Pacific Mutual Life Insurance v. Galbraith

115 Tenn. 471
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 115 Tenn. 471 (Pacific Mutual Life Insurance v. Galbraith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance v. Galbraith, 115 Tenn. 471 (Tenn. 1905).

Opinion

M’R. Chief Justice Beard

delivered the opinion of the Court.'

This suit, was brought by defendant in error, as as-signee, to recover on an insurance policy issued by plain[473]*473tiff in error on the life of one Harry M. Johnson for the snm of $2,000. The policy bears date the 1st of January, 1902, and the assured died on the 14th of February, 1904.

The declaration, after setting out the issuance of the policy and the death of the assured, alleges that at the time of the death the policy was in full force and effect. To this declaration the insurance company filed three pleas. The first of these raised the general issue. The second averred that the policy was issued pursuant to a written application made by Johnson to the company, which application, by the terms of the policy, was made a part thereof, wherein he made certain representations and guaranties with regard to.his occupation, habits, and health, all of which were material to the risk, and were at the same time false and fraudulent in fact.

The third plea averred that it was a part of the contract that the annual premium provided for in the policy should be paid on the 1st day of January in each year, and on failure to make prompt payment of any such premium the policy should lapse; that on January 1, 1903, this being the day on which the second annual premium was due, Johnson failed to pay the same as stipulated, and thereby the policy became lapsed and of no effect; that on January 10, 1903, Johnson, in order to procure reinstatement and revival of the policy, furnished to the plaintiff in error a certificate containing a warranty of present good health; that relying upon the truthfulness of this certificate, and without any knowl[474]*474■edge of its falsity, the plaintiff in error accepted the premium then overdue and reinstated the policy. It is then averred that the warranty contained in this certificate was false, in this: “That the said Johnson was not at its date . . . in all 'respects in good, sound, and unimpaired condition,” but, on the contrary, he was then greatly impaired in health, suffering with the disease known as “tuberculosis” or “consumption,” complicated with Bright’s disease, from which he died on February 14, 1904. Wherefore it was averred that, the reinstatement having been procured by this false and fraudulent statement, the plaintiff in error was not bound on the policy.

To the third plea the defendant in error filed a replication, in which it was said that it was not true that Johnson made false representations and warranties in the certificate furnished by him for the reinstatement of the policy. Again, and for additional replication, it was averred that it was expressly stipulated in the policy sued on that it should be indisputable, for any reason, .after two years from its date of issuance, and that the policy was issued January 1, 1902, and two' years had ■elapsed at the date of the death of the assured, and, this being so, the defendant in error relied upon and pleaded as a bar to the contest attempted by the plaintiff in error.

A demurrer was interposed to the second plea, the grounds of which it is unnecessary to state.

To the third replication set out above, the plaintiff in [475]*475■error filed a demurrer, in which it was insisted that the “two years incontestable clause referred to therein had no application to the certificate of-good health made hy •Johnson for the purpose of procuring a reinstatement of the policy then lapsed. . . . because it appears from the declaration and defendant’s plea, to which the third replication is responsive, that the certificate of good health in question was made on January 10, 1903, and that the assured died on February 14, 1904; wherefore, it appears that the period of two years from the date of making the certificate and reinstatement of the policy had not expired at the time of the death of the assured, and defendant is not, therefore, debarred from showing fraud in the making of the certificate and contesting the policy because thereof.”

The demurrer to the defendant’s second plea, and also the demurrer to the plaintiff’s third replication, were ■overruled, and thereupon, hy way of replication to the second plea, the plaintiff averred in substance the same ■as had been replied by him to the third plea; that is, again he interposed as a bar to the contest bound to be made with regard to the alleged fraudulent statement of the assured, upon which the policy was reinstated, the two years incontestable stipulation of the policy, insisting that this period ran from the date of the policy, and not from the date of the reinstatement.

The plaintiff in error then confessing it could no further go by way of rejoinder to the second replication to the second plea, or to third replication to the third plea, [476]*476these replications were therefore taken for confessed, and the circuit judge, sitting without the aid of the jury, then proceeded to hear the cause, and upon the pleading and the evidence adduced adjudged that the defendant in error, as assignee, was entitled to recover the full face of the policy, with interest from the death of the assured, and the cost of the cause.

The case being now before us for review, it is insisted by the defendant in error that the judgment should be sustained, first, because there was in fact, as appears upon the face of the record, no lapse at the time this certificate was made by the assured on the 10th of January, 1903, or at the time he paid Ms annual premium on that day, and, this being so, the certificate was of no force or effect on the relations of the parties growing out of the issuance of the policy; and, second, that, conceding a lapse, the trial judge was right in his ruling that the incontestable clause was operative from the date of the policy, rather than from that of the reinstatement.

The first of these contentions is rested on the ground that, while the policy bears date 1st of January, 1902, yet it is assumed to be apparent from the record that the policy in fact was not issued until the 15th of that month and that year, and counting from this later date there was no lapse at the time the certificate was issued on wMch the reinstatement was based. In the face of the pleading of the defendant in error this contention cannot be maintained. In the replication, to the second and third pleas, it is distinctly stated “that said policy [477]*477was issued on the 1st of January, 1903.” This contention, therefore, may he dismissed without discussion of the cases cited in its support.

This leaves open for determination the real question, presented in the record, as to the soundness of the holding of the trial judge that by the stipulation in question the policy was incontestable from its date, and as the assured died more than two years from that time the company was liable, notwithstanding a lapse and the reinstatement through the false warranty of the assured within that period.

The policy was issued in consideration of an advance payment of an annual premium which might, at the option of the assured, be made in semiannual or quarterly installments, with the conditions found in the application for the policy, which by the terms of the letter was made a part thereof, that “the policy shall lapse and be void if any premium or installment thereon is not paid, as therein provided, and then all previous payments shall be forfeited to the company.”

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Bluebook (online)
115 Tenn. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-mutual-life-insurance-v-galbraith-tenn-1905.