Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Farmer

47 S.W. 850, 65 Ark. 581, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 5, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 850 (Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Farmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Farmer, 47 S.W. 850, 65 Ark. 581, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 122 (Ark. 1898).

Opinions

Bunn, C. J.

This is a suit to recover on a policy of [life insurance, and the defenses are several, and the first in order is that the policy, notwithstanding its delivery, under an expressed stipulation contained in the application for it, never in fact became operative. The stipulation referred to is in these words: “That under no circumstances shall the insurance hereby applied for be in force until payment in cash of the first payment, and delivery of the policy to the applicant during his life and in good health."

The evidence in the case tended to show that the policy was placed in the mail at Hope, properly addressed to the insured at Hot Springs, early in the morning of the day in the afternoon of which the insured was taken with his last illness, and that in due course it should have reached him before he was taken sick; and the court appears to have so found, and to have determined accordingly. This, of course, involves also the question whether or not the placing of a writing in the mail, properly addressed, with postage prepaid, as in this instance, is a delivery as a general rule, as the trial court held. As to this, we see no error, and the question is at last, does this case come under the general rule as to that particular? Or, in other words, was the first payment made before delivery, under special stipulations referred to above, so as to make the policy operative before the last sickness and death of the insured? All the other material issues in this case involve the breaches of special warranties. This one does 'not, but is a mere stipulation as to what shall not be. a delivery sojas^to make the contract of insurance complete and effective.

The policy itself contains this recital: “In consideration of the answers, statements and agreements contained in the application for the policy of insurance, which are hereby made a part of this contract, and of the payment of eighty dollars, as a first payment to be paid on or before the delivery of this policy, and the further payment of thirty dollars payable to the association within sixty (60) days from the date of this policy, for the general expense fund of the association, the Mutual Belief Fund Life Association does hereby receive Luden Farmer, of Sot Springs, County of Garland, State of Arkansas, as a member of said association,” etc.

Other than the presumption that may arise from this recital, taken in connection with the mailing of the policy and the receipt of the same by.the family of the insured, if not by himself, there was absolutely no evidence of this first payment having been made at all, adduced oh the trial. There is this to be said also that, besides Hartin, the agent who solicited for the insurance, and mailed the policy to the insured, and did all necessary things connected with the insurance, there was no one living who could testify as to this payment, since the officials of the company did not necessarily know whether or not it had been made; nor could the beneficiary, Mrs. Farmer. When Hartin was on the stand testifying,' neither party asked him as to this payment, and he said nothing in reference thereto. Each party seems to have been afraid of any answer on the subject he might make, and so the matter was left, each one claiming the benefit of the presumption that ai’ises under such a. state of things.

To guide the jury in concluding upon the evidence on this point, at the instance of the defendant company, the court gave the following instruction, which was in no way modified or affected by any other, to-wit:

“14. The possession of the policy by Parmer before his death is prima facie evidence that the first premium was paid, but it may still be shown that in point of fact it was not paid. The question for you to decide is whether the first premium was paid by Parmer while in good health; and in passing on this point you will fairly and impartially consider all the testimony in the case; and if you find from the preponderance of the evidence that the premium was not paid by Pawner while he was in good health, you will find for the defendant.”

This certainly made a delivery of the policy a presumption that the first payment had been made, and cast upon the defendant company the burden of showing that in fact it had not been made. It showed by its officers, whose duty it was to have received the money had the same been paid to it, that they had never received it, and then the defendant, by a sort of counter presumption to rebut the presumption in favor of the plaintiff, referred to one of its by-laws, which made its agent and solicitor and the examining physician, in the collection of money, a representative and agent of the applicant for insurance, thus making the applicant responsible for money so paid, until it was actually paid into the treasury of the company. If this were all of it, it would seem that the former presumption would, in a way, be rebutted; but this not all of it, for, whatever may be the case in respect to other payments and collections of money, as regards the first payment the following clause in the contract between Hartin and the company, made subsequent to and in view of the by-law mentioned, makes Hartin the agent of the company, and not only so, but gives him authority, after paying the examining physician’s fee out of it, to appropriate this first payment — in this case eighty dollars — to the payment of his own fee, thus:

“The compensation to be allowed said J. F. Hartin for securing said business on the year distribution deposit plan (presumably the kind of policy involved herein) shall be $8 for each $1,000 of insurance, payable out of the first payment thereunder, less the medical examination fee, which is to be remitted to the association with the application; or a receipt therefor from the physician must accompany the same.”

The expression, “payable out of the first payment thereunder,” especially when taken in connection with the manner of payment to the examining physician, makes it manifest that the agent had the right to retain as much of the payment as would pay his fee, which in this case is substantially the exact amount. Nor is this clause, so far as third parties are concerned, changed by the subsequent provision in the contract to the effect that the company might set-off against the agent’s commission any debt it might have against him; but what follows indicates that subsequent commissions are mainly, if not exclusively, referred to in the provision. At all events, this part of the contract plainly makes Hartin the agent of the company in making the first collection, or rather authorizes him to act for himself, and in this he is not representing the applicant. The proof, therefore, that the payment was not in fact made to Hartin, we think, was insufficient to rebut the presumption of payment arising from the recital of the policy, and the jury’s finding cannot be disturbed as to that.

The other issues raised spring out of the alleged breaches of the warranties in answers to questions propounded in the application to the applicant and answered by him through the agent, Hartin; he being, by a stipulation in the application, made the agent of the applicant, as is also the examining physician, as to all statements and answers in the application.

The following occurs in relation to the questions and answers of No. 15: “Q.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 850, 65 Ark. 581, 1898 Ark. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-reserve-fund-life-assn-v-farmer-ark-1898.