New York Life Insurance v. Riggins

1936 OK 528, 61 P.2d 543, 178 Okla. 36, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 475
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 22, 1936
DocketNo. 25429.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1936 OK 528 (New York Life Insurance v. Riggins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Insurance v. Riggins, 1936 OK 528, 61 P.2d 543, 178 Okla. 36, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 475 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

BUSBY, J.

Clay Riggins, a civil engineer, 32 years old, died on May 7, 1931, under circumstances subsequently related herein. This action is to determine the extent of liability, if any, of the New York Life Insurance Company under two policies of insurance previously issued by it upon the life of deceased.

During his lifetime Clay Riggins procured from the company two policies of life insurance containing “waiver of premium” and “double Indemnity” provisions* The policies were, respectively, for $5,000 and *37 $10,000 in the event of death irom any cause, and twice such amounts in the event death should result from “bodily injury ef-. fected solely through external, violent and accidental means.” When these policies were issued the executors, administrators, or assigns of the insured were named therein as beneficiaries. However, in each of the policies provision was made whereby the insured reserved the right to change the beneficiary. On March 28, 1930, this right was partially exercised. On that date the insured entered into a trust agreement whereby one-half of the death benefits provided in the policies were to be retained in trust by the company and disbursed in monthly payments to Mary Elva Riggins, wife of the insured, as beneficiary of the trust thus created. It was agreed that the amount-of each monthly installment should be governed by the extent of the company’s total liability, that is, the company as trustee agreed to pay $50 per month upon its liability of $15,000, but it further agreed that if such liability should exceed that sum, one-half of the excess would be applied to increase the amount of such monthly payments, thus in the event of death from accidental means within the meaning of the policy the monthly payments would be $100 per month until one-half of $30,000 together with interest accruals as stipulated between the parties should be paid.

Each of the policies required periodic payment of premiums unless such payment should be excused by reason - of the premium waiver features of the policies. Premiums falling due on the two policies became payable, respectively, on December 23, 1930, and December 30, 1930. Neither of these premiums was paid. A 30-day grace period was provided in each of the policies during which it should remain in force subsequent to the due date of the premium. However, this period of grace had in each instance expired when the deceased died on May 7, 1931.

It appears that the deceased conducted his business as a civil engineer in partnership with one W. B. McMasters under the firm name of Riggins and McMasters. .This partnership had been formed in the fall of 1929. A large portion of the insured’s business was in connection with municipal improvements or projects.

*In the spring of 1930, Mr. Riggins became addicted to the excessive use of alcoholic -beverages, as a result of which his system was undermined to such an extent that in May, 1930, he was placed in Duke’s Sanitarium at Guthrie for treatment. After staying in that institution for some eleven days he showed some slight improvement and returned to Oklahoma City, his place of business and residence. For a short time after removing from the sanitarium he desisted from the use of alcoholic drinks, but again took up the habit in the early summer of 1930. The date of resumption was fixed by some of the testimony as on or about' July 1st of that year. There is testimony in the record intended to show that by reason of drink the deceased was suffering from chronic alcoholism and was incapacitated to perform or transact business until the date of his death. We shall defer for the present consideration of the evidence touching upon the condition of the deceased during this time.

On May 4, 1931, Mr. Riggins took about an ounce of bromidia which produced bro-midia poisoning. On May 5th he was taken to the Oklahoma City General Hospital. After his admission to the hospital his condition began to improve. On May 7th he was left alone in his room by the nurse for a few minutes. When she returned he was absent from the room. She heard the water running in the bathroom nearby. She busied herself with other matters for' a short time and then became alarmed at the failure of the patient to emerge from the bathroom. She knocked at the door. Receiving no response, she called another male patient, who opened the bathroom door. The assured was lying on his right side in the bathtub with the hot water faucet open .and the hot water running over his face. The incident is recorded on the hospital records in the following language:

“Face on right arm sideways. No water in tub. Face blue. Scars, superficial, over right cheek, nose lips chin and left cheek. Deep burns over chest and right side down on legs. Both arms burned. jWas gasping for breath when found. Found in tub with hot water turned on, face under faucet.”

At the trial of this case there was some conflict in the evidence as to whether the deceased had died before or after he was found in the tub. There was also some dispute by way of conflicting inferences as to the. probable events leading up to his death which transpired while he was in the bathroom alone. These matters will be more comprehensively considered in the subsequent portions of this opinion.

A few days after the death of the insured, Mrs. Riggins, accompanied by her fatner, Dr. P. H. Anderson, had a conference with *38 one William A. Bucholz, the soliciting agent of the company who had secured the insured’s applications for the two insurance policies heretofore mentioned; in this opinion. The conversation took place at the branch office of the company in Oklahoma City. Mrs. Riggins advised the agent that the insured had been disabled some time prior to the default in the payment of premiums. The agent advised her to secure a number of affidavits depicting the facts relative to the insured’s disability and deliver of mail the same to him at the Oklahoma Oity office. 'The affidavits were accordingly procured. Some of them were delivered to the agent before June 1, 1931. Others were inclosed with a letter and mailed to the agent by an attorney for the plaintiff on June 18, 1931. These affidavits constituting proof of disability were apparently not received by the home office of the company until the early part of July, 1931.

The-company denied liability on the policies upon the single ground that the insured had not been totally ‘and permanently disabled within the meaning of that term as used in the policies at the time default was made in the payment of premiums in December, 1930.

This action was then commenced in the district court of Oklahoma county on the 10th day of October, 1932, by Mary Elva Riggins to recover alleged accrued monthly installments under the trust agreement in an amount commensurate with an asserted aggregate $30,000 liability of the company, that is, Mrs. Riggins sought to recover alleged accrued monthly payments at the rate of $100 per month. It was claimed by her that the death of her husband resulted from bodily injury effected solely through external, violent, and accidental means, thus increasing the liability of the company under the double indemnity features of the policies.

The parties will be referred to herein by their trial court designations when not otherwise identified.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 528, 61 P.2d 543, 178 Okla. 36, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-v-riggins-okla-1936.