McCormick v. the Travelers Ins. Co.

264 S.W. 916, 215 Mo. App. 258, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 168
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 916 (McCormick v. the Travelers Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCormick v. the Travelers Ins. Co., 264 S.W. 916, 215 Mo. App. 258, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 168 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

TRIMBLE, P. J.

Action on an insurance policy of $5000 issued by defendant upon the life of Louis D. McCormick, dated February 1,1916, and afterwards made payable, in the event of his death, to his estate. He died March 11, 1919, and his widow, as administratrix, brought thjs suit on March 23, 1921. From a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor for $5503.12, the amount of the policy with interest, defendant has appealed.

The petition is in the usual form except that neither the policy 'nor a copy thereof is attached, the petition alleging that “said insurance policy is now in the possession of defendant and that defendant has full knowledge thereof, and this plaintiff is by reason thereof unable to set out a copy of said policy.”

Defendant’s duly verified answer, after a general denial, specifically denied that the policy was in force on March 11, 1919, the date of McCormick’s death, and then set up that on or about March 3, 1919, McCormick surrendered said policy for its cash surrender yalue, to-wit, $180, which defendant paid to him, and he executed a *261 surrender deed thereto, a duly verified copy of which was attached to the answer.

In reply, plaintiff, in addition to a general denial, alleged that prior to the date of the execution of the alleged surrender deed,' defendant negotiated an arrangement with McCormick to change the form of his insurance, wherein policy No. 345913 (the policy sued on), was to be cancelled and a new policy of $5000, written at a smaller premium rate, was to be substituted for the other policy, all as one continuous and single transaction ; that on March 3,1919, McCormick signed and delivered to defendant’s agent the surrender deed in accordance with said arrangement, and also signed and delivered an application for new insurance and was physically examined, all as a. part of the same arrangement; that it was the agreement and a part of the said arrangement that policy No. 345913 should not be cancelled until said new policy took effect, and that the cancellation and surrender of the old policy was conditioned on the acceptance by defendant of the new application and the issuance of the new policy.

Said reply further alleged that the consideration of $180 recited in said surrender deed was not paid to McCormick and that he died before there was a payment or tender of said sum to him; and that said surrender deed was without force or effect; that defendant issued a draft for the $180 payable to McCormick and forwarded the same by mail from the home office to defendant’s Kansas City office, and McCormick’s name was evidenced thereo'n by defendant’s agent without McCormick’s knowledge or authority, and defendant has denied liability on the new insurance applied for by McCormick, and is now estopped from claiming that policy No. 345913 was cancelled or surrendered, and from claiming that said policy is not in force.

In a rejoinder, defendant denied that it entered into any negotiations of an arrangement with McCormick for a change in the form of his insurance, but alleged that the transaction whereby policy No. 345913 was cancelled *262 was a separate and distinee transaction, in no wise dependent upon or in consideration of the writing of any new policy by defendant; that McCormick did, on March 3, 1919, file an application for a policy of insurance and was examined by a medical examiner, but no policy was ever issued thereon, McCormick having died before said application and medical examination were ever passed upon by defendant; that defendant received from McCormick along with said new application a check for $34.85 which defendant duly tendered to plaintiff but she refused to accept same and it is now tendered and paid into court for her use and benefit.

The trial proceeded in this wise: Plaintiff offered in evidence the policy sued on, and then, after a stipulation as to plaintiff being administratrix and that McCormick died at Excelsior Springs at 2 a. m. of March 11, 1919, plaintiff “for the purpose of proving denial of liability and consequent waiver of formal proof of death,” offered in evidence the “material part” of a letter from defendant’s Kansas City cashier, addressed to plaintiff personally and dated March 18,1919, said part so offered stating that the writer ,is informed that addressee had requested blank proofs of death for Policy No. 345913, but that said policy “was surrendered for cash on March 6,1919, the surrender deed being signed by your husband on or about March 1st, and the Company’s check for $180, being the full amount of such cash surrender value, having been accepted Ry your husband prior to his death. ’ ’ . . . “I am holding, pending the appointment of an administrator of Mr. McCormick’s estate, the sum of $34.85, which Mr. McCormick paid at the time he made application for new insurance on March 1st.” Plaintiff thereupon rested and defendant demurred to the evidence, which the court overruled.

Defendant thereupon introduced evidence showing that on March 10, 1919, McCormick had a balance of $6.04 to his credit in his account in the Liberty Trust Company of Kansas City and that on that day defendant’s draft for $180 dated Hartford, Conn., March 6, *263 1919, payable to McCormick and endorsed “F. D. McCormick by F. D. M. for deposit with Liberty Trust Co., Kansas City, Mo.,” was presented to said bank and the' amount of said check was placed to McCormick’s credit in his regular bank account. Other evidence shows that this check arrived in Kansas City on March 10, 1919.

Defendant further introduced evidence showing that the surrender deed, attached to the answer, was signed and acknowledged by McCormick on' March 3, 1919. Said deed recited that it was executed “in consideration of one hundred eighty dollars to me in hand paid, the receipt of which I do hereby acknowledge as to my full satisfaction,” and for which insured conveyed and set over to defendant all right, title, claim, interest and benefit he had, or may have, in and to Policy No. 345913.

It was then stipulated and agreed between counsel that said policy provided for a surrender value of $380 at the end of three years, and the policy shows this on its face.

In rebuttal, plaintiff took the stand and testified that McCormick went from his home in Kansas City to Excelsior Springs on March 8, 1919, and that from that time she was with him^co'ntinuously at Excelsior Springs until an hour before he-was found on the 10th of March, 1919, in his room, unconscious from a pistol shot wound from which he died on the morning of March 11, 1919, without ever having regained consciousness. It was further shown in evidence that McCormick did not endorse the $180 draft deposited to his account but that this endorsement and deposit were made by F. D. Masden, defendant’s soliciting agent in Kansas City.

In a suit by plaintiff individually against defendant, . she had taken, in Hartford, Connecticut, the deposition of Lewis M. Robotham, defendant’s Assistant Secretary in charge of its Life Department, and in this deposition had called for and examined him about certain letters and ^papers which were attached to said deposition as exhibits. In the trial of the case at bar, plaintiff, in re *264

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 916, 215 Mo. App. 258, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-v-the-travelers-ins-co-moctapp-1923.