Kellogg v. National Protective Insurance

155 S.W.2d 512, 236 Mo. App. 837, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 130
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 155 S.W.2d 512 (Kellogg v. National Protective Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kellogg v. National Protective Insurance, 155 S.W.2d 512, 236 Mo. App. 837, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 130 (Mo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

*840 CAVE, J.

Appellant sued in the Jackson County Circuit Court on two policies of accident and life insurance issued by respondent to her husband, who, during the life of both policies, was killed in an automobile accident. In one, the appellant was the beneficiary, and the amount claimed therein in the suit below was $1500. The other was payable to the estate of the insured, and the amount claimed therein was $500. In the trial below, there was no dispute about the policies being in effect at the date of the death of insured and no dispute about proof of death being made.

The appellant and her husband resided in the State of Kansas at all times here involved,'and he was killed in an automobile accident in that State on April 24, 1938. The probate court in Kansas ordered his executrix to assign the latter policy to her as her statutory widow’s allowance, which was done, and she sues on both policies in her own name.

The respondent is a Missouri corporation, with its chief office in Kansas City, Missouri. The deceased ordered the policies, they were sent to him from the home office, and he paid the premiums thereon, all by mail.

The appellant contends the policies are to be construed and enforced under the laws of Kansas, and she pleaded in her petition certain Kansas statutes and decisions which forbid provisions in such policies reducing the liability below the face amount unless printed in bold type of greater prominence than the rest of the text; and made such policies valid as if the forbidden provisions did not appear therein. Other allegations in the petition set out certain Kansas statutes and decisions under which appellant claimed respondent had transacted business in the State of Kansas in issuing, delivering and collecting premiums on said policies, and in adjusting the same.

The respondent’s answer denied it had transacted this-or any other business in the State of Kansas, and pleaded certain clauses of the respective policies, reducing liability below the face amount after the insured had reached certain specified ages. These were not printed in large type, as required by the Kansas statute. The deceased had passed those ages when he died. Respondent admitted liability for the reduced amounts and tendered such amounts into court. The appellant did not file a reply. The case was tried to the court without a jury; respondent’s theory was adopted, and judgment went for respondent in view of said tenders.

At the close of the evidence, appellant had requested certain declarations of law applying the aforesaid Kansas statutes to the case and *841 stating that any contrary course would violate Article IV, Section I of the Constitution of the United States, by denying full faith and credit to the statutes and decisions of a sister State. These declarations were refused. Motion for new trial was overruled and appellant filed application and prayed for appeal to the Supreme Court of Missouri because of the constitutional question involved, and the appeal was so granted. That court held that there was no constitutional question involved, and certified the cause to this court.

The case being stripped of any constitutional question leaves but one question for decision, and that is, were these two contracts of insurance Missouri contracts or Kansas contracts! The appellant concedes that if the Kansas statutes, to be later referred to, do not apply, then she is not entitled to recover anything other than the amount tendered into court. The policy sued on in the first count was issued May 3, 1932, for $1000, and by the terms of the policy it increased in value $100 per year for five years, so that at the death of the insured, it had a face value of $1500. The second policy was for $500 and was issued April 1, 1938. The manner of purchasing the policies was the same in each case. Respondent advertised in the Kansas City Star, a newspaper published in Kansas City, Missouri, soliciting applications for insurance. The insured saw the advertise-, ment at his home in Portis, Kansas, and wrote a letter of inquiry to respondent at its office in Kansas City, Missouri. In reply, respondent sent each policy to insured for inspection. The policies are not dated, and provide that they shall become effective only from the date the final premium receipt is dated and signed at the home office. After inspecting the policies, when they were received through the mail, the insured sent the amount of the premium to the respondent by mail and received a receipt therefor by mail, which receipt had been signed at its office.

Insured was seventy-seven years.of age at the time of his death. The first policy, among other things, provided that after the insured had reached or passed his seventy-fifth birthday, the benefits payable would be one-fourth of the face of the policy. The second policy provided that after the insured’s seventieth birthday, benefits would be one-third of the face. These reducing provisions are printed in the same type as the text of the policy, and the Kansas statute, which is here involved, provides that the provisions of a policy reducing the amount to be paid by reason of the circumstances under which the loss is incurred, to an amount less-than that provided for the same loss occurring under ordinary circumstances, shall be printed in bold face type, and with greater prominence than any other provisions of the-text of the policy. Thereby arises the controversy in this lawsuit. Appellant contends that both policies are Kansas contracts and the Kansas statute applies, while respondent asserts that both policies are Missouri contracts and must be construed according to the Missouri law.

*842 Appellant argues in ber brief that because tbe Kansas statute requiring the printing of exceptions in insurance policies in bold face type applies to all policies delivered in the State, regardless of the place of contract, it is a proper exercise of police power and overrides any contract provision, and cites the cases of Dolan v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, 173 Mass. 197, and Harwood v. Security Mutual Life Insurance Company, 263 Mass. 341. An examination of the opinion in those cases shows they have no application here. In the Dolan case, supra,, it appears that the insurance company was doing business in Massachusetts, and the contract of insurance was made through its agent in that State and delivered and paid for in the State of Massachusetts, and the only fact relied on by the insurance com-panjr was the provision on the back of the policy, as follows:

‘1 This contract shall be governed by and construed only according to the laws of the State under which the corporation is organized.”

That presents an entirely different question from the one now under consideration.

In the Harwood case, supra, the court was there discussing the question of a demurrer to a petition, which, among other things, alleged that the policies were issued by the defendant to plaintiff in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. We do not believe the two Massachusetts cases cited throw any light on the question now cop-fronting us.

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Bluebook (online)
155 S.W.2d 512, 236 Mo. App. 837, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellogg-v-national-protective-insurance-moctapp-1941.