National Life & Accident Ins. v. Atwood

194 S.W.2d 350, 29 Tenn. App. 141, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 8, 1946
Docket3
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 194 S.W.2d 350 (National Life & Accident Ins. v. Atwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Life & Accident Ins. v. Atwood, 194 S.W.2d 350, 29 Tenn. App. 141, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

*144 McAMLS, J.

The National Life & Accident Insurance Co. filed this action in the Chancery Court to cancel a life insurance policy dated February 12, 1940 upon the life of Willie M. Atwood and to enjoin an action at law by the beneficiary, John B. Atwood. Atwood filed an answer and cross-bill making the issue of fraud and concealment in procuring the policy.

The case was twice tried before a jury on the following issues:

“ (1) Did Mrs. Atwood tell the agent, Tyner, that she had been treated for syphilis, and had been in the hospital twice within the past eight months, preceding her application, once for influenza and once for bronchitis or bronchiectasie ?
‘£ (2) Did Mrs. Atwood know at the time she signed her application for insurance with the agent, Tyner, that the application did not contain the proper, and truthful information as to her health?
“(3) Did Mrs. Atwood knowingly make false representations, in answering the questions contained in her application for insurance policy contract involved in this cause, with actual intent to deceive the complainant National Life & Accident Insurance Co.?”

Both juries answered these issues in favor of the beneficiary, finding in effect that the insured made full disclosure of her condition of health to the agent and did not know that the agent incorrectly transcribed her answers to the questions in the application.

The Insurance Company filed a wayside bill of exceptions and a motion for a new trial following the first trial. The Chancellor, without stating upon what ground, granted the motion for a new trial and the Insurance Company, by appropriate assignment, now insists that' the Chancellor erred in' not decreeing in its favor at the *145 first trial “upon the whole proof” because, it is insisted, the undisputed evidence shows that the ’ insured knew that the agent withheld from the Insurance Company knowledge of the fact that she had been afflicted with syphilis before the policy was issued.

Appellee insists that we 'cannot review this action of the Chancellor because (1) the motion for a new trial following the first trial was neither incorporated in the bill of exceptions nor spread upon the minutes and (2) there was no exception preserved to the action of .the court in sustaining the motion for a new trial.

The established rule is that everything which occurs during the progress of the trial which must be preserved by bill of exceptions must be made the basis of a motion for a new trial if complaint is to be made thereof on appeal. Bostick v. Thomas, 137 Tenn. 99, 191 S. W. 968. And, before the enactment of Chapter 20, Public Acts of Tennessee for 1945, it was well settled that a motion for a new trial must be either incorporated in the bill of exceptions or spread upon the minutes of the trial court. Chattanooga Iron & Coal Co. v. Hanssard, 143 Tenn. 553, 226 S. W. 1045.

Chapter 20, Public Acts of 1945, approved February 14, 1945, provides:

“Whenever such motion for a new trial shall appear to have been filed and acted upon in the lower court, such shall be and become a part of the record without the necessity of spreading the same on the minutes or incorporation in the bill of exceptions.”

The motion for a new trial, filed November 21, 1944, following the first trial, was neither incorporated in the wayside bill of exceptions nor spread upon the minutes and the question is: Would the application of the 1945 Act to the present ease deprive appellee of a vested *146 property right without due process of law or give to the Act au unauthorized retrospective force and effect?

The rule that a motion for a new trial must be spread upon the minutes or incorporated in the hill of exceptions is an exception to the general rule that pleadings and other parts of,the technical record become a part of the record for purposes of appeal when they are properly filed by the clerk of the trial court. There seems no good reason why a motion for a new trial, any more than any other part of the technical record, should be authenticated by the trial judge and, now that the Legislature has spoken, the Courts should give the Act a liberal construction as a remedial statute and, if possible, construe it as applying to pending cases. To so construe it can work no injustice while to limit its application to cases tried after the Act was passed might do so.

Plainly, the Act, if applied, would not deprive appellee of a vested right. In the first place he had no final judgment or decree in his favor when the Act was passed because the Chancellor had not concurred in the verdict of the jury. But, if the verdict had been concurred in by the trial judge and a decree entered based upon the verdict, the appellant had a right to have it reviewed upon the technical record without a motion for a new trial. The Act, if applied, would only serve by a procedural change to enlarge the scope of review to include a review of the facts. The Act, therefore, takes away no right of appellee though its effect, if applied to a pending case, is to enlarge a right of appellant.

The Legislature is free to effect changes which relate exclusively to the mode of procedure or substitute new remedies for old and there is no vested right to a particular remedy. Lunati v. Progressive Bldg. & Loan *147 Ass ’n, 167 Tenn. 161, 67 S. W. (2d) 148; 11 Am. Jur. 1185; 16 C. J. S., Constitutional Law, sec. 260, p. 680. A statute which, furnishes a new remedy hut does not impair any contractual obligation or disturb a vested right is applicable to proceedings begun before its passage. Indeed, it is said statutes dealing with matters of procedure only, prima facie, apply to pending actions and will he so construed unless a contrary purpose appears from the terms of the act. 50 Am. Jur. 506.

As applied to procedural changes governing the right of appeal the rule is that, where due provision has been made for the preservation of essential rights, the procedure for review or the extent of review are so far within the power of the legislature as to preclude the raising of questions of due process with respect to the method or procedure for review, the parties entitled to review, or the character of review in the appellate court. 16 C. J. S., Constitutional Law, section 626, p. 1278.

A parallel case was before the Supreme Court of Virginia in Kennedy Coal Corp. v. Buckhorn Coal Corp., 140 Va. 37, 124 S. E. 482. There a new act of the legislature gave the right of appeal in certain cases in which the right was barred under existing law. The act extending the right of appeal was sustained as against the contention that it deprived the appellee of a vested right. See also Bates v. Ransome-Crummey Co., 42 Cal. App. 699, 184 p. 39.

The Middle Section of this Court, in Brinkerhoff v. Nashville Horse & Mule Co., Davidson Law, 1 applied the foregoing principles to the Act under consideration and held it controlling in a case tried before the Act was passed. In an opinion by Judge Hickerson it was said:

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W.2d 350, 29 Tenn. App. 141, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-accident-ins-v-atwood-tennctapp-1946.