Overton v. WASHINGTON NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY

260 A.2d 444, 106 R.I. 387, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 936
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 7, 1970
Docket675-A
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 A.2d 444 (Overton v. WASHINGTON NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overton v. WASHINGTON NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY, 260 A.2d 444, 106 R.I. 387, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 936 (R.I. 1970).

Opinion

*388 Powers, J.

This is a civil action brought by the named beneficiary to recover the proceeds of an alleged oral contract of term life insurance. The case was tried to a Superior Court justice sitting without a jury. From the final judgment entered pursuant to his decision for the plaintiff, the defendant company seasonably appealed.

On October 20, 1961, Orón B. Overton, Jr., underwent a medical examination in connection with an application to the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company for a $25,000 ■policy of life insurance. As a result of this examination, Metropolitan offered to issue a policy on a rated-up premium. Overton, however, never accepted the offer. Rather, he entered into negotiations with the instant defendant through its agents Ethier and Sundin. In connection with *389 these negotiations, a conference was held at Overton’s home on November 10, 1961, at which were present Overton, his wife, plaintiff here, and the aforesaid agents Ethier and Sundin. 1 Overton advised the agents that he had made application to Metropolitan; that he had submitted to a medical examination; that Metropolitan had offered to issue the policy for a rated-up premium but that he, Overton, had done nothing about it.

The November 10, 1961, conference centered around Overton’s possible purchase of $25,000 life insurance with defendant. The premium and alternate modes of payment were discussed. As a result thereof, an application for a $25,000 policy was partially completed but later destroyed. However, on November 24, 1961, agents Ethier and Sundin went to Overton’s place of business where an application for a $10,000 non-medioal policy was made out by agent Sun-din and signed by Overton. It is agreed that Overton paid no money on November 24th.

The agents had explained to Overton and his wife the several methods by which premiums could be paid. These included a plan whereby Overton would authorize his bank to credit defendant each month out of Overton’s checking account referred to as the PAC plan, or the giving by Over-ton of 12 post-dated checks, one for each month of the ensuing year, which plan was designated PDC. Overton objected to any such method and stated that he wanted to pay the premium on a quarterly basis. In filling out the application Sundin first listed as the method by which premiums would be paid as PAC-PDC but later, when Over- *390 ton insisted on quarterly payments, crossed out the earlier notation and marked the space provided for indicating quarterly payments. In connection with this change, Sundin had Overton initial the crossing out of the PAC-PDC plans which initialling was in accordance with settled practice.

However, the application, in form, is a multiple-page folding document, divided into two parts. On the back of Part I provision is made for the agent’s confidential report. In this latter portion of the application, Sundin made note of Overton’s application to Metropolitan and his medical examination in connection therewith, and here also stated that the mode of premium payment would be plan PAC, and the premium filled in was $16.84. These statements relative to the mode of payment and monthly premium were left unaltered, unlike the similar notation to which reference has been made.

The record establishes that, on November 24, 1961, defendant’s agent Sundin filled out an application for a non-medical life insurance policy of $10,000; that the application was filled out in the presence of Ethier and Overton, and that the latter signed and delivered said application to the agent on the same day, but paid no premium whatsoever. However, according to Sundin, he again called on Overton at the latter’s place of employment on Monday, November 27, 1961, and obtained Overton’s check postdated to December 1, 1961, and made payable to defendant in the amount of $16.87. Sundin then turned over the application and check to a cashier at the defendant’s local office and the check was deposited to defendant’s account. The record further establishes that said application was received at defendant’s home office in Evanston, Illinois, on November 29, 1961.

It was Sundin’s testimony that, when he called on Over-ton on November 27, 1961, it was for the purpose of obtaining a down payment or good faith gesture, and that he *391 explained to Overton that the payment of $16.87 did not bind the company. He further testified that he had asked Overton for $20 to show good faith, but the latter stated that this was more than he was able to pay at the time. Sundin, according to his testimony, then explored with Overton the amount the latter could pay, and the sum of $16.87 was agreed upon but that it had no special significance. This, notwithstanding the admissions of both Sun-din and Ethier that $16.87 was the exact premium for one month insurance of $10,000. The trial justice found Sun-din’s testimony that the sum of $16.87 had been more or less accidentally arrived at was inherently improbable, and rejected it as not credible.

In connection with the November 27, 1961 payment of $16.87, it should be noted that a portion of the application is a detachable conditional premium payment receipt. This is filled out, signed by the agent and delivered to the applicant whenever the appropriate premium is paid at the time the application is delivered. By the terms of this receipt, the applicant is provided with interim coverage pending determination by defendant as to whether the application will be accepted or rejected. 2 Here, the conditional receipt was not filled in, signed, nor delivered to Overton, but was detached by Sundin at some time. In connection therewith, however, there appears question 32 on the application as follows:

“What amount has been paid in exchange for receipt attached?”

In answer to this question, there appears the entry of $16.87; this, Sundin also testified, was made by him, but not on November 24, 1961, when the application was supposedly completed; rather, it was entered by Sundin on November 27, 1961, when he received a post-dated check for that amount. Since, Sundin further testified, that the ap *392 plication calls for quarterly payments, and $16.87 was substantially less than a quarterly paid premium, Overton was not entitled to the interim coverage afforded by a conditional payment receipt, and for this reason was not filled out.

The trial justice noted that on November 24, 1961, Sun-din had filled in $16.84, believing when he did that the premium was to be paid monthly in accordance with either plan PAC or PDC. Thus, the trial justice reasoned that, when the agents left with the signed application on November 24, 1961, Overton had no knowledge of any figure other than the $16.84 and must have been advised of the slightly higher premium sometime between November 24, 1961 and the drawing of the post-dated check for $16.87. We shall discuss infra the plaintiff’s (widow and beneficiary) testimony regarding the drawing of the post-dated check.

In any event, Overton became ill on December 2, 1961, subsequently entered the hospital and died on December 5, 1961.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 A.2d 444, 106 R.I. 387, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overton-v-washington-national-insurance-company-ri-1970.