National Life Co. v. Wilkerson's Adm'r

71 S.W.2d 1034, 254 Ky. 459, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 25, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 S.W.2d 1034 (National Life Co. v. Wilkerson's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Life Co. v. Wilkerson's Adm'r, 71 S.W.2d 1034, 254 Ky. 459, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 109 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

On October 23, 1919, the National Life Association of Des Moines, Iowa, issued its policy to Rufus T. Wilkerson, insuring his life in the sum of $2,000; the insurance being payable to his estate. The policy was issued on the assessment plan and had no reserve or loan value. 'The National Life Association has been succeeded by the appellant, National Life Company. The initial assessment paid by Wilkerson for his insurance was $44.74, and the annual assessments he appears to have paid up to the summer of 1930 were in like -amount. Towards the end of this period, the National Life Association and its successor, the National Life Company, ceased to write insurance on the assessment plan, due, as it seems, to a change in the laws of the state of Iowa. The company then sent out into the field a number of agents to visit its policyholders who held these assessment policies ;for the purpose of informing these policyholders that dhe writing of insurance on the assessment plan had *461 ceased, and that therefore necessarily as the policyholders insured under the assessment plan died off, no new ones being added, the burden of carrying the assessment policies would very materially increase as the years went on. Wade English, one of these agents, visited Wilkerson in June, 1930. As a result of several interviews with Wilkerson, .the latter surrendered his assessment policy and received in lieu thereof what is known in this record as a “Certificate Delating to Old Age Disability, Pure Endowment Benefit, ’ ’ hereinafter called the “endowment certificate,” and which provided that in consideration of the surrender of the assessment policy, the company would pay to Wilkerson the sum of $294.26 on the 23d day of October, 1944, if he were then living. At the same time, Wilkerson took out a 21-pay-ment life policy in the National Life Company in the sum of $1,000, the premium to be paid quarterly at the rate of $20.74, or a total premium for the year bf $82.96. He paid the first premium on June 23, 1930, when the policy was issued. He failed to pay the premium due on the 23d of September, 1930, and the policy lapsed. The record discloses that the motive which actuated Wilkerson in allowing this policy to lapse was that he had procured life insurance in another company in the principal sum of $1,000, at a cheaper rate than that called for by the policy issued to him by the appellant in the preceding June. Wilkerson died in March, 1931. His personal representative collected the last policy of insurance, to which reference has been made, and then undertook to collect from the appellant the policy issued in June, 1930, as well as the $294.26 covered by the endowment certificate. The personal representative was unsuccessful in these efforts as the June policy had lapsed and the endowment certificate was payble nob until 1944, and then only in the event Wilkerson was living. Thereupon this suit was brought seeking to reinstate the assessment policy surrendered in June, 1930, and after such reinstatement to recover its amount of $2,000, less an assessment of $44.74, which the petition alleged was all that was levied against this policy in the following October when the assessments were due. As grounds for this suit, it was alleged that the surrender of the assessment policy had been procured by. fraud ia that, first, in order to induce the insured to surrender his assessment policy it was represented to him that the assessments thereon would thereafter materially increase and that the next assessment he would have to pay *462 would be $165, and, secondly, it was represented to bint that if be surrendered Ms policy be would receive an endowment certificate for $294.26, payable to him in 1944 if be were then living, but payable to Ms estate at all events if be died before that time; both of these representations being false, and the insured acting in reliance upon them. To support these allegations, which' were denied by the company, the administrator of Wilkerson introduced several witnesses who testified that-they had heard English state to the insured that if ha-surrendered his policy he would receive a certificate requiring the company to pay him $294.26 in 1944 if he. were then living, and which would be payable to his' estate if he died before that time. The administrator; also proved by witnesses that like representations were-made by these agents to other assessment policyholders-in the neighborhood to induce them to surrender their policies. "The administrator also introduced several witnesses who testified that the agent had represented to-the deceased that if he retained his assessment policies,, his assessments would materially increase and the one due-on the next assessment date would be $165. They also introduced witnesses who had policies in this same assessment class who testified that the assessments in the following October were not advanced over what they had theretofore been. The appellant introduced its agent, who denied that he told Wilkerson that his -endowment certificate would be payable to his estate if he died prior to 1944. It produced the application of Wilkerson to-exchange his assessment policy for this endowment certificate which Wilkerson had ’signed, and which plainly' stated that the endowment was not to be paid until 1944- and then only- if Wilkerson were alive. ' The company also established that Wilkerson receive his endowment certificate, which also plainly set out this fact, shortly after its issuance. So far as the record shows, Wilkerson retained this certificate until his death and never made any complaint or effort to set the transaction aside-because of having been defrauded or for any other reason. English admitted that he told Wilkerson that it would not be long before his assessments would materially increase, but denied that he said it would jump-in the following October, or that it would then be $165. He stated that in June no one could say what the assessment would be in October, for not until then could the losses for the year be determined. His explanation of-the figure of $165 being mentioned in the conversation-. *463 lie had with Wilkerson is this: That Wilkerson at first wished to take out a $2,000 policy instead of the $1,000 policy he did take ont in Jnne, 1930. It will he remembered that the quarterly payments on this $1,000 policy came to $82.06 for the year, and a $2,000 policy, the premiums of which were paid in the same fashion, would have come to $165.92. He says that the witnesses who testified that he told Wilkerson that his next assessment would be $165 were mistaken and that they mistook what he told Wilkerson about what the premium would be on a $2,000 policy for what the next assessment on the old policy would be. The lower court granted the appellee the relief sought in his petition, and from the judgment thus entered, this appeal is prosecuted.

This being an action for rescission, that is, the setting aside of the surrender of the assessment policy for the endowment certificate, the return of the endowment certificate to the company, and the return of the assessment policy to the appellee, the right to such rescission must be established by clear and convincing evidence. Turner-Elkhorn Coal Co. v. Smith, 247 Ky. 112, 56 S. W. (2d) 545; Perry v. Thomas, 232 Ky. 781, 24 S. W. (2d) 603.

As said in the case of Atlantic Delaine Co. v. James, 94 U. S. 207, 214, 24 L. Ed. 112:

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W.2d 1034, 254 Ky. 459, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-co-v-wilkersons-admr-kyctapphigh-1934.