Points v. Wills

97 P.2d 374, 44 N.M. 31
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 23, 1939
DocketNo. 4456.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 97 P.2d 374 (Points v. Wills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Points v. Wills, 97 P.2d 374, 44 N.M. 31 (N.M. 1939).

Opinions

BICKLEY, Chief Justice.

Claim was filed by the dependents of W. R. Points, deceased, for compensation for his death against W. O. Wills, Jr., his employer, and Pioneer Mutual Compensation Company, insurer.

The insurance company answered denying liability to claimant on the insurance policy and set up four defenses to a claim of liability under the policy in an answer by way of new matter and cross-action against the employer, to-wit, that the death of Points occurred prior to an acceptance of the policy, that the subject matter of the policy had been partially destroyed prior to acceptance, that the policy was dated December 5th through clerical error, and because of concealment on the part of the employer of the accident and because of such clerical error, the policy should be reformed to be effective from December 8th, and because of such failure by the employer to notify the insurance company, the insurance company was entitled to rescind and cancel the policy. .

The employer filed no answer. He was represented by counsel at the trial but presented no evidence, and is. not represented here. The trial court found against claimant and entered judgment dismissing the claim both as to the employer and the insurance company.

The circumstances surrounding the issuance of the insurance policy here involved and the accident which resulted in the death of the workman are these:

On December 5, 1937, the employer, W. O. Wills, Jr., filled out an application for a policy of workmen’s compensation insurance upon a form furnished by the agent of the insurance company at Lordsburg, New Mexico. In the space, provided therefor the employer asked that the insurance period be from December 5, 1937, to December S, 1938. This application was mailed with a check for $150, the required deposit, to the agent of the insurance company whose office is at Lordsburg, and was received by the agent on the morning of December 6th. On December 7th, the agent endorsed the check and sent it with the application to the office of the insurance company in Santa Fe, where it was received on the morning of December 8th. On the 8th, the company accepted and approved the application and issued a policy of workmen’s compensation insurance to be effective for one year from 12:01 A. M., December 5, 1937. The policy was delivered by the agent to the employer at Lordsburg on or about December 11th, and .on .December' 13th, the policy’was' approved by George W. Hay, District Judge-, and was filed in the office of the County Clerk of Hidalgo County on the same day.

' The accident, which resulted in the almost immediate death of W. R. Points, the employee, occurred 'shortly after noon on December 6th. The employer was advised by telephone of the accident the 'same afternoon. The employer did’ not' notify the insurance company'or its agent of the accident until December 20th,' which was after the issuance and delivery of the policy. - '

Appellant (claimant below) .assigns as error the admission of certain testimony of Maybelle Harrington, who had previously testified that she was employed by the Pioneer Mutual Compensation Company in the capacity of office manager of the Compensation Underwriters and that her duties as office manager consisted of “accepting, separating the applications, making up the policies, taking care of the payrolls.” The testimony objected to is as follows:

“Q. And the policy date which you filled in the policy was December 5, 1937, 12:01 A. M., expiring December 5, 1938. Will you state what the policy of the company is with respect to the effective dates of the policy ?

“Mr. Hodges: We object to that as being immaterial as to what the policy of the company is. The policy speaks for itself and this witness should not be allowed to dig up some private rule that is unknown to the people dealing with them. It is manifestly unfair.

“Mr. Dailey: It is material on the question of mistake conforming with the constructive fraud defense we have set up. It is also , material under the first defense we have set up that no contract was made because there was no meeting of the minds of these parties by reason of the facts that the date of December 5th instead of December 8th was inserted in the policy through clerical error. What I want to establish is the policy of the company, the authority of Miss Harrington as its general agent who filled in the date to show that she neither had the authority to insert that date and that she did it through a mistake, clerical error.

“Mr. Hodges: To which I reply that the company is bound by the acts of its own agents. They acknowledged the check for the principal and issued the policy under that date and there can’t be any question to it.

“The Court: Overruled.

“Mr. Sanders: May it please the court I want to make the samé objection on behalf of the claimants.

* * *

“Mr. Hodges: To which ruling we except.

“Mr. Sanders: - Yes, sir.

“A. It is the policy of the company tó date the policies as of the date they are received in the office and each date is stamped on the application when we get it, and when I made up this policy I was following the application and I made an error which is not the policy or rule of the company at all, it was my own error.

“Mr. Sanders: May I enter an objection to any mistake on the part of the company?

“The Court: You may make that objection.

“Mr. Hodges: And I join on the part of the employer.

“The Court: Overruled.”

In a note in Ann.Cas.1914C, page 72, on admissibility of parol evidence to show custom or usage pertaining to matters contained in an insurance policy, the note writer says:

“Parol evidence is admissible as to a uniform, continuous and well settled usage or custom pertaining to the matters embraced in the contract, unless such usage or custom contravenes a rule of law, or alters or contradicts the express or implied terms of an unambiguous contract. (Citing cases.) * * * (Emphasis ours.)

“Where, however, a written contract is susceptible on its face of a plain and unequivocal interpretation, resort cannot be had to evidence of custom or usage to explain its language or qualify its meaning. (Citing cases.)

“In Lattomus v. Farmers’ Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 3 Houst. (Del.) 254, the holding of the court seems to be to the effect that the insurer could not show a by-law whereby it was liable to contribute and pay on a fire insurance policy only in proportion to what was paid on the same property insured in a third company, or a custom to the effect that such payment and contribution was a satisfaction in full and a discharge of the policy. The decision seems to rest on the ground that the custom sought to be introduced in evidence was a particular custom and that none but a general custom having the effect and operation of a general rule or law could be shown. * * * In Northwestern Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Connecticut Fire Ins. Co., 105 Minn. 483, 117 N.W.

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97 P.2d 374, 44 N.M. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/points-v-wills-nm-1939.