MacE v. Provident Life Ass'n

7 S.E. 674, 101 N.C. 122
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 S.E. 674 (MacE v. Provident Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacE v. Provident Life Ass'n, 7 S.E. 674, 101 N.C. 122 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

Davis, J.,

(after stating the case). 1. The rejection of the issues tendered by the defendant presents the first exception in the record.

Issues should be so framed as to present clearly and fairly to the jury the questions of fact controverted, but no particular form is requisite, and every material question raised by the pleadings is presented in the issues submitted, and there was no error in rejecting those tendered Meredith v. Cranberry Coal and Iron Co., 99 N. C., 576 ; Cuthbertson v. Ins. Co., 96 N. C., 480, and cases there cited.

2. During the course of the trial the defendant’s counsel proposed to read the postal carl referred to in the pleadings, insisting that it was part of the application, as if incorporated the original application.

*127 His Honor refused to allow it to be read as a part of the contract, “but permitted it to be read as evidence,” and. to this the defendant excepted.

The application for insurance, which contains numerous questions and answers and stipulations on the part of the applicant, was dated the 2d day of September, 1885, and signed by Dickinson. The answer to the question, “ In whose behalf or for whose benefit is the insurance to be effected?” is “f to T. E. Mace, Newbern, N. C.; J to Amelia Dickinson, Newbern, N. C. * *_* Relation to the party to be insured, wife and first cousin.”

Following the questions and answers is the following stipulation: “ It is hereby declared that these are fair and true answers to the foregoing facts, in which there is no suppression of known facts, and every person whose name is hereto subscribed adopts as his or her own, and warrants to be full, complete and true, and to be the only statements given to the association in reply to its inquiries, which shall be the basis of the contract between the undersigned and the Providence Life Association.”

The postal card was dated September 14, after the application had been made and signed, and was written in answer to a let'er from the secretary of the company in regard to the application, and it was clearly competent, upon the question of fraud, as any other declaration or statement as an inducement to the contract and tending to show that the real transaction would be, but it was no part of the contract. The defendant says that, although the application is dated September 2 and the policy is dated September 7, the latter was in fact not issued until September 17, as the endorsement shows, and is admitted by plaintiff, and would not have been issued but for the postal card. In view of the finding of the jury in regard to the representations in the postal card in regard to the indebtedness of Dickinson to Mace, we fail to see how the postal card could invalidate the policy.

*128 We are unable to see what possible effect the dependence of Dickinson upon Mace could have upon the application. If Mace had been dependent upon Dickinson, it might have been material as giving the former an interest in the life of the latter, but with or without such dependence, the fact, as found, that Mace was a creditor, gave him an insurable interest in the life of Dickinson.

3. The defendant offered in evidence certain depositions which had not been passed upon by the Clerk, but which it was agreed should be in evidence subject to plaintiff’s objections. The following questions and answers, contained in the deposition of W. 0. Nelson, Secretary of defendant company, were, upon objection by the plaintiff, excluded, and defendants excepted:

Question 5. Please state whether said insurance on the life of said George W. Dickinson was agreed to in consequence of the representations in said postal card contained?

Answer. Yes.

Q. 6. Would you have insured him, but for said representations in said postal card?

A. 6. Not upon that application and for Mace’s benefit. We fully believed at the time that the postal card was written by Mr. Dickinson, and would not for a moment have thought of issuing a policy had we known the card had been written by Mace.

Q. 7. What relation must a party be to have an insurable interest in the life of another ?

A. 7. Members of the same immediate family have an insurable interest in the lives of each other; but outside of that relationship, I do not think an insurable interest exists, except when a clear dependency of the insured upon the beneficiary is established. We regard an insurable interest to mean an interest in the continued life of the insured and not an interest in his death.

*129 Q,. 8. If a parly desiring insurance on the life of another is a creditor, what amount of insurance do you allow him to take out?

A. 8. We permit him to take out a sufficient amount of insurance to cover the debt, the interest accruing and the probable cost of sustaining the policy during the life expectancy of the insured. It is always understood, however, that the beneficiary, in a policy of this kind, will only be entitled to recover the actual amount of his claim at maturity of the policy.

Q. 9. Does your company allow a party to take out insurance, for a greater amount than the amount due party from the one insured ?

A. 9. Yes, as stated in my reply to interrogatory 8.

Q,. 10. Does your company allow parties to. take out speculative risks, merely, when the party insured is not indebted to the one applying for insurance?

A. 10. No, sir.”

The excluded evidence was chiefly expressions of opinion, and irrelevant. There was no error in excluding it.

4. The defendant asked the Court to give the following special instructions:

I. That any statement contained in the application or the postal card is as much a part of the policy as though written in the policy itself, and that if any statement therein contained be false the plaintiff cannot recover.

II. That said statements being made by the contract, warranties are made by the parties material to the risk, and if any are false, the plaintiff cannot recover.

III. That if the Insurance Company asked for a statement on the point of the extent and character of any indebtedness from the deceased to the plaintiff, and he failed to furnish it, the plaintiff cannot recover.

IV. The plaintiff can only recover, if at all, upon the amount he shows to be due, and if he shows that the de *130 ceased only owed him $1,000 in 1884, he can only recover that amount, with interest from September 17th, 1884.

H'is Honor refused to give these instructions, but gave the charge set out in the record, which, so far as it is material to the questions before us, is as follows:

It will be your duty to find the truth of the matter thus submitted to you, from the evidence in the case. The first issue devolves upon you the duty of determining whether G. W.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stewart v. American Life Ins. Co.
89 F.2d 743 (Tenth Circuit, 1937)
Evans v. Independent Nat. Life Ins. Co.
143 So. 724 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
Ormond v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance
58 S.E. 997 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1907)
Follette v. United States Mutual Accident Ass'n
12 S.E. 370 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 S.E. 674, 101 N.C. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mace-v-provident-life-assn-nc-1888.