Pender v. North State Life Insurance

163 N.C. 98
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 17, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 163 N.C. 98 (Pender v. North State Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pender v. North State Life Insurance, 163 N.C. 98 (N.C. 1913).

Opinion

Walker, J\,

after stating tbe case: Tbe answers to tbe first and third issues were not seriously contested by tbe plaintiff, and could not well baye been resisted, but tbey bare become immaterial by reason of tbe answer to, tbe second issue in favor of tbe plaintiff. Whether the deceased was addicted to tbe habitual use 6f opium in any of its forms, or of any other narcotic, was a pure issue of fact to be determined by tbe jury upon tbe evidence, which was conflicting. There was sufficient evidence, in law, to support tbe finding of tbe jury, and when this is tbe case and it is claimed that tbe jury have given a verdict against tbe weight of all the evidence, tbe only remedy is an application to tbe trial judge to set aside tbe verdict for that reason.. We will not review bis ruling upon such a motion, except where it clearly appears that there has been a gross abuse of bis discretion, which, of course, will be of exceedingly rare occurrence, and so much so that in our procedure it may be considered as almost a negligible quantity. There was no such abuse in this instance.

Under tbe fourth and fifth issues, tbe jury, by their answers thereto, have evidently found as facts that H. D. Teel was not agent or manager of tbe defendant company on 6 December, 1906, when tbe policy was sent to him from tbe home office, and that tbe company did not require payment of tbe premium in .advance, but delivered tbe policy to H. D. Teel and trusted him for tbe payment of tbe premium, tbe understanding being that tbe policy should immediately become effective upon its delivery and without prepayment of the premium as a condition upon which it should take effect. We cannot escape this conclusion after a careful perusal of.the evidence and tbe charge of tbe court, and considering them in connection with the issues four and five, as answered by tbe jury.

Tbe defendant offered strong evidence. to show that H. D. Teel was tbe defendant’s agent and local manager on ,6 December, 1906, but there was some evidence on tbe other side of tbe question, introduced by tbe plaintiff, and while it may not be very convincing or even satisfactory, we are not willing-to say that it was altogether destitute of probative force, but we [102]*102do mean to say tbat it was weak or insufficient to warrant tbe finding of tbe jury. It was some evidence, and was properly submitted to tbe jury, and tbe defendant baving failed to bave tbe verdict set aside by tbe judge below, because it was against tbe weight of tbe evidence, must abide by tbe result as final and beyond our control. We can- review by appeal “any decision of tbe courts below upon any matter of law or legal inference,” but in jury trials, at least, our jurisdiction ends wben tbat is done. ¥e cannot review findings of fact in sucb cases. Const., Art. IY, sec. 8. And wbat we bave said applies equally to tbe sixth and seventh issues. There was conflicting evidence which carried tbe questions to tbe jury, and we are concluded by their findings.

Returning to tbe fifth’ issue for further consideration, we find tbat tbe court instructed tbe jury, if they found tbat H. D. Teel received tbe policy from tbe insurance company, not as its agent or manager, but as an ordinary applicant for insurance, baving no sucb relation to it, and be was trusted to pay tbe first premium, instead of paying it in advance, they should, answer tbe fifth issue “Yes”; but if tbe insurance company sent tbe policy to H. D. Teel, be then being its agent or manager, to bold tbe }3olicy for tbe company until tbe premium was paid, and not to deliver it to himself until it was paid, or if H. D. -Teel received tbe policy, not as agent or manager, and laid it aside until be could pay tbe premium, and it was not paid by him on 6 December, 1906, they should answer tbe issue “No.” We see no valid objection tbe defendant can make to this instruction. There was evidence of the facts it embodied sufficient to support either hypothesis stated in it, and tbe jury manifestly found tbat H. D. Teel was not agent at tbe time, and received tbe policy as an ordinary applicant, baving no confidential relation with tbe company, and tbat tbe latter bad trusted him to pay tbe premium. If tbat be tbe case, tbe policy was delivered and in force on 6 December, 1906. If there bad been an actual delivery of the policy, nothing else appearing, tbe production of it at tbe trial by tbe plaintiff, who is tbe beneficiary, makes a prima facie case for him. Perry v. Insurance Co., 150 N. C., 143, citing Kendrick v. Insurance Co., [103]*103124 N. C., 315; Grier v. Insurance Co., 132 N. C., 542; Rayburn v. Casualty Co., 138 N. C., 379; Waters v. Annuity Co., 144 N. C., 663. That the company may waive the prepayment of the premium and give credit for the same is but to state a self-evident principle, and this waiver may be shown by direct proof that credit was given, or may be inferred from the circumstances as well. Bodine v. Insurance Co., 51 N. Y., 117. No man is bound to insist upon his rights, and an insurance company may disregard the provision requiring prepayment of the premium as a condition of imparting vitality to the policy, and agree, either expressly or impliedly, that it will accept the promise of the applicant to pay on demand or at a future day. The doctrine is thus clearly stated in Yance on Insurance, at p. 178: “Even though the parties may have expressly agreed that the contract shall not be deemed complete until payment of the premium in cash and in full, this stipulation may be waived by the insurer or any of its agents having competent authority. As a general rule, any agent having power to execute and issue contracts on behalf of the insurer has power to waive a condition of prepayment. And an absolute delivery of the policy by such an agent, without payment of the premium, under such circumstances as will justify an inference that credit is to be. given, will constitute a waiver of a condition of prepayment. It seems that an intention to give credit may be inferred from the mere fact of unconditional delivery, without requiring present payment. Nor do the courts show great readiness to find that a delivery was made subject to a condition of immediate payment.” The cases in this Court, already cited, are substantially to the same effect.

The sixth and seventh issues involved matters of fact alone, there being, in our opinion, evidence on both sides of the questions submitted to the jury in them. Our remarks as to the second issue are generally applicable to these two issues. We are concluded by the verdict.

In regard to the seventh issue, it was urged before us by the learned counsel for the defendant, that the verdict upon the fifth and seventh issues was inconsistent, as the policy could not [104]*104have been delivered and become effective on two different dates. But we think, the answers to tiese issues are reconcilable, if it is necessary to bring them into harmony in order to sustain the verdict. It would seem to be immaterial on which of the two dates it took effect. If on either of them, it is valid and enforcible in view of the special facts of this case. But they are consistent, as the jury evidently meant that the policy was delivered on 6 December, 1906, and continued in force until and including 10 May, 1907; but if they were mistaken in law, for any reason,’ as to its being in force on 6 December, 1906, then upon the facts as they found them to be, it took effect on 10 May, 1907. It is true that there is evidence that H. D. Teel was the agent of defendant on 10 May, 1907, though there is no' special finding of the fact. We will assume it to be true.

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Bluebook (online)
163 N.C. 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pender-v-north-state-life-insurance-nc-1913.