Leavens v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

197 A. 309, 135 Me. 365, 1938 Me. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 16, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 197 A. 309 (Leavens v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leavens v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 197 A. 309, 135 Me. 365, 1938 Me. LEXIS 17 (Me. 1938).

Opinion

Sturgis, J.

This is an action of assumpsit brought by the widow of Irving D. Leavens as beneficiary named in a certificate held by the deceased under a group policy of insurance No. 6371G issued on April 6, 1932, to his employer, the Burnham & Morrill Company of Portland by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. The case having been referred under Rule of Court with right of exceptions as to questions of law reserved, comes forward on exceptions to the acceptance of the report in the Superior Court.

Under the terms of the group policy and the certificate issued thereunder, the employee was insured for TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED dollars payable to the beneficiary of. record upon receipt of due notice and proof in writing of the death of the assured while insured and surrender of the certificate. And it was expressly provided that:

“In case of the termination of the employment of the Employee for any reason whatsoever, all of his said insurance [367]*367shall immediately cease, but the Employee shall be entitled to have issued to him by the Company, without evidence of insurability, and upon application made to the Company within thirty-one days after such termination, and upon payment of the premium applicable to the class of risk to which he belongs and to the form and amount of the policy at his then-attained age (nearest birthday), a policy of Life Insurance in any one of the forms customarily issued by the Company, except Term Insurance, in an amount not exceeding the amount of his protection under the said Group Policy at the time of such termination.”
The group policy contained the following additional clause:
“Lay-off or leave of absence of two (2) months or less shall not be considered, and retirement on pension shall not be considered, a termination of employment within the meaning of this Policy unless notification to the contrary shall have been given by the Employer to the Company within thirty-one (31) days after the date when such lay-off, leave of absence or retirement shall have commenced.”

The insurance became effective as to the employee only upon his written application and he was given the right to change the beneficiary named therein at will. Although the employer paid and was responsible for the premiums, all insured employees were required to make weekly contributions thereto which were withheld from their weekly wages or charged to their accounts.

The transcript of the evidence discloses that on February 12, 1936, the decedent Leavens, who had been for several years employed by Burnham & Morrill Company as an electrician, injured a finger of his right hand and went home for the rest of the day. He reported at the factory the following morning, however, and continued to work regularly until February 17, 1936. On that day, Leavens’ immediate superior, finding him not at work and apparently somewhat under the influence of liquor, advised him to go home and he left the shop. That afternoon, his wife came ,to the plant and was informed and reported to her husband that he was not discharged but when he felt better and was able could come [368]*368back. There is evidence that his injured finger inconvenienced the employee at least until February 24s, 1936, but he was at no time fully incapacitated for work. He did not come back, however, and on March 20, 1936 following, died.

On Febuary 29, 1936, the office force of the Burnham & Morrill Company struck the employee’s name off the payroll. The clerk in charge of that record inquired of the master mechanic concerning Leavens’ absence from his work, received the reply, “Well, as far as I am concerned, he is all through” and upon inquiry was directed by the superintendent to cancel the employee’s insurance. This information being communicated to the clerk in charge, Leavens’ insurance card was transferred to the inactive file and notice sent to the agent of the insurer that he was discharged as of that date. This notice, however, bore date of March 10, 1936, and presumably was neither made nor sent until.that time, and by stipulation made at the trial it was agreed that it reached the insurer on March 13, 1936. As to when it was acted upon at the home office and insurance upon the decedent’s life actually cancelled does not appear. We only learn from the record that the premium for the year ending April 6, 1936, including the pro rata charge for this employee’s coverage, had been already paid in advance, and at some unknown time the employer received a pro rata credit for the purported cancellation as of February 29, 1936. It does definitely appear that neither the employee nor anyone in his behalf was ever notified that he had been discharged or that his insurance under the group policy had been cancelled.

Some of the facts incident to this purported termination of the decedent’s employment are significant. It had been and continued the invariable practice of the employer to notify all employees when they were discharged and they were usually allowed at least a week’s pay thereafter. This the responsible officers and clerks admit was the only case known where a discharge was attempted without the employee being informed and knowing of it. Again, the decedent’s work was distributed among other employees already on the payroll and no one was hired to fill his place. It also appears by direct admission that the superintendent of the factory who had actual charge of this man’s employment, when as he says he simply [369]*369took the decedent’s name from the payroll, intended and expected to reinstate him when he came back, at least on assurances that he would not “drink any more on the job.”

It is stipulated and not in controversy that the plaintiff in this action is the widow of the deceased employee and the beneficiary named in his certificate, notice and proof of his death were duly made, and the group policy was in full force and effect when he died. The only question in issue is whether the employment of the decedent was terminated and his insurance discontinued at the time of his death.

Upon the facts which have been recited and others in accord therewith found in the evidence, the Referees reported:

“that at the time of the decease of the insured, Irving D. Leavens, he was within the meaning of the terms of the policy, an employee of Burnham & Morrill Company and was entitled to the benefits of the insurance contract, and upon his death as stipulated by the parties, the amount payable to his beneficiary was $2500, with interest from the date of the writ, April 22, 1936, to the date of final judgment, together with costs of court to be taxed by the Clerk.”

We are of opinion that the finding was fully warranted and objections filed thereto show no reversible error.

The record leaves no doubt that on February 17, 1936, the deceased employee was expressly given a temporary leave of absence and, accepting his wife’s statement as true, thrqugh her was given permission to stay home until he felt better. No claim was ever made that he was notified directly or indirectly that this leave of absence was terminated. The striking of his name from the payroll on February 29, 1936, with all attendant facts and circumstances, is susceptible of the inference that it was in fact intended as a layoff rather than a final termination of his employment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 A. 309, 135 Me. 365, 1938 Me. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leavens-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-me-1938.