of the finding of the jury in the lunacy proceeding or the order of court following upon it. Certainly if a person is adjudged sane in a lunacy proceeding, he is no more conclusively so-than he might be under natural conditions before the law became concerned with 'the inquiry, and an adjudication of such a court, when presented in a matter not connected with the immediate purpose and scope of the proceeding, when admissible at all, is no more than evidence. Sprinkle v. Wellborn, 140 N. C., 163, 52 S. E., 666.

Between -those who are not parties -or privies to the proceeding, an order in a lunacy proceeding under the statute adjudging a person of unsound mind, or an order in a subsequent proceeding adjudging a person to be of-sound mind and restoring him to the management of his own affairs, is not res judicata, and is not necessarily conclusive of the- *143 mental condition of tbe person discharged.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E.2d 475, 217 N.C. 139, 128 A.L.R. 1375, 1940 N.C. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-pilot-life-insurance-nc-1940.