McDaniel v. Insurance Co. of Oregon

410 P.2d 814, 243 Or. 1, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 504
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 410 P.2d 814 (McDaniel v. Insurance Co. of Oregon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDaniel v. Insurance Co. of Oregon, 410 P.2d 814, 243 Or. 1, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 504 (Or. 1966).

Opinion

SCHWAB, J. (Pro Tempore).

This is an action by a surviving husband, individually and as administrator, against an automobile agency and credit life insurer on a policy issued to the deceased spouse. The court sitting without a jury found for all defendants on the ground that the plaintiff McDaniel had concealed the state of his wife’s health at the time the policy was issued.

In May of 1959 the defendant Insurance Company of Oregon issued to the defendant Dean and Taylor Pontiac Company a Group Creditors Life Policy. The policy, subject to the payment of the premium in each instance, insured the life of certain debtors of Dean and Taylor. The policy further provided that any pay *3 ment by the insurance company under the policy would be to the automobile agency for application to the indebtedness of the insured debtor. The group policy provided that debtors eligible were “each natural person between the ages of 18 and 65 inclusive who is in good health and becomes indebted to the creditor * * It also declared, “the validity of this policy or of any life insurance claimed hereunder shall not be contestable.”

On June 29, 1960, McDaniel and his now deceased wife, Mary, purchased an automobile from Dean and Taylor. Included in the contract price of the automobile was a $101.62 premium charge for credit life insurance. Thereupon, Dean and Taylor, pursuant to its agreement with the Insurance Company of Oregon, issued a certificate of insurance in the name of the Insurance Company of Oregon naming Mary McDaniel as the insured debtor. Mrs. McDaniel was a diabetic, ill at the time of the purchase, and died 52 days later on August 20, 1960. Mr. McDaniel knew, prior to the purchase of the automobile, that Mrs. McDaniel was a diabetic. The death certificate stated that the cause of death was nephrosis with uremia and that diabetes mellitus was a significant condition contributing to death, but not related to the terminal disease or condition given as the cause of the death.

The certificate of insurance issued to Mrs. McDaniel states, “This Certificate is subject to all the terms, limitations and conditions of the Group Creditor Life Policy issued to the Creditor * * *. This insurance will be issued only to such Eligible Debtors who are * * * in sound health.”

Upon Mrs. McDaniel’s death the Insurance Company of Oregon disclaimed liability. When Mr. Me- *4 Daniel failed to continue the monthly payments on the purchase contract, Dean and Taylor repossessed the automobile. Following the repossession the plaintiff, individually and as administrator of the estate of Mary McDaniel, deceased, brought an action against both defendants alleging that at the time of Mrs. McDaniel’s death there was a balance due on the automobile contract of $3,176.98 which the Insurance Company of Oregon wrongfully refused to pay, and alleging that Dean and Taylor Pontiac Company though requested to do so had not collected this amount or any portion thereof from the Insurance Company of Oregon and had wrongfully repossessed the automobile.

The various arguments advanced by Insurance Company of Oregon in support of the judgment in its favor resolve themselves into two propositions.

(1) Dean and Taylor Pontiac Company, and not the decedent’s estate, was the only party with a right of action on the policy.
(2) Since Mary McDaniel was not in good health at the time the policy was issued, the coverage failed to attach.

The insurance company relies upon the case of Murray v. Life Ins. Co. of Georgia, 107 Ga App 545, 130 SE2d 767, which holds that the legal and beneficial interest in the credit life insurance contract there considered was vested in the creditor and not the debtor. The holding was based on the fact that “coverage was extended upon the creditor’s application, in consideration of the creditor’s payment of the premiums therefor and was payable to the creditor”-, and that the plaintiff, by paying the premiums himself, was merely furnishing collateral in the form of insurance as “a *5 necessary incident to the obtaining of the loans.” 130 SE2d at 769. In the case at bar the acquisition of credit life insurance was not a prerequisite to obtaining the loan. The president of the automobile agency made this clear when questioned by counsel for plaintiff.

“Q Now Mr. Taylor, on car sales, do you require insurance on the life of a purchaser when a car is being bought on credit?
“A It isn’t a requirement. It is strictly we’d like to sell it. We sell all we can sell.
“Q But it is not in any sense a requirement?
“A No. Lots of people don’t even take it.
“Q You are doing this then as a — are selling this insurance as a service to the customer and for what profit you can get out of that sale of the insurance?
“A Correct.”

The Georgia court, in Betts v. Brown, 219 Ga 782, 136 SE2d 365, held that when a policy was voluntarily purchased at the option of the deceased debtor and an individual certificate was issued to him, his personal representative and not the creditor had the right to bring an action on the policy, saying:

“* * * If the payment were with the proceeds of credit life insurance the debtor himself procured, independently of his creditor, or with the proceeds of a pre-existing policy of insurance owned by him and assigned to his creditor, there would be no question but what the payment was by the insured. We see nothing which would require a different result here where the debtor chose a third authorized arrangement * * *.
“* * * Although, in accordance with arrangements made previously by Betts [the insured] and the bank, the two insurance companies acted as the conduit for the payment of the indebtedness, to us it *6 is inescapable that payment was made by Betts. He literally paid with his life.” 219 Ga at 786-87, 136 SE2d at 369.

Here, Mrs. McDaniel obtained a credit life insurance policy insuring her life. She was not required to do so. The provision that Dean and Taylor Pontiac Company was to receive the proceeds did not make it the sole party with a beneficial interest. The facts of the case at bar are analogous to those of the Betts case, not the Murray case.

The contention of the defendant insurance company that the coverage of the policy failed to attach because Mrs. McDaniel was not in good health at the time of the issuance of the certificate is not supported by the weight of authority. The policy in question contained an incontestability clause effective on the policy date. In policies containing

(1) a clause stating that the policy cannot go into force unless the insured is in sound health upon the policy date, and

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Great American Reserve Insurance Co. v. Fry
418 S.W.2d 716 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
410 P.2d 814, 243 Or. 1, 1966 Ore. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-v-insurance-co-of-oregon-or-1966.