Mutual Life Insurance v. Otto

138 A. 16, 153 Md. 179, 53 A.L.R. 487, 1927 Md. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 8, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 138 A. 16 (Mutual Life Insurance v. Otto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Life Insurance v. Otto, 138 A. 16, 153 Md. 179, 53 A.L.R. 487, 1927 Md. LEXIS 31 (Md. 1927).

Opinions

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

.The appellant in this case conducts a life insurance business in Baltimore City. On or about April 20th, 1925, Clarence W. FoKwell, its soliciting agent, received from Earl W. Otto, an infant, an application for a five hundred dollar twenty year endowment insurance policy on his life in favor of his mother Margie Otto-, and at the same time received from him fifty-eight cents in payment of the first week’s premium to become due on the policy when issued. The application was accepted, and, on April 25th, 1925, the policy was issued and delivered by the appellant to Fo-xwell, to be by him delivered to Otto-. Otto- was injured in an automobile accident on April 28th, 1925, before Foswell had manually delivered the policy to him, and on the same day he died. *181 Thereupon Mrs. Otto demanded of the appellant the amount of the policy, and upon its refusal to pay the same she brought this suit. The case was tried before the court and a jury in the Baltimore City Court and, the verdict and judgment at that trial being for the plaintiff, the defendant appealed.

The appellant’s defense below, and its contention in this Court, is that, since the policy had not been manually delivered to Otto in person before bis death, it never became effective, and it bases that contention on tbis clause of the policy: “Second. This policy shall become void, if upon date of actual delivery, the insured is not alive and in sound health, or if the insured dies in consequence of his or her own criminal action; or if there is in force, upon the life of the insured, a policy previously issued by this company, unless this policy contains an endorsement signed by tbe president or secretary, authorizing this policy to be in force at tbe same time. If this policy becomes void, all premiums paid thereon shall be forfeited to tbe company.” That defense was presented by three prayers offered by the appellant at the close of the plaintiff’s case, all of which were refused, and the action of the court in refusing those three prayers is the subject of the only exception submitted by the record. If the appellant’s contention is good, the three prayers should have been granted; if not, they were properly refused. So that the only questions before us are whether at the time of Otto’s death there had been an “actual delivery” of the policy to him, within the meaning of the clause above referred to, or if not, whether such delivery was waived by the appellant.

The facts relevant to that inquiry are not in dispute, and are as follows: Eoxwell, as has been stated, received the policy for delivery to Otto on April 25th, which was on Saturday, ou which day appellant’s agents received all policies based on tbe “industrial plan” issued during the week. When he received the policy sued on it was “paid up” until the next succeeding Saturday, “which would he the second of May.” He appears to have had certain regular “debit” routes in northeast Baltimore, on wbicb be worked collecting premiums and delivering policies on Monday, Tuesday and Wed *182 nesday in each week, and on Thursday, Friday and Saturday in each week he delivered policies issued to persons in parts of the city not on such routes. Otto lived on Brice Street in northwest Baltimore, which was not on Foxwell’s regular route, and he had not reached him to deliver the policy to him before he, Otto, was killed, and when asked why he had not delivered the policy after his regular hours, he said: “I don’t know any set rule on that; there is no set rule for delivering policies and no set rule for writing policies. We have no stated hours, and I don’t remember whether I had my machine with me on the Monday night you were speaking of on the 27th, but I did have the machine on Monday 20th, and I drove over there in my machine. I don’t have my machine every day.” At the time the first premium was paid Foxwell gave Otto' a receipt which contained the following statement: “No obligation is incurred by said company by reason of this payment, unless said application is> accepted and a policy delivered,” and also a notice to the effect that if the policy were not delivered within four weeks from the date of the receipt, the assured should notify the company of its non-delivery.

The case really turns on the meaning to be given the words “actual delivery” used in the policy. Appellant contends that they mean a physical delivery to Otto in person, while the appellee says that they mean delivery either to Otto or to any other person authorized to receive it for him. In construing the words “actual delivery” as used in the policy, no assistance .is to be had by reference to the notice in the receipt that “no obligation is incurred by the company by reason of” the payment of the first premium “unless * * * a policy is delivered,” first, because the word “delivery” is broader than the phrase “actual delivery”; second, because the notice was no part of any contract and, whatever it amounted to, it was merged in the completed contract, to wit, the policy; third, because the agent had no power to limit the right of his principal to vary any or all of the terms found in the notice; and finally, because the action is not upon any supposed contract evidenced by the notice but upon the policy. *183 So that the question is, Was there “a delivery” within the meaning of the policy ?

Where an insurance policy, expressly or by implication, provides that it shall not bind the insurer until it is actually delivered, manifestly such delivery is necessary to complete the contract. 138 Am. St. Rep. 47. But while such a requirement may be prescribed as a condition precedent, whether it is so in a particular case must depend upon the intention of the parties as expressed in the words of the contract. In this case, the only reference to the “"delivery” of the policy is found in the first paragraph of the “conditions” of the policy, where it is said: “This policy shall become void, if upon date of actual delivery, the insured is not alive.” The words “shall become void,” are inconsistent with the hypothesis that the delivery of the contract was> a condition precedent to its complete operation. Because a thing does not “become” void unless it exists, for if nothing exists nothing can be destroyed. If the insurer had intended that the policy should not become effective or consummate until actually delivered, it would have said that, instead of saying that it should “become void” if when delivered the insured was not alive. On the contrary, by the use of the words last quoted, it conceded that the policy was a completed and binding contract from the date of its issue, but one which would “become” void if prior to actual delivery the insured ceased to exist. The question then is, What, under such circumstances, do the words “actually delivered” as used in the policy mean? Delivery can only mean delivery to the insured, or to some person acting' for him and expressly or by fair implication authorized to receive it for him. The policy does not expressly require that the “actual delivery” shall he to the insured in person, so that delivery to his agent or any person authorized to receive it for him would completely gratify the letter as well as the spirit of the contract.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mid-Continent Life Ins. Co. v. Dees
1954 OK 20 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1954)
Pruitt v. Great Southern Life Ins. Co.
12 So. 2d 261 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1942)
Jones v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
158 Misc. 466 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1936)
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. James
153 So. 759 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1934)
Thurmond v. Sovereign Camp Woodmen of World
155 S.E. 760 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1930)
Orient Insurance v. New Hampshire Fire Insurance
145 A. 147 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 A. 16, 153 Md. 179, 53 A.L.R. 487, 1927 Md. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-life-insurance-v-otto-md-1927.