Murphy v. Prudential Insurance

30 Pa. Super. 560, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 120
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 23, 1906
DocketAppeal, No. 41
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 Pa. Super. 560 (Murphy v. Prudential Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Prudential Insurance, 30 Pa. Super. 560, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 120 (Pa. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

This is an action of assumpsit on an insurance policy, issued by the defendant on the life of Patrick McNamara, and the plaintiff having recovered a judgment the defendant appealed.

After the death of McNamara the plaintiff, Murphy, brought this action, claiming to be the assignee of said policy for a valuable consideration. Upon this point we think there was sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, if the policy was in force at the date of the death of McNamara.

By the terms of the policy the assured was required to pay a weekly premium of seventy-one cents, and it is conceded that the last payment only continued the policy in force until June 30, 1902. The assured died January 2,1903, and, therefore, when the plaintiff made his claim for the insurance the policy had been forfeited, according to its terms, for more than six months. It is conceded that no premium was paid from June, 1902, until December following, when an attempt was made to pay premium on the policy, but it was never accepted by the company. The policy contains upon its face, in printing, the following: “ This policy shall be void .... if the said weekly premium shall not be paid according to the terms hereof. ... If for any cause this policy be or become void, all [563]*563premiums paid thereon sha]l be forfeited to the company, except as provided on the back of this policy.”

“ 6. The weekly premiums stated in said schedule shall be paid to an authorized agent of the company on or before every Monday during the continuance of this contract, and no pay- ’ ment shall be considered binding upon the company unless entered by the agent at the time of the payment in the premium receipt book belonging with this policy.”

“ 8. If for any reason the premium is not collected by the agent when due, it shall be the duty of the policy holder, before the said premium shall be in arrears four weeks, to bring or send said premium to the home office, or to the company’s agent.”

“ 10. Agents are not authorized to make, alter or discharge contracts, or waive forfeitures, or receive premiums on policies in arrears beyond the time allowed by the regulations of the-company, which in no case shall exceed four weeks.”

This policy was by the plain terms upon its face, and the conceded fact that no premiums had been paid for about six months, lapsed, forfeited and void, unless the plaintiff could show a state of facts establishing a waiver of the default by the company, or that it was estopped from defending, because of the nonpayment of the premiums.

To avoid the apparent forfeiture of the policy by reason of the nonpayment of the premiums, the plaintiff set up, in substance, that his wife, acting for him, visited Mr. Schubert, called the district superintendent of the defendant company, prior to the date when the next premium would fall due after June, 1902; that she informed him that the strike waspending and that they would be unable to pay the premiums, asking what should be done ; that Mr. Schubert told her that during the pendency of the strike the company had decided to suspend the rules requiring the payment of the premiums, and that the premiums might be paid after the expiration of the strike; that if the person insured should die in the meantime, the unpaid premiums should be deducted from the amount payable at the death of the insured, and those unpaid premiums should be a lien upon the policy. This, in substance, is the ground on which the plaintiff claims to recover on a policy which, according to its own terms, had lapsed.

[564]*564It is upon this alleged state of facts that the plaintiff contends for the doctrine of estoppel and waiver as against the defendant. It clearly appears that Mr. Schubert, Mr. Griswold and Mr. Haggerty were agents of the defendant company in the Scranton district, and that the defendant corporation had its home office in Newark, N. J. The scope of the power of these local agents is not presumed to extend beyond the soliciting of insurance and the collection of premiums and the business necessarily incident thereto. It must be conceded that the plaintiff furnished sufficient evidence to carry the question to the jury upon which he relied to save the forfeiture of the policy, provided proof of the statements of the agents was sufficient, without more, to bind the defendant company.

While the plaintiff sustained his contention by the testimony of his wife and son, the defendant positively proved by the testimony of Schubert and his two assistants that no agreement or promise was ever made by any of them to Mrs. Murphy or to anyone else, that the premiums need not be paid during the strike. Moreover, the agents went further, and specifically denied that they had any authority to enter into any such agreement. Now right here is where we think the learned court fell into error as alleged in the first and second assignments.

In the face of the plain terms of the policy above quoted, we think it was manifest error for the learned court to instruct the jury, in substance, that if Mr. Schubert made the promise relied on by the plaintiff, and testified to by Mrs. Murphy and her son, then the company is estopped from defending on the ground that the McNamara policy had lapsed. In our opinion, the burden rested on the plaintiff to go one step farther and satisfy the jury, by competent evidence, that the local agents at Scranton had authority to suspend the payment of premiums and still keep the policy in force. Upon this question we have carefully read the entire record without discovering a scintilla of evidence that these agents had any such precedent authority, and the record is just as barren of evidence that the company ratified such arrangement, if it was made.

In our opinion, under the facts and the law applicable thereto, the first, second and fourth assignments of error must be sustained. This conclusion will relieve us from discussing the remaining eleven assignments.

[565]*565We are unable to understand, in view of tbe express terms of the policy, how the company can be held to have waived the payment of premiums or be estopped from defending on that ground in the absence of any evidence of authority in Schubert, or either of his assistants, to enter into the agreement upon which the plaintiff relies. If there was no authority in the agents to make such agreement, and the fact that it was made was never communicated to any officer or agent of the company having authority to make or ratify such an agreement, it becomes very clear that the alleged waiver and estoppel must fail.

Where an agent acts outside of the scope of his authority the company is not bound without ratification: Greene v. Lycoming Fire Insurance Co., 91 Pa. 387.

In Waynesboro Mutual Fire Insurance Company v. Conover, 98 Pa. 384, the policy provided that no suit should be maintained thereon unless brought within six months after a loss had occurred. The action was not brought for two years after the loss, and the plaintiff relied upon the promise of a general agent of the company that it was unnecessary to sue within the six months. Held, that such promise or statement by the agent did not constitute a waiver, and the judgment of- the court below in favor of the plaintiff was reversed.

In Lantz v. Insurance Co., 139 Pa.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Pa. Super. 560, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-prudential-insurance-pasuperct-1906.