Kempshall v. Vedder

79 Ill. App. 368
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 8, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 Ill. App. 368 (Kempshall v. Vedder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kempshall v. Vedder, 79 Ill. App. 368 (Ill. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Burroughs

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was commenced by the appellants against the appellee before a police magistrate of Schuyler county, and from his judgment an appeal was taken to the County Court of that county, where the case was tried without a jury by consent of the parties, and that court found for the appellee and gave judgment against the appellants for costs. They bring the case to this court by appeal and insist that the trial court admitted improper evidence for the appellee, improperly refused to sustain appellant’s motion to strike the testimony of the witness Fred Tedder from the record, and that the finding and judgment of the court is contrary to the law and the evidence.

The evidence shows that the appellee procured from the .¿Etna Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, a policy of insurance for $1,500 upon her life, which, by its terms, was to become void upon her failure to pay the annual premium thereon of $62.72, the first on April 5,1897, and a like amount each year. When she procured this policy to be issued she paid cash $8.23, and gave her promissory note to the appellants (by the name and style of P. W. Kempshall & Co.), the general agents of the company, at Peoria, Illinois, for $62.72, due April 6, 1897, which cash and note represented premium and policy from November 21-, 1896, to April 5, 1898. The policy was delivered to her on or about November 24, 1896. About March 26,1897, the note was sent to a bank at Rushville, Illinois, where the appellee lived, for collection; she at that time was in Florida, where she remained until after the note became due, and was by the bank notified to pay the same, but refused to do so, claiming that when she gave the note it was verbally agreed that if when the note was due she did not then care to continue her insurance any longer, she need not pay it. The note was by its terms an unconditional promise to pay $62.72 on April 6,1897. The suit was commenced June 7, 1897. On the trial in the County Court the appellants offered the note in evidence and rested; the appellee then testified that Mr. Roseberry, an agent of the TEtna Life Insurance Company, in the fall of 1896, called at her store in Rushville, Illinois, and solicited her to insure in his company, and she did apply for the policy and paid him cash $8.23, and gave the note sued on; that the cash paid the premium to April 5,1897, and the note was for the premium from April. 5, 1897, to April 5, 1898; that when she gave the note Roseberry told her “ when the note fell due, if she did not desire to carry the insurance any longer she could drop it and would not have to pay the note; ” that it was his representations that induced her to sign the note and she relied on it. She also introduced Fred Vedder as a witness, who testified that he was a clerk in appellant’s store at Rushville, Illinois; that he was present when the note was signed and heard a part of a conversation then had between the appellee and Mr. Roseberry, in which she said to him, “ Now, Mr. Roseberry, if I don’t see fit to carry this insurance any longer than the first of April, do I understand there will be no more expense ? ” And Mr. Roseberry then said, “No, madam, there will be nothing more.” The defendant then offered in evidence Policy No. 248352, of the .¿Etna Life Insurance Company, dated April 5,1897, insuring the life of the appellee for $1,500, she to pay $62.72 on April 5, 1897, and a like amount on each fifth day of April thereafter for twenty years; also form No. 122, attached to the policy, and- which was as follows, viz.:

1 “ Form Ho. 122.
Hartford, Cohn., Hoy. 24th, 1896.
In consideration of the advance payment of eight and 23-100 dollars, under policy Ho. 248352, on the life of Mrs. Emma B. Tedder, temporary insurance, subject to the conditions of said policy, shall commence when the same is delivered and shall cover the term intervening between said delivery and five o’clock p. m. of the date of said policy, when if the regular premium required by the policy is not paid the insurance will cease. Said advance payment shall be regarded as the first premium named in section 5 of said policy for the temporary insurance described above only, but shall not be considered in determining any value or benefit to be derived from said policy after the date of the same and in any event of any claim arising by reason of death of the insured prior to the date of said policy, one full year’s premium shall be deducted from the amount otherwise due and payable by the company.
J. L. English, Sec’y.”

Section 5 of the policy is as follows, viz.:

“ This policy shall not take effect until the first premium hereon as described in form Ho. 122, attached hereto, shall have been actually paid, during the lifetime and good health of the insured, and within sixty days from Hovember 24th, 1896 (a receipt for which payment shall be the deli veri’- of this policy), and if any subsequent premium be not paid when due during the lifetime of said insured, then this policy shall cease and determine, except as provided in sections 3 and 8; and no premium on this policy shall be considered paid unless a receipt shall be given therefor, signed by an executive officer of said company.”

The appellee also stated in her evidence that she kept the policy from the time she received it in Hovember, 1896, until the trial before the police magistrate, and never during that time tried to get it canceled.

The appellants then introduced Mr. Eoseberry, who wrote the insurance on the life of the appellee, and he testified that no such statement or representation was made by him as testified to by the appellee, nor did the appellee and he have the conversation testified to by the witness, Fred Tedder, in which the appellee said to him, “ How Mr. Eoseberry, if I don’t see fit to carry this insurance any longer than the first of April, do I understand there will be no more expense % ” and that he did not then say, “Ho, madam, there will be nothing more.” The bill of exceptions shows that when the appellee was asked as a witness the question which brought from her the answer in which she claimed that when she gave the note Eoseberry told her “ that when the note fell due, if she did not desire to carry the insurance any longer, she could drop it, and would not have to pay the note, that it was his representation that induced her to sign the note, and she relied upon it,” the appellants objected to the question because it called for a parol contemporaneous agreement to vary the written terms of the note sued upon, but the court overruled the objection and the appellants excepted. A like objection, ruling and exception were made to the questions put to the witness Fred Vedder, which elicited his testimony on the conversation he heard between appellee and Eoseberry, when the note was given; and the appellants also moved the court to strike from the record the evidence of the witness Fred Vedder for the reason that it was an attempt to show that the appellants and appellee made a parol contemporaneous agreement which varied the express terms of the note sued on, but the court overruled the motion and the appellants excepted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 Ill. App. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kempshall-v-vedder-illappct-1898.