Kentucky Home Life Ins. Co. v. Kittinger

90 S.W.2d 673, 262 Ky. 525, 103 A.L.R. 1361, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 790
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 29, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 673 (Kentucky Home Life Ins. Co. v. Kittinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Home Life Ins. Co. v. Kittinger, 90 S.W.2d 673, 262 Ky. 525, 103 A.L.R. 1361, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 790 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

On June 1, 1914, Rudolph Kittinger, the deceased husband of appellee and plaintiff below, Mabel Kittinger, procured an insurance policy on his life in the amount of $500 with the Citizens National Life Insurance Company, a Kentucky corporation. The monthly premiums for the first two years were 62 cents, and double that amount thereafter. Some years after the policy was issued, the company that executed it was absorbed by the Intersouthern Life Insurance Company of Louisville, Ky., and it issued to the insured an “As *526 sumption Certificate” whereby it became obligated to perform the policy agreements. On two occasions before December 1, 1924, the insured defaulted in his monthly payments, but he later, and pursuant to his policy provisions, applied for and secured a reinstatement. He defaulted in the monthly payment dated December 1, 1924, and did not thereafter apply for reinstatement. Before that date be became indebted to. tbe company in tbe sum of $9, for which be executed to it bis note which was unpaid at tbe time [of bis last default. Tbe policy provided that in case of default, and without payment during tbe following 30-day grace period after the policy was in force for three full years, any indebtedness to tbe insurer should be deducted from tbe earnings of the policy at tbe time of default, and that tbe insured should have three options of settlement: (a) By taking extended paid-up insurance for tbe full amount of tbe policy less tbe indebtedness owed; (b) to take a paid-up policy for tbe amount tbe net earnings would buy; or (c) to take tbe net earnings in cash. It was also provided in tbe policy that in such defaulting event, without insured’s exercise of bis optional right, tbe insurer would exercise it for him by giving him extended insurance under option (a).

Pursuant to such provisions (the insurer not having exercised bis option following bis last default), a clerk in tbe home office of tbe Intersoutbern Company, tbe then obligator in the policy, attempted to calculate tbe period of extended insurance to which tbe insured was entitled (tbe amount being reduced to $491 after deducting indebtedness evidenced by insured’s note, supra), and by oversight or mistake be announced a much greater period of extension than tbe policy was entitled to, because of having before him at the time a 20-year payment policy tbe premiums on which for tbe same amount of insurance was much larger than for tbe kind of policy carried by tbe insured, and which accrued larger earnings to tbe insured than a straight life policy. Tbe calculating clerk, therefore, estimated that, according to tbe earnings of such a policy, Kittinger’s insurance was entitled to an extension for tbe period ending November 25, 1940, and tbe company issued a statement to that effect which was attached to tbe policy.

In 1932, tbe Intersoutbern Company became in *527 solvent and its affairs were settled through litigation in the Franklin circuit court, a part of which was a sale of its property and an assumption of its obligation to its policyholders by the purchaser. Appellant and defendant below became the purchaser of such assets, and in its bid therefor it limited the obligations that it assumed to the then current valid policies of the Intersouthern. Its bid was accepted and the sale to it confirmed, thus substituting it as the insurer in all outstanding policies, including the one here sued on, provided they were at that time in force and effect, since its submitted bid expressly stipulated that it only assumed the obligations of policies then in force and effect. Following the completion of its purchase, it issued to Rudolph Kittinger its assumption certificate, and later he died in 1933. The plaintiff was beneficiary in the policy, and she demanded payment of defendant, which it refused upon the ground that the clerk of the Intersouthern Life Insurance Company who calculated tlm extended period of the pollicy in contest mistakenly estimated it as extending to the period abo -e mentioned when it should have been extended, under the terms of the policy, only to February 21, 1926, or for a period of 1 year and 82 days from the date of default on December 1, 1924. Plaintiff by her pleadings admitted the mistake and error relied on, but pleaded the neglect of defendant in discovering the mistake until after the death of the insured, which her counsel insisted had the effect to estop defendant from relying on it.

Following pleadings made the issues and the case was referred to the commissioner of the court to take evidence and report whether or not the policy was in force at the time of the insured’s death. He filed his report in which he made an affirmative answer and recommended judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $491. Defendant filed exceptions to that report, which the court overruled and rendered judgment in accordance with the commissioner’s recommendation, to reverse which defendant filed the record in this court with a motion for an appeal.

It is first insisted by counsel for plaintiff that the admitted mistake was not a mutual one in that the insured did not participate therein; but we are not altogether convinced of the correctness of that insistence. The policy was never out of the possession of *528 the insured, and the data from which such a calculation could he made was contained, either in its face or on its back, or in papers attached to it and from which the correct period of extension could be easily calculated, and which undisputably was 1 year and 82 days from the date of the default, or to and including February 21, 1926. It is, furthermore, conceded that, according to the terms of the policy, the extended insurance to which it was entitled terminated at that date, and that the intermediate time from it to the mistaken date calculated by the clerk of the Intersouthern _ at the time was entirely in excess of the extended period to which the insured was entitled under his policy. Therefore, the alleged obligation of defendant under the policy during that excess period was wholly gratis on the part of the insurer and conferred a favor and benefit on the insured over and above that for which he had contracted and paid, and to which other similar policyholders were not entitled. The declared practice applicable to relief against mutual mistakes as a basis for reformation prevails only where the one resisting the relief denies the mistake and insists that the contract as written embodies the true agreement; but in this case plaintiff, as well as her counsel, admits the mistake relied on. Moreover, the excess extension was without consideration, since the ' insured neither surrendered nor gave up anything to obtain it.

That insurance policies may be reformed or actions thereon defended for mutual mistakes is fully discussed and approved in the case of Harrel’s Adm’r v. Harrel, 232 Ky. 469, 23 S. W. (2d) 922, in which the beneficiary named in the policy was corrected after the death of the insured because of such mistake. The same question was before this court (but in which the amount due from the insurer as shown by the face of the policy was the question involved) in the case of Flimin’s Adm’x v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 255 Ky. 621, 75 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 673, 262 Ky. 525, 103 A.L.R. 1361, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-home-life-ins-co-v-kittinger-kyctapphigh-1935.