National Life Co. v. Wolverton

163 S.W.2d 654, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 4, 1942
DocketNo. 2491.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 654 (National Life Co. v. Wolverton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas 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. Wolverton, 163 S.W.2d 654, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 368 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

HALE, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order of one of the district courts of McLennan County overruling a plea of privilege. The proceedings arose out of an action for. damages on account of the alleged breach of a contract of life insurance. Upon issues properly-raised by the pleadings, the trial court found and concluded 'that the suit came within each of the exceptions embraced in subdivisions 23, 27, 28 and 28a, respectively, of Article 1995 of Vernon’s Texas Statutes. A correct disposition of the appeal turns upon whether the evidence adduced upon the hearing was sufficient to sustain the essential findings with respect to one or more of the four exceptions.

Under appropriate points in its brief, appellant contends that the proof was insufficient as a matter of law to establish the existence of a cause of action, or to show that such cause of action, if any, or any part thereof, arose or accrued in Mc-Lennan County, or that the suit was on a policy of life insurance, or that the action was brought against a state-wide mutual assessment company growing out of or based upon any alleged right or claim arising from or predicated upon any policy issued by it, all within the meaning of the venue statute. These contentions require an extended statement from the record.

Appellee, Charlie T. Wolverton, Sr., is now and has been continuously since the year 1902 a resident of Mart in McLennan County, Texas. . On February 15, 1917, at the solicitation of J. P. Smith, he made application at his place of business in Mart on a printed form for membership and insurance in the National Life Association of Des Moines, Iowa, and paid the sum of $73.06 as the first annual premium on the policy applied for. It was agreed in said application, however, that the Association should incur no’ liability under the same until the policy had been issued' by the Association and delivered' to the applicant while in good health. At the same time appellee submitted to medical examination at the hands of a physician in Mart. Smith then transmitted the application, medical examination and premium payment to the Association at Des Moines, Iowa. On February 23, 1917, the Association issued its policy or certificate' insuring appellee, who was then 55 years of age, in the sum of $2,000, payable to his wife as beneficiary. The certificate, with a copy of the application and report of medical examination attached thereto, was thereafter delivered by agent Smith at Mart, Texas, to appellee while in good health.

*656 This.certificate recites on its face1 that the insurance therein specified is granted in consideration of the application and medical examination and of the payment of $73.06 as a first annual payment and the payment of all subsequent amounts required under the contract during its continuance. The certificate, further provides 'on its second page that after the first annual payment, the insured agreed to make subsequent annual payments: “(a) For .the General and Benefit Funds, such amounts as may be levied by the Board of Directors of the Association, the entire Mortuary and Surplus Funds being pledged to maintain an annual rate therefor which is not in eicess of $73.06; also the Reserve Fund may be drawn upon to maintain said rate, if the amount realized therefrom for Mortuary purposes is not sufficient, (b) For the Reserve Fund, the sum of fifty cents for each year of the insured’s age, as stated herein, for each One Thousand Dollars of insurance carried, which amount shall be paid once only, and may be paid in installments as authorized by the Board of Directors, with five per cent annual interest. All savings, between the amount levied for the General and\ Benefit Funds in any one year, and the maximum rate for the said Funds, above státed, will be applied upon this ■ Reserve Fund obligation, until it is paid ih full.”

National Life Association was a mutual assessment company exclusively at the time when it issued the certificate above referred to and it was then duly authorized to do business in Texas as such. On January .30, 1929, its charter was amended under the laws of the State of Iowa so as to authorize it under the name of National-Life Company to thereafter continue its business as a mutual assessment company insofar as may be necessary to carry out all its contracts theretofore made with its members or policyholders, and in addition thereto, it was authorized by said, amendment to thereafter transact the business of life 'insurance as a legal reserve or level premium ' company, and since that time it has transacted business in Texas in both capacities. Appellee paid to National. Life Association and to appellant, National Life Company, respectively, the sum of $73.06 under his contract for each of the years from 1917 to and including the year ending February'23, 1941. On January 29, 1941, appellant notified-ap-pellee that his annual premium had been increased from $73.06 to $398.26. Thereupon appellee offered to pay the annual premium of $73.06, which appellant refused to accept, and hence this suit.

The 'records, reports and parol testimony introduced in' evidence are too voluminous to be here set forth even in the briefest summary. While it was shown that there had been a substantial and steady decrease over a period of years in the assets of appellant belonging to its assessment members, such as appellee, it appears that sáid assets at the end of the year 1940 amounted to approximately Two Million Dollars. Nolan C. Phillips, a certified public accountant, testified at length as an expert witness with respect to the financial history of appellant as reflected by copies of its annual reports to the Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Texas. The substance of his testimony was that there was no necessity disclosed by these records for the increase of the premium as demanded by appellant. Perry Duncan testified that he had been engaged in the insurance business for twenty years and during that time had become familiar with rate structures; that all rates are based essentially upon the American Experience Tables of Mortality with interest calculations at the rate of 3 or 3½ per cent. He testified to the amount of premium required to purchase various types of policies at given ages.

Without further statement, it must suffice to say the trial court found specifically on what we regard as sufficient evidence that the financial condition of appellant was not such as to demand or authorize an increase in the annual premium rate of appellee from $73.06 to $398.26 and that such increase was unnecessary and unreasonable. Conceding, without deciding, that appellant reserved the right under its contract to increase appellee’s annual premium rate, an unauthorized attempt on its part to arbitrarily increase the assessments required to continue the policy in force constituted a repudiation on its-part of the contract. Texas Mutual Life Ins. Ass’n v. Boyd, Tex.Civ.App., 89 S.W.2d 821, point 1 and authorities there cited. We therefore hold that the evidence and findings of the court were sufficient to givé rise to some kind of a cause of action on behalf of ap-pellee. What, then, were the rights and remedies involved, how did they originate and develop, and where did the asserted cause of action and the component parts thereof arise within the meaning of the venue statute?

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163 S.W.2d 654, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-co-v-wolverton-texapp-1942.