Kentucky Home Life Insurance v. Mosley

89 S.W.2d 744, 191 Ark. 1146, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1936
Docket4-4099
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 744 (Kentucky Home Life Insurance v. Mosley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Home Life Insurance v. Mosley, 89 S.W.2d 744, 191 Ark. 1146, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 351 (Ark. 1936).

Opinions

Junie Gober Mosley sued the Kentucky Home Life Insurance Company upon a policy of insurance issued by the Inter-Southern Life Insurance Company, assumed by appellant. Against this policy of insurance there was a lien or debt of $79.48 and some interest: This was pleaded by the plaintiff in filing her suit. The contract under which Kentucky Home Life Insurance Company assumed these obligations of reinsurance had been duly approved by proper officer's in Kentucky, where the appellant company was domiciled, and in Arkansas, wherein the policy issued upon was delivered to Alonzo T. Mosley, the insured.

The reinsurance agreement provided that a lien equal to sixty per cent. of the net equities should be established against policies assumed but the Kentucky Home Life Insurance Company, and it was pleaded, and not disputed, that the net equity in policy No. 151,763 amounted to $37.68; that a lien in the amount of $22.61 was established and placed against the said policy. This added to the indebtedness of $79.48, with accrued interest, was in excess of the cash reserve upon the particular policy at a time long prior to the time of the death of Alonzo T. Mosley. Under the terms and conditions of the policy, when such condition prevailed, after lapse for failure to pay premiums, the policy became of no effect, and the beneficiary was without right to recover thereon.

In the briefs, as we understand them, all parties agree substantially to the foregoing announcement. Plaintiff, however, appellee here, offered proof to the effect that there was an error in the complaint admitting the indebtedness as pleaded therein of $79.48, and offered further proof to the effect that a premium note of $44.95, with interest upon a former outstanding loan, amounting to $1.88, which fell due on August 26, 1931, and which indebtedness was renewed on that date, or shortly thereafter by the execution of another note, *Page 1148 including the above-mentioned indebtedness, in the sum of $48.23, had been paid. Witnesses who testified to the fact of payment testified first upon a motion to quash the summons and return of service thereon; that the payment was made in the fall of 1932. The appellant had filed this motion to quash, alleging that it had done no business in Arkansas, had no agent for service, and that the service of process on that account was improper. The appellee, however, to show that the company had been doing business, offered this proof tending to show that the appellant company was making collections upon these old notes or obligations, which had been, prior to that time, given to the Inter-Southern Life Insurance Company, and which had been taken over by the appellant.

Upon trial of the case two witnesses testified that early in January of 1933, a Mr. Woods came to Gordon, where the Mosleys lived, and had with him this premium note above-mentioned and collected the same from Mr. Mosley. The witnesses were not positive, but thought Mr. Woods' initials were S.C. They testified most positively that he represented himself to be the agent or representative of the Kentucky Home Life Insurance Company.

If this alleged fact of the payment of this note be conceded to be established by the proof and as found by the verdict of the jury, then this case ought to be affirmed; otherwise it must be reversed. The question of whether the note was presented and paid is one that was sharply disputed, and, if there is any substantial evidence to support the finding of the jury, the verdict would be building and conclusive upon us, although this testimony is far from satisfactory to establish the facts contended for, even if the testimony offered were competent for the purpose for which it was offered.

Several witnesses testified by affidavit, upon supplemental motion for new trial, on account of newly-discovered evidence, that the note had constantly been in the files of the appellant company, at its home office in Kentucky had not been taken therefrom by Woods or any one else, that it had not been sent to Arkansas for collection *Page 1149 at the time witnesses alleged they saw it paid, but this proof comes somewhat late, and it appears to us it must have been available at the time of the trial of the cause, as S.C. Woods was there and testified in tho case, and for that reason we give little consideration to this supplemental motion for a new trial, though the evidence set up is perhaps a correct statement of the facts.

Ray Mosley, son of the insured, and Dick Jackson attorney, who had at one time represented the insured, testified upon trial of the case, that they were present in January, when the man named Woods collected this note and say that he gave a receipt for the money paid, and that the receipt has now been lost; that he did not deliver note upon payment, but said it would have to be taken back to Little Rock on account of suit pending there. Payment was made, however, by Mr. Mosley to Woods in their presence. Ray Mosley got about $20 of the money, which he loaned his father for the purpose of this payment, from the Gurdon Lumber Company, and says that his father got some money also from the Gurdon Lumber Company for the purpose of making said payment.

These facts were sharply disputed by cashiers or bookkeepers of the Gurdon Lumber Company, who say that no such funds were advanced, either to the elder Mosley or to his son, but the jury found against this contention. In addition, the verdict of the jury was approved by the trial judge, who saw all the witnesses and heard them testify.

However, there was one fatal defect in these matters as presented in this case. The only evidence in this entire record about this payment is the testimony of Dick Jackson and Ray Mosley, and the only evidence that payment was made to any agent or officer of the insurance company is their testimony to the effect that the said collector, Woods, represented himself to be the agent of the Kentucky Home Life Insurance Company. There is no proof of agency, aside from the alleged declarations of collector Woods. *Page 1150

It is true that Jackson and Mosley had available a letter from S.C. Woods, written from the home office of the company to Mosley, sometime prior to his death, in regard to his insurance. Neither one of these parties was actually sure that the initials of the alleged agent or collector were S.C., but it may be assumed, for the purpose of this opinion, at least, that S.C. Woods was the one they meant to designate as the agent collecting the money. S.C. Woods, however, was called as a witness, that is to say the S.C. Woods, who wrote the Letter in regard to the insurance policy. He testified that he had worked for a time in the home office of the company at Kentucky and had later been sent to Florida for the company, and that he had not collected any money upon this note. He stated in fact that he had never been in Arkansas and was not in Arkansas at the time of the alleged collection of the note.

Dick Jackson and Ray Mosley, present as witnesses, did not dispute this statement of S.C. Woods. His statement is uncontradicted and undisputed.

Then it must appear that whatever payment was made, if one were in fact made, was made to some other Woods. If it were made to S.C. Woods, Jackson and Mosely would have been able to identify him as the man who was present, received the money and gave the receipt and kept the note. There is no proof that any of this money, alleged to have been used to pay this note, was ever received at any office or by any officer of the appellant company.

We cannot conceive that Ray Mosley and Dick Jackson mean to infer that the S.C. Woods, present and testifying, was the collector. They did not say so directly or inferentially.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 744, 191 Ark. 1146, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-home-life-insurance-v-mosley-ark-1936.