Locomotive Engineers' Mut. Life & Accident Ins. v. Hughes

80 So. 850, 202 Ala. 466, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 23, 1919
Docket6 Div. 837.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 So. 850 (Locomotive Engineers' Mut. Life & Accident Ins. v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Locomotive Engineers' Mut. Life & Accident Ins. v. Hughes, 80 So. 850, 202 Ala. 466, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 283 (Ala. 1919).

Opinion

McCLELLAJSf, J.

The plaintiff (appellee) recovered on three certificates of benefit insurance issued by the appellant to the insured, L. D. Ponder, who died August 21, 1909. A report of this cause on former appeal may be found in 77 South. 352. 1 The appellee was the beneficiary in all of the certificates. Ponder was a locomotive engineer, whose run was between Birmingham, Ala., his home, and Atlanta, Ga. He was a member of the engineers’ organization, and as such member was insured in and by the appellant in the aggregate sum of $4,500. The constitution and laws of the appellant imposed the duty upon those holding insurance therein to pay monthly assessments as they were levied and notice thereof given in the association’s journal. Not having paid the assessments for the months of May, June, and July, 1909, Ponder was in default with respect to them, and in consequence the insurance given by the certificates sued on was forfeited, unless the defaults thus made by Ponder were waived by some one authorized to conclude the insurer in the premises, in which event Ponder’s status as an insured was restored before his death. In addition to general traverse of the averments of counts A, B, and O, the defendant set up in special pleas 3 to 12, inclusive, the indicated acts of forfeiture; and also asserted, through special plea F, that Ponder had made default in two monthly assessments (May and June, 1909). Whereupon, under the laws of the association, he was a “forfeited member,” who could not be restored to membership without formal application and medical examination, disclosing good *467 health, etc., which conditions to restoration Ponder did not meet. It is to be noted that no plea was interposed charging fraud at any time with respect to physical condition ot' the insured. The plaintiff joined issue on the several pleas, and replied severally, specially to them in replications 1 and 2 to pleas 3 to 12 inclusive, and in replication 3 to special plea F. Special replication 1 is this:

“That before the death of deceased defendant collected all the past-due premiums on the policy sued on, knowing at the time that they were past due, and thereby waived any forfeiture of said policies, and provisions of the by-laws set out or referred to in said plea.”

The second special replication alleged that at a time when the insurance was in force, and before default in the payment of premium, the authorized agent of the defendant extended the time of payment to the date on which the agent should send his monthly report to the home office, and that, the assessments were so paid. It may be observed at this point that since it was proven without conflict thát the report of the agent was sent forward on August 8, 1909, and the payment asserted in the replication was made several days subsequent to that date, material averments in this replication were affirmatively disproven.

The third special replication, addressed to special plea F, averred:

“That the' defendant accepted payments of the said the dues and assessments on the policies sued on before the death of deceased knowing at the time that said dues and assessments were past due, without requiring applications to be made for reinstatement of said policies as required by the by-laws, and plaintiff avers that soon thereafter, and a long time, to wit, 8 days before deceased’s death, defendant was informed and had knowledge of ’.deceased’s physical condition and of the illness from which he died, and with such knowledge it ratified and affirmed its collection of said past-due assessments, and retained said sum so paid. The plaintiff, therefore, avers that defendant waived the provisions of the by-laws referred to in said plea.”

There are no assignments of error based on rulings on the pleadings. The waiver asserted by the plaintiff was predicated of the receipt of these assessments for May, June, and July, 1909, by an agent of the insurer, who was authorized to conclude the insurer to invoke the forfeiture set forth in its pleas. If the waiver set up was sustained by the evidence, and no error intervened, the plaintiff was due to be accorded the judgment that was rendered.

[1] J. S. May was the agent, mentioned before, of the defendant. He testified that he “was insurance secretary of the defendant association” at the time in question; that his duty “was to collect the insurance [i. e., assessments] from the members, take their applications for insurance, and deliver policies” ; and that he was the only collecting agent in the division of the organization of which he and Ponder were members. There was evidence tending to show that J. S. May was frequently away from Birmingham, the locus in quo of the division, on his runs to Atlanta, Ga.; that the defendant knew that May’s duties as a locomotive engineer took him away from his home station at such frequently recurring times for such periods as was the rule with all insurance secretaries of the defendant who were locomotive engineers. During May’s repeated absences on his runs his wife received the payments of assessments from members who came to pay; this service, May testified, being for the accommodation of the men. On August 12, 1909, a relative, a representative of Ponder, gave Mrs. May, at the usual place of payment of assessments, a check and some cash in a sum equal to the assessments Ponder should have paid for May, June, and July, 1909. J. S. May was absent on his run. On that date Ponder went to a hospital in Birmingham, submitted to a surgical operation, and on August 21, 1909, died of pneumonia. ' Mrs. May, on August 12, 1909, issued a receipt (in the name of J. S. May)- for these assessments, using the form furnished by the defendant. There was evidence from which it was inferable that Mrs. May was generally accustomed to pursue this practice, with the express sanction of J. S. May. There was evidence tending to show that J. S. May returned the next day to his home, and the check and cash received by Mrs. May from Ponder’s relative were then delivered to J. S. May; that J’. S. May retained the check and cash for some time after Ponder’s death; that the plaintiff, Mrs. Ponder, told J. S. May, over the telephone several days before Ponder’s death, that Ponder was seriously ill at the hospital, and that he (May) could not, as he desired, see him; and that J. S. May told plaintiff not to worry, that Ponder’s insurance “was all right.” J. S. May’s testimony was to the contrary; but the credibility and effect of the whole evidence bearing on this important phase of the ease was for the jury’s consideration.

[2, 3] At the instance of the plaintiff, the court gave the jury this special instruction:

“The court charges the jury that an insurance agent regularly charged by the insurance company with the duty of collecting premiums on behalf of the company has authority to collect premiums after the due date and bind the company on its policy, if he has full knowledge of the facts and circumstances under which payment was made.”

The immediate effect of this charge was to advise the jury that, as a matter of law, the authority of an agent of the insurer to collect premiums on insurance comprehended authority to collect premiums “after the due *468

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Locomotive Engineers Mut. Life & Accident Ass'n v. Hughes
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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 850, 202 Ala. 466, 1919 Ala. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/locomotive-engineers-mut-life-accident-ins-v-hughes-ala-1919.