Kurgan v. Prudential Insurance

91 N.E.2d 620, 340 Ill. App. 178
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 3, 1950
DocketGen. 44,961
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 91 N.E.2d 620 (Kurgan v. Prudential Insurance) 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
Kurgan v. Prudential Insurance, 91 N.E.2d 620, 340 Ill. App. 178 (Ill. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Friend

delivered the opinion of the court.

Gregory Kurgan, a minor, by Antonina Wijas, his next friend, filed a complaint in chancery for the reformation of an insurance policy issued by defendant, the Prudential Insurance Company of America, on the life of his mother, Estelle Kurgan, who died February 14,1945, and to recover the face amount of the policy of $4,188. The insured’s husband, who was plaintiff’s father, was designated beneficiary in the policy, and was made a party defendant, but no order or judgment was sought or obtained against him, and he does not join in this appeal. At the close of plaintiff’s case, defendant made a motion for a finding in its favor, or in the alternative, to dismiss the complaint for want of equity, which was denied, and after evidence had been adduced on behalf of defendant, the chancellor, sitting without a jury, decreed that the policy be reformed so as to show a change of beneficiary from Walter Kurgan to the plaintiff; that the portion of the policy which designated Walter Kurgan as the beneficiary be set aside; and that judgment as at common law be entered for plaintiff in the sum of $5,019.12, representing the face amount of the policy, plus interest from the date of death of insured, and costs of the proceeding. The defendant insurance company appeals.

There is substantially no dispute as to the essential facts. Policy No. 12 681 173, with endowment and life insurance features, was issued to Estelle Kurgan November 21, 1943. It provided for dividends, loans, disabilities and accidental-death benefits, in return for monthly premiums payable for ten years or until prior death. The face amount of $4,188 was to be payable to the insured if living on November 13, 1953, or in the event of her prior death, to Walter Kurgan, her husband.

Under the general provisions of the policy appears the following: "Change of Beneficiary. — The Beneficiary under this Policy may from time to time be changed, upon proper written request while this Policy is in force and the submission of such written request to the Home Office, but such change shall become operative only if this Policy has been received at the Home Office and endorsed by the Company. After such endorsement has been made, the change shall take effect and any interest of any previous Beneficiary shall cease as of the date of such written request whether or not the Insured is living at the time of such endorsement, but without prejudice to the Company on account of any payment made by it prior to such endorsement.

Application for the policy was made in two parts. In part 1, Estelle Kurgan reserved the right “at any time without the consent and to the exclusion of any beneficiary ... to change the beneficiary. . . .” In part 2, she agreed that “(1) the matter contained in Parts 1 and 2 of this application shall become a part of the policy hereby applied for; (2) no agent has power in behalf of the Company to . . . bind the Company by making any promise or representation or by giving or receiving any information; [and] (3) my acceptance . . . of any policy issued on this application shall constitute an approval of the provisions contained in such policy. . . . ”

John C. Cholewa, a special agent employed in the Chicago office of the defendant, procured Estelle Kurgan’s application. His authority was limited to the solicitation of business for the company, to submitting applications to the examiner in defendant’s Chicago office for forwarding to the home office, and to collecting the first premiums on the policies he sold.

When the policy was issued, the insured placed it in a cabinet drawer in her home, where it remained until after her death. In October or November of 1944, she became hospitalized. After her return from the hospital she contemplated changing the beneficiary in her policy, but took no affirmative steps toward that end. Subsequently, about the first week in January 1945, she returned to the hospital, and a day or two later she told her sister, Adele Wartell, that she wanted to make her son the beneficiary of her policy. While in the hospital she was visited regularly by her husband, Walter Kurgan, and by other relatives. On January 15,1945, her parents, Stanley and Antonina Wijas, accompanied by John Cholewa, went to see her at the hospital. Cholewa brought three blank “request-for-change-in-beneficiary’’ forms which she read and signed. None of the requests were completely filled out; two contained only the name of Gregory Kurgan as primary beneficiary, without designating his relationship to the insured, and no other information whatsoever, and on these two forms her signature was witnessed by Cholewa and her" mother, Antonina Wijas. Both of these requests bear date January 13, 1945. On the third form, also bearing the same date, no beneficiary was indicated and insured’s signature was witnessed by Cholewa alone. The blanks were actually signed on January 15, and Cholewa took the forms with him that day when he left the hospital. He is no longer employed by defendant, resides in California, and was not a witness at the trial.

Estelle Kurgan left the hospital February 8, six days before her death, and stayed with her parents at their home until she died on February 14, 1945. On February 13, 1945, Cholewa mailed the applications back to the insured at the hospital, with a letter, purported to have been lost before trial, in which he stated that insured would be required to produce the policy in order to effect a change of beneficiary. The envelope, containing the applications and letter, was readdressed and forwarded hy mail to the Kurgan home, where it was picked up by William Wroble, Kurgan’s brother-in-law, and brought to Kurgan in the forenoon of February 14. Kurgan had gone over to visit his wife in the late morning of that day, and upon his return to his mother’s home, where he was then staying inasmuch as he was sick himself, he found the envelope, which he opened that afternoon, and someone read him the contents of the letter. He testified that because of her sick and weakened condition, the letter was not shown to Estelle Kurgan, and she died later that day.

On February 15, 1945, Walter Kurgan executed a proof-of-death form which was witnessed by Cholewa and submitted to defendant. Thereafter, on February 20, Marion Kogut, one of plaintiff’s attorneys, sent a registered letter to defendant at its home office, claiming that plaintiff was entitled to the proceeds of the policy. Defendant received the letter, but made no reply.

February 16, 1945, defendant was served with garnishment summons issued out of the circuit court of Cook county in case No. 44-C-6687, entitled “Walter Kurgan, for use etc. v. Prudential Insurance Company of America, a corporation,” to which it filed answer admitting having in its possession proceeds due Walter Kurgan under the policy insuring his wife. April 4, 1945, judgment was entered against defendant, and the following day a check, payable to Kurgan in the amount of $4,108, the face amount of the policy less unpaid premiums amounting to $80, was issued by defendant. Kurgan authorized defendant’s attorneys to pay his judgment creditors from the proceeds of that check, and he received the balance, for which, on April 10, 1945, he released defendant from all further obligations to him under the policy. The instant suit was filed some two weeks later, on April 26,1945.

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91 N.E.2d 620, 340 Ill. App. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurgan-v-prudential-insurance-illappct-1950.