McIntyre v. Federal Life Insurance

126 S.W. 227, 142 Mo. App. 256, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 181
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 7, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 227 (McIntyre v. Federal Life Insurance) 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
McIntyre v. Federal Life Insurance, 126 S.W. 227, 142 Mo. App. 256, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 181 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Action on a contract of life insurance. Plaintiff recovered a judgment for the full [261]*261amount of her demand and the case is here on the appeal of defendant.

The cause of action pleaded in the petition is grounded on an oral contract of reinsurance. On January 11, 1902, the Union Life Insurance Company, an Indiana corporation, issued a written policy of life insurance to Catherine Hughes whereby, in consideration of an annual premium of seventy-one dollars, the company agreed to pay plaintiff, who was a daughter of the assured, the sum of $1000, on the death of the assured. Provision Avas made in the policy for the payment of the premium in monthly installments of $6.27 and the premiums Avere paid monthly by plaintiff who acted as her mother’s agent. These payments were made to an agent of the company who called at plaintiff’s home to collect them. .

In July, 1901, plaintiff received through the mails a communication signed by the officers of the company to the effect that the assets and business of the company had been transferred to the Federal Life Insurance Company (the defendant) and that the policy in suit had been reinsured in the defendant company. The statement was made that “Under the contract Avith the Federal Life the net amount of admitted assets transferred to it will be credited to the Union policy-holders,” but there is no intimation in the letter of any impairment of the assets of the Union Company or of any provision in the contract of reinsurance for an impairment lien on the policies reinsured. In conclusion the letter says: “The Federal Life is an exceptionally strong and ably managed 'Old Line’ company and no Union policy-holder will ever have reason to regret this transfer. We hope you will remain a permanent policy-holder in the Federal.”

In the following month, the agent who had collected premiums for the Union company called at plaintiff’s home to collect the installment then due. He stated that the policy had been transferred to the de[262]*262fendant and that he was the agent of defendant. Plaintiff testified she showed him the letter from the Union company “and he told me to go on with my premiums just the same as I paid the old company, that the policy was just the same and the full value of the policy would be paid just the same as the Union Life Insurance Company.” Thus assured, plaintiff paid the monthly premium and, thereafter paid the premiums until the death of her mother, which occurred July 3, 1905. There can be no doubt, under the evidence, that the collector was the agent of defendant to make these collections and that defendant received and retained the premiums. Shortly after the agent of defendant collected the August premium, another agent of defendant called on plaintiff and, according to Iyer testimony, stated that the insured “would have to pay a larger premium or otherwise would have to be reexamined.” Plaintiff replied by repeating the conversation she had with the collector and by stating that she “stood on that agreement and would not have her mother re-examined or pay any more, premium than she had been paying, to the defendant.” The version of this conversation given by the defendant’s evidence differs materially from that of plaintiff, but the witnesses do not disagree about the fact that nothing was said in this conversation relative to an impairment lien. Defendant’s agent says he tried to tell plaintiff about the lien but she grew very angry and would not listen. This is denied by plaintiff.

Over the objection of plaintiff, defendant introduced in evidence the following letter written to plaintiff by defendant under date of July 16, 1904:

“To the Policy-Holders of the Union Life Insurance Company of Indiana:

“You are hereby notified that this company has reinsured and assumed the certificates or policies of the Union Life Insurance Company, including your Policy No. 9065, subject to the terms' of a contract between [263]*263the Union Life Insurance Company and the Federal Life Insurance Company dated July 16, 1904. Upon our records your policy will be known as No. 6730, to which number you will please refer in correspondence relating to it. In accordance with said contract the Federal will continue your policy in force by your making to it the payments as and when required by the terms of your policy and said contract. You may remit your premiums direct to the office or to our Indianapolis office in the Lemcke Building, and such of you as have heretofore paid to collectors may continue so to do, as may best suit your convenience.

“The Federal is and always has been strictly an ‘old line’ legal reserve company. You may confidently rely upon the Federal carrying out every promise and meeting every obligation promptly. The Federal will treat you and your beneficiary fairly, honorably and equitably. There is no better company than the Federal. It has never scaled a policy claim a dollar and has paid all such claims immediately upon receipt of completed proofs.

“Hoping that you will continue your policy in the Federal and remain one of our policy-holders for many years to come,” etc.

On the death of the assured, defendant claimed that it held an impairment lien against the policy which reduced the amount of its liability to plaintiff, the beneficiary, to $269.11. The reinsurance contract between defendant and the Union Company contains provisions which, had plaintiff given her assent to that contract, either expressly or by implication, would entitle defendant to assert a lien against the policy in the amount claimed. Plaintiff denies assenting to the contract and denies all knowledge of any arrangement by wrhich the reinsured policies might be subjected to the burden of impairment liens. Her position thus is stated in a letter she wrote defendant after her mother’s death.

[264]*264“I never was informed or given to understand anything other than that the policy which she held would be paid in full. Think of the unreasonableness of me paying $75.24 per year for $269.11 of protection, when other companies were soliciting her for $1000 insurance at the same rate. It seems strange to me that you say you sent a representative down here to inform she and I of these unreasonable conditions of her insurance. Why could you not have informed me in writing or placed these conditions on my policy so it would be understood? You know you never did so. You also know that neither she nor I ever would or did consent to anything of this character as we would never have paid a premium on such a contract.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 227, 142 Mo. App. 256, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintyre-v-federal-life-insurance-moctapp-1910.