Jones v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company

289 F. Supp. 930, 20 Ohio Misc. 227, 48 Ohio Op. 2d 284, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9074
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 23, 1968
DocketCiv. A. 5371
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 289 F. Supp. 930 (Jones v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, 289 F. Supp. 930, 20 Ohio Misc. 227, 48 Ohio Op. 2d 284, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9074 (W.D. Mich. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

FOX, District Judge.

On June 27, 1966, plaintiff, Harriet Lois Jones, commenced this action against defendant, John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, to recover the proceeds of a life insurance contract entered into by herself, her husband, R. Edsel Jones, and defendant on or about December 30, 1965.

In May of 1968, a jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. During the trial this court decided various legal issues which we believe merit further discussion and analysis.

The facts can be briefly summarized as follows:

Raymond Edsel Jones and Hugh W. Crouse, an agent of the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, met in 1963 while Mr. Jones, who lived in Grand Rapids, Michigan, was in Ohio on business.

Mr. Crouse operates under the name of “Crouse, Long and Associates” in Mansfield, Ohio, as a special agent of the William B. Hoyer Agency, of Colum *932 bus, Ohio. He is licensed to sell life insurance in both Ohio and California.

The Hoyer Agency is one of the oldest, most respected and successful John Hancock agencies in the country.

Mr. Crouse is an experienced life insurance salesman, having sold over a million dollars of insurance per year for most of the years he has been with the John Hancock Company.

After they became acquainted, Mr. Crouse and Mr. Jones periodically discussed Mr. Jones’ life insurance needs. Mr. Jones purchased a policy of life insurance from Mr. Crouse some time during 1964, which was written by Mr. Crouse for the Franklin Life Insurance Company.

Mr. Crouse continued to discuss Mr. Jones’ insurance requirements when they would see each other in Mansfield and elsewhere. Both were private airplane pilots and did a substantial amount of traveling.

Finally, in December, 1965, Mr. Crouse persuaded Mr. Jones to purchase additional life insurance from John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company. The type of policy or policies, and the total amount, within limits, was left up to Mr. Crouse.

Mr. Crouse concluded that an ordinary life policy (called a Signature 25) with a face value of $43,000, and an additional $43,000 in the event of accidental death, with provisions for an additional $860 per month payments for a decreasing term of twenty years, would be a proper policy for Mr. Jones.

The application for the insurance was prepared by Mr. Crouse in Mansfield. It designated Mrs. Jones as the owner and primary beneficiary, and Mr. Jones as the insured.

After the application was completed, Mr. Crouse arranged for Mr. Jones to be examined in Mansfield on December 8, 1965, by two doctors who worked regularly for the John Hancock Company. Both examinations revealed that Mr. Jones was a normal, healthy man.

Subsequently, at the invitation of Mr. Crouse, who had certain business interests in Los Angeles, Mr. and Mrs. Jones and .their children flew to Los Angeles to spend the 1965 Christmas Holidays with him and his wife.

Mrs. Jones and their daughter went by commercial flight, while Mr. Jones and their three sons flew in his own plane as far as Texas. After being grounded there by foul weather, they proceeded to California via commercial airline.

While in California, the Joneses and Mr. Crouse met on approximately December 30, 1965, and completed the insurance application. Because Mr. Jones was a licensed pilot, a supplemental aviation application was required.

The supplemental aviation application dealt with the number of hours flown, both in total and by year, by Mr. Jones. Under the circumstances this information had to be estimated as Mr. Jones’ log books in which actual hours were recorded were in his plane in Texas.

Nevertheless, Mr. Crouse decided to proceed on the basis of Mr. Jones’ estimates and completed the application. Mr. Crouse explained to the Joneses that because of his flying hours, he might be charged an added premium of $2.50 per thousand. It is undisputed that Mr. Jones said that he would accept the policy with the added premium.

In order to complete the transaction, Mr. Crouse asked the Joneses to sign the application. This was done on the bottom of the application form, Part A. To satisfy defendant’s regulation that the first month’s premium be submitted with the application for insurance, Mr. Crouse persuaded the Joneses to sign in blank two cognovit notes and an assignment of the policy, which forms were supplied to Crouse by the Hoyer Agency. Mr. Jones was willing to write a check for the amount of the premium; however, Mr. Crouse told him that a note *933 would be better than a check, since the exact premium could be accurately computed by the Hoyer Agency and the note then completed by them.

Below the signatures of the Joneses on Part A of the application form, a conditional receipt was attached. It read as follows:

NOTICE: APPLICABILITY OF THIS CONDITIONAL RECEIPT IS GOVERNED BY AGREEMENT B OF APPLICATION
CONDITIONAL RECEIPT FOR ADVANCE PAYMENT WITH APPLICATION FOR NEW INSURANCE
RECEIVED from_____________________________________the sum of $______ paid with application to the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company bearing the same date and number as this Receipt. If this sum is at least one month’s proportionate part of the premium according to the Company’s published rates for the policy and premium interval selected in the application, and if the Company at its Home Office shall determine that each person proposed for insurance, including the proposed Insured, was, on the date of completion of the latest of all required Parts A and B and medical examinations pertaining to each such person, acceptable under the Company’s rules for the premium class, amount and plan of insurance, and additional benefits, if any, applied for, the contract applied for shall take effect retroactively as of the date of the latest of all required parts of the application and medical examinations, or of such other date as may be requested in the application and accepted by the Company, notwithstanding any change in acceptability due to any disease contracted or injury sustained after the date of completion of all required parts of the application and medical examinations.
If said contract takes effect hereunder, any balance of the said premium may be paid while all persons proposed for insurance are living, and within 60 days hereafter. If the balance is not so paid, the contract shall continue only for such proportionate part of said premium interval as the amount paid under this Conditional Receipt bears to said premium.
The application shall be deemed to have been declined if it has not been approved by the Company within 60 days hereafter and the amount paid shall be returned upon surrender of this receipt. Any check tendered is received subject to collection only.
John Hancock Mutual
Name of pro- Life Insurance Company
posed Insured______________ Date_____ 19__ By____ Agent
Form 156-CR-63

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289 F. Supp. 930, 20 Ohio Misc. 227, 48 Ohio Op. 2d 284, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-john-hancock-mutual-life-insurance-company-miwd-1968.