New York Life Ins. Co. v. Gill

182 So. 109, 182 Miss. 815, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 197
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1938
DocketNo. 32920.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 182 So. 109 (New York Life Ins. Co. v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Gill, 182 So. 109, 182 Miss. 815, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 197 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

*827 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, Mrs. Flora L. Gill, brought an action at law against the New York Life Insurance Company upon an insurance policy for $3000 which provided for double indemnity in case of death by accident, as shall hereafter appear. In the declaration she averred the existence of the insurance policy in force at the time of the death of the insured, Morris Vernon Gill, her husband; and that he came to his death by accident within the terms of the policy; and also averred that because the insurer had in its possession the proofs of death, revealing to it the cause thereof, it owed plaintiff thereunder the sum of $6000, and that it had not paid the additional amount of $3000 alleged to be due because of the accidental death of the insured, to her, as beneficiary in the policy.

She further averred that the insurer, its agent Mark, the Long Bell Lumber Company and C. Vandercook, superintendent thereof, together with the physicians, had conspired together to conceal from her the cause of her husband’s death, which occurred on the 4th day of September, 1925; and at great length averred concealment, fraud and deceit on the part of the insurer and the- other persons named; that she left Crandall, Mississippi, where her husband’s death occurred, to accompany his remains to Humboldt, Tennessee, for interment; and that on her return Mark, the agent for the insurer, presented to her a draft drawn by the insurer in her favor for the sum of $3000; and that he then and there fraudulently represented to her that the statements furnished the insurer by the two physicians showed that her husband, the insured, had died of natural causes, and that the face of the policy was all the defendant company was due her; that she relied upon the statement, and had no reason or cause to know that her husband had suffered an accident on the day of his death, and that she did not learn of his death having been caused by an accident until October, 1935. This declaration was filed on August 31st, 1936, nearly *828 eleven years after tile death of the insured. There was much pleading, which it would unduly prolong this opinion to set out in full.

The insurer filed a plea of the general issue, a special plea of the statute of limitations of six years, Code 1930, section 2292, and a plea of accord and satisfaction, with denial of any fraud on its part, or any conspiracy with reference to the matter,- and issue was joined on all these pleas by lengthy replications.

Upon trial before a jury, and a verdict thereby, the court below rendered a judgment for $3,000 with interest, from which judgment the New York Life Insurance Company appealed here.

We shall not set forth the many errors assigned as ground for reversal of this cause, as we have reached the conclusion that a peremptory instruction requested by the insurer, and denied by the court, which denial is assigned as error, should have been given. We are of the opinion that the evidence wholly fails to sustain the charge of concealed fraud, and that the appellee exercised no diligence whatever in ascertaining the cause of her husband’s death.

As a witness in her own behalf, Mrs. Gill testified that her husband died on September 3rd, 1925, about eight o’clock at night. He had been working that day for the Long Bell Lumber Company, left home that morning to go to his work some distance from Crandall, where he lived with his wife; that he lived only about thirty minutes after he was brought home in a dying condition, where he was attended by Drs. Smith and McRae,- that he was well when he left home; she was present with Dr. McRae when he died. She testified that oh the night of his death she had the insurance policy involved in this controversy in her possession, in the dresser drawer, that she gave it to someone that night, and had not seen it since.

She testified that Dr. McRae was employed by the *829 Long Bell Lumber Company as its physician, and was also the family physician of her husband and herself.

C. Vandercook was superintendent of the Long Bell Lumber Company; she saw him at a neighbor’s home the night of her husband’s death, where he called on her, to ascertain her wishes in regard to the burial of her husband; that on the following day the body of Mr. Gill was carried to Qluitman for shipment to Humboldt, Tennessee, Vandercook taking the appellee and her children to Quitman, stopping by the company office to sign some insurance papers before taking the train, which was due about midnight, where in the presence of a notary,-Mr. Mark, who had solicited and written the insurance on the life of Gill about a month before his death, a Mr. Mnllett, and Vandercook, she signed some papers — what she did not know — being* dazed, she did what she was told; that Vandercook told her that Mark was leaving for Washington, and wanted her signature to the papers to save delay. She went to Humboldt, stayed about three weeks, when she returned to her home, where she received the following letter from Mark:

“Dear Mrs. Gill: I just returned from Longview, Washington. Am working on your claim. Will advise you in a few days. Am sorry of the delay but it is taking quite a bit of investigating. Kindest regards to my Crandall.
“Yours truly,
“Gust K. Mark.”

About a week thereafter Mark called on her with a check for $3,000, at which time the following conversation occurred between them:

“What did. Mr. Mark give yon, if anything, on the occasion of his visit? A. He gave me this check.
“What did he tell you, if anything, when he gave you the check? A. He told me my husband had died of heart trouble and upon his investigations that that was all they owed me.
*830 “Now, Mrs. Gill, state whether or not you believed what he told you? A. I did.”

Upon her return after the funeral she heard no discussion of the cause of her husband’s death; but in 1935 a friend told her that he had suffered an accident in the wood's on the day of his death — this was the first she heard of his having been injured while at work in the woods; she had thought his death was the result of heart ’trouble, as both Dr. Smith and Dr. McRae had told her on the night of Gill’s death. She remained in Crandall until December 26th, 1925, when she moved to Meridian, and has not since lived in the former community.

Three witnesses were offered, who testified that at about 4:30 on the evening of September 3rd, 1925, the employes of the Long Bell Lumber Company, including Gill were engaged in loading a shaft weighing 800 to 1,000 pounds on a trailer, to be conveyed on the railroad from the woods back to Crandall. The employes were carried to the woods in the morning on a train, and returned to Crandall by the same means at the close of the day’s work.

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 109, 182 Miss. 815, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-ins-co-v-gill-miss-1938.