Judd v. Lubbock Mutual Aid Ass'n No. 2

269 S.W. 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1925
DocketNo. 2430.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 269 S.W. 284 (Judd v. Lubbock Mutual Aid Ass'n No. 2) 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
Judd v. Lubbock Mutual Aid Ass'n No. 2, 269 S.W. 284 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

Mrs. Judd filed this suit against the Lubbock Mutual Aid Association No. 2, an unincorporated association, and against Elmo Wall, to recover on a certificate of insurance issued by the association on the life of her husband, N. B. Judd, deceased, for $1,000, alleging that the policy provided for payment to her, in case of death of said N. B. Judd, of $1 for each member in good standing, and alleging that there were 1,000 such members of said association, and that said N. B. Judd was in good standing at the time of his death. She also sought to hold Elmo Wall personally liable, because at that time he was conducting a business which he called the Lubbock Mutual Aid Association No. 2, and in the conduct of said business sought members and collected fees from them, and therefrom paid death benefits.

Appellees answered, specially pleading that N. B. Judd was not in good health when he made the application for insurance and when the certificate was issued to him, and that they did not know of such bad health of N. B. Judd at the time such application was made and such certificate issued.

Appellant, by supplemental petition, replied to this allegation that she had made no representations as to N. B. Judd’s health, and had not authorized any one to make same; that the insured had made no such representation, and did not sign the application for insurance; that the application was made out by A. Judd, the agent of defendants Wall and the association; that, if N. B. Judd was not in good health, it was known to A. Judd, the agent of defendants; that defendants did not issue the policy by reason of any representations that insured was in good health; and that by reason of the foregoing, the defendants were estopped to rely upon the bad health of N. B. Judd.

The case was submitted to the jury upon special issues, and the jury found: First, that A. Judd was the agent of Elmo Wall or of the association; second, that Elmo Wall, at the time the application was made, could by the exercise of ordinary diligence have ascertained that N. B. Judd was in bad health ; and, third, that the Lubbock Mutual Aid Association No. 2, at the time the application was made, had no notice that Judd was in bad health, and upon these findings thé court entered judgment that plaintiff take nothing by her suit. From this judgment appeal has been taken to this court.

The errors presented by appellant’s propositions are: (1) The jury having found that A. Judd was the- agent of the defendants, and the evidence being conclusive that A. Judd filled out the application for insurance, and that he knew that Judd was not in good health; (2) as neither the beneficiary nor insured made any misrepresentation and as the misrepresentations, if any, were made by the agent of the defendants, the defendants were not deceived, and did not rely on said misstatements; (3) the court erred in render *285 ing judgment for defendants and against plaintiff, because tbe findings of the jury are conflicting on a material issue, and a mistrial should have been declared.

The evidence shows that N. B. Judd was in bad health at the time the application for insurance was signed; that his. cousin, A. Judd, signed the application for him; that Elmo Wall and the association had no actual knowledge of the bad health of N. B. Judd at the time said application for insurance was made; that A. Judd was paid a small part of the first premium fees by Elm'o Wall. The application was dated October 10, 1922. In this application the questions, “Save you been treated by a physician in the last 12 months? And for what cause?” were not answered; but the question, “Are you now in good health?” was answered, “Tes.” It appears from the testimony of Dr. Wagner, which is not denied, that he made an examination of N. B. Judd on October 6, 1922, 4 days before the date of the application, and that Judd was in an advanced stage of pulmonary tuberculosis, and that he, the doctor, so informed the said Judd. It appears that Mrs. Judd, N. B. Judd, and A. Judd had some conversation about taking out insurance. Mrs. Judd testifies that she talked to Mr. A. Judd about it in his store, and that A. Judd promised to go to Elmo Wall of the Lubbock Mutual Aid Association No. 2 and see about it, and -after-wards A. Judd “told her he had.” She did not know how much the policy would be, and did not say anything to A. Judd about paying the premium — he said he had attended to it for her. She knew that her husband was in bad health. N. B. Judd died December 2, 1922, something over six weeks after the making of the application.

Elmo Wall, testifying relative to the facts surrounding the making of the application, gives this as his version of it:

“I run a number of these associations, and attend to signing them up. I- didn't send Mr. Judd a copy of my by-laws; these by-laws were printed prior to the issuance of this policy, I furnish them to my agents. I have several agents, but Mr. A. Judd wasn’t one of them. In a way I allowed him a commission; we do some times. A party will say, ‘I can get somebody to join, would you allow me something if I get you a member? ’ and he says, ‘I got you four members,, will you allow me something?’ and I told him I would. I allowed him something that time, but didn’t a good many times. If he eve'r wrote anybody except these other two relatives, I don’t know anything about "it. We frequently allow a $1 commission when somebody brings us a member. We don’t require that our applicants be examined, the state law don’t require it. We don’t take one who we have reason to doubt being in good health, not if we know it. * * *
“A. Judd asked for insurance for N. B. Judd and his wife October 23, 1922, and I remember the occasion. He said he had some relatives needed some insurance (this conversation oe-curred some time before the date the application was made), and that at some later time he was going to take out. some insurance for them, they were poor people, and were unable to pay for it, and he was going to do it for them, and later on the 23d of October I met him here at the foot of the stairs in the Johnson building where I offieed at the time, and he appeared to have just come down, and he said, T came over here to talk about that insurance,’ so we went up the stairs, and that’s when the applications were filled out. I suppose I asked him all the questions in this regular printed blank; asked him about his physician. He didn’t tell me anything, said he was in good health, I don’t remember the words, anyway he was in good health, that’s on there. I suppose he told me he had no physician — I asked him all the questions on there — and evidently he didn’t tell me of his having been treated by a physician, because he didn’t have a physician on there.
“After this application was made, I saw an item in the Avalanche that A. Judd had taken N. B. Judd, who had been sick for some time, to San Angelo on account of his health, evidently the latter part of November. I saw A. Judd in about a week or so after that, evidently the day the man died; anyway it was on Saturday. I saw him in my office. He came up there to pay for some policies of membership, fees of his son or son-in-law. As he-came in the office there was a person in the office, so I just went with him in the back room and says, ‘Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.W. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judd-v-lubbock-mutual-aid-assn-no-2-texapp-1925.