Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Gierl

16 Ohio C.C. 294
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio C.C. 294 (Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Gierl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Gierl, 16 Ohio C.C. 294 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Scribner, J.

This action was brought in the court below by Martha (Gierl against the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, to recover upon two policies of insurance, so-called, issued by •said insurance company upon the life of Cresant Fox. One of these policies of insurance was issued on the 1st of June, 1891, and the second policy on the ‘22nd of July, 1891. The party whose life' was insured — -Cresant Pox — died on the 15th of August, 1892, and suit upon these two policies was brought by Martha Gierl,the beneficiary named in these policies, on the 11th of November, 1893. The proofs of 'death,as they appear in the case, were furnished on the 27th •of August, 1892 — less than two weeks after the date of the •death. On the trial in the court of common pleas, there was a verdict for the plaintiff, the beneficiary, Martha Gierl, for the amounts payable by the terms of the policies, with interest after the date when they became due. There was a motion for a new trial in the case,which was overruled by the court and exceptions taken. The testimony given in ■the case was embodied in a bill of exceptions, duly signed and filed, and this petition in error is filed for the purpose ■of reversing the judgment rendered by the court of common pleas. The assignments of error in the case are as follows:

1. Said court erred in not directing a verdict for plaintiff in error.

2. Said court erred in overruling the motion of plaintiff In error for a new trial.

3. Said court erred in his charge to the jury in the trial, -of said action.

[296]*2964. The facts set forth in the petition are not sufficient in. law to maintain the said action against plaintiff in error.

5. Said court erred in the admission of evidence offered by the defendant in error, to which the plaintiff in error objected.

6. Said judgment was given for said defendant in error when it should have, been given for said plaintiff in error.

The principal questions arising in the case for our consideration may be somewhat briefly stated, though, perhaps-a little time may be required in order to state our views of the rules of equity and the rules of law governing the case upon the testimony in the bill of exceptions and the action of the court as it there appears.

It appears from the testimony in the case, that the beneficiary named in the policies, Martha Gierl, was not in any manner related to Oresant Fox, the party whose life was insured. It does appear that she was the wife of a foster son (as he is called) of Oresant Fox. He was not her real son, but he had been taken by Oresant Fox in infancy and cared-for, raised and treated as her son. It is contended by plaintiff in error here that the plaintiff below had no such insurable interest in the. life of said Oresant Fox, the foster mother, as entitles her to become a beneficiary in a policy issued upon the life of Oresant Fox. It is not denied but that the woman herself, Oresant Fox, might, under her own-application, take out a policy upon her life for the benefit of any person whom she might see proper to name; -and it is contended on the part of Martha Gierl that, as the application was made, not by her, but by Oresant Fox; that the premium was paid for the benefit of the beneficiary, Martha Gierl — in short, that the beneficiary was not the applicant' for the policy, but that the foster mother, Mrs. Fox, was the applicant and obtained the policies for the benefit of Martha. Gierl. It is also claimed that upon the death of the decedent, Mrs. Fox, the contract of insurance limited the time-within which an action should be brought upon the policies-[297]*297to six months. The action, in point of fact, was not brought ■until the expiration of about thirteen months from the •death of the decedent.

Upon the allegations of the answer — to which I will ■briefly call attention — these contentions are a principally raised. Both policies are set out in the petition. In both* •of them is contained this provision:

“No suit shall be brought nor action commenced against said company under this policy until ten days shall have expired after the filing of proofs of death upon all the forms prescribed by the company in its home office, nor ■after six months from the date of death of the insured, it being understood and agreed that if any suit or action be commenced after said six ' months, the lapse of time shall be taken to be conclusive evidence against any claim, the provisions of any and all statutes of limitation to the contrary being hereby expressly waived.”

In the answer the company admits many of the material matters alleged in the petition, and proceeds to assert, as I 'have stated:

* * “That applications for said insurance were vnot made or signed by .said Cresant Fox, and said insurance was procured by and solely for the use and benefit of •said Martha Gierl. The said Martha Gierl is and was at the time of the procurement of said policies of insurance in no way related by kinship or blood ties to the said Cresant Fox, and said Martha Gierl had at said times and now has no interest in the life of said Cresant Fox- either pecuniary or otherwise, and said insurance was fraudulent and void.”

The policies and the applications were ■ attached. ■ The ‘latter appear upon their face to bear the signatures' of Cresant Fox,and to be made for the benefit of Martha Gierl. Upon the testimony introduced in the case there was some controversy as to who these applications were signed by. Naturally they were not signed by Cresant Fox, because she was not able to write. But the testimony upon the part of the plaintiff is, that they were signed by the agent of the [298]*298insurance company who was taking the application; that he subscribed her name, by her authority, to these applications; and it was utterly denied on the part of the plaintiff below that Martha Gierl had had anything to do with the affixing of the signature of the old lady to the applications, and her testimony is that the application was made in the presence of Mrs.....

The answer proceeds to allege:

“Defendant further says that said insurance was procured by the said Martha Gierl upon representations made to this defendant for the purpose of procuring this insurance that said Oresant Fox was but sixty-three years of age when in truth and in fact the said Oresant Fox was at the time of the procurement of said policies nearly eighty years of age. Said Martha Gierl and said Oresant Fox well knew that said Oresant Fox was more than sixty-three years of age, and was nearly eighty years of age at the time said policies of insurance were applied for and were issued, but for the purpose of» defrauding this defendant said Martha Gierl and said Oresant Fox willfully and falsely represented said Oresant Fox as sixty-three years old.’’

The testimony shows that the plaintiff when she was inquired of as to her age — -that they asked her when she was born, and she said she didn’t know when she was born; but when.asked how old she was, she stated that she was somewhere from sixty-three years old, and said: “My last birthday is sixty-three.’’ Now, there is' testimony tending to show that these applications were written, both of them, by the agent who'was taking the application, and the testimony of the witness is that she gave her best opinion to the agent, that she must be from 61. to 68 years of age.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio C.C. 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-insurance-v-gierl-ohiocirct-1896.