Potts v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

2 A.2d 870, 133 Pa. Super. 397, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 330
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 21, 1938
DocketAppeal, 221
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 A.2d 870 (Potts v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potts v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 2 A.2d 870, 133 Pa. Super. 397, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 330 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Stadteeld, J.,

This is an action in assumpsit by plaintiff, Kathryn Potts, against the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, to recover the face amount of a written contract of insurance allegedly entered into between defendant and Carl Findanscutz.

The pleadings consist of plaintiff’s statement of claim and defendant’s affidavit of defense.

*399 On Tuesday, April 5, 1938, the case came up for trial before Glass, J., without a jury. The court found for the plaintiff in the amount of $429.27 and the defendant thereupon filed motions for new trial and for judgment n. o. v., which were dismissed. This appeal followed.

The material facts are not in dispute and are as follows: On December 26, 1936, Carl Findanscutz signed an application for insurance in the defendant company in the amount of $400. At the time of signing the application, Carl Findanscutz paid to defendant’s agent, Forman, the sum of fifty cents which represented one week’s premium on the policy if it was issued, otherwise, the fifty cent deposit was to be returned to the applicant. At the same time, this agent gave to Carl Findanscutz a receipt for the premium, which provided that no obligation was incurred by the company by reason of such application.

The application was received by the company and in due course the policy was prepared for delivery to Carl Findanscutz. The insurance was of the type which is commonly known as ‘Whole Life Industrial” and was payable to Catherine Patts, who is the same person as the plaintiff, Kathryn Potts.

The policy provided on the first page under “Effective Date” — “This Policy shall take effect on the date of issue stated in the Schedule, provided the Insured is then alive.” On page 4 thereof, under the heading “Schedule” the date of issue was set forth as January 18, 1937. The policy also contained on page 1 thereof the following provision: “This Policy includes all matter printed or written by the Company on this and the following pages and constitutes the entire agreement. Its terms cannot be waived by any agent and cannot be changed except by endorsement hereon signed by the Secretary.”

This policy was delivered by the agent, Forman, to Kathryn Potts at her house on Saturday, January 16th. *400 On Sunday, January 17, 1937, Carl Findanscutz, the insured named in the policy, died, and on Monday, January 18th, Mr. Forman took back the policy that he had delivered Saturday and also the premium receipt book.

Plaintiff, through herself, her daughter, and a Mrs. Wollick, showed that a policy had been delivered on Saturday, January 16th, and that said policy was a policy of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, in the amount of $400 and was payable to herself as beneficiary. Plaintiff further testified that the insured, Carl Findanscutz, died on Sunday, January 17th.

Defendant, through its agent, Forman, identified the policy offered in evidence as being the one that had been delivered to Mrs. Potts on Saturday, January 16th, and that it was the policy which had been returned to him on Monday, January 18th. Defendant offered in evidence this policy, the premium receipt book and the type of receipt which was given to Carl Findanscutz on December 26th.

Appellant contends that the policy, identified and offered in evidence, shows the date of issue set forth therein was January 18, 1937, which, by its terms, was to be the effective date, and that prior to that date Carl Findanscutz had died, and therefore the policy never became effective.

Appellee contends that the policy had been delivered on Saturday, January 16th, and, therefore, that was the effective date of the policy.

At the trial of the case, plaintiff objected to the admission of the policy in evidence, on the ground that defendant in its affidavit of defense denied “that it ever issued or delivered a contract of insurance on the life of Carl Findanscutz” and that the offer of the policy was inconsistent with its defense. The trial judge, however, admitted the policy in evidence and disposed of the case as though the defense had been properly pleaded. As stated in the opinion of the court below, the sole question involved is whether Carl Findanscutz *401 was insured when he died or “putting the question in a different form......Had the contract of insurance between the insured and the defendant been consummated, and was it in effect at the time the insured died?” We will consider and dispose of the case in the sa'me manner.

During the trial of the case, the trial judge indicated that he was of the opinion that “an insurance company has no right to put a date on, to post-date a policy like post-dating a check.” The opinion of the court below, also, develops at length the meaning of the words “date of issue” and the conclusion of the writer was: “the date of issue, as we have already indicated, is the date when the policy was either signed by the authorized officers of the company or signed by them and delivered to the beneficiary,” and accordingly, held this policy to have become effective Saturday, January 16, 1937, the date the policy was delivered. With these conclusions we cannot agree.

Quoting from Couch’s Encyclopedia on Insurance Law, at par. 1328, p. 4793, it is stated that “......a policy may by agreement be antedated and take effect from that date, or the parties may expressly contract that when certain acts have been performed the policy shall become effective as of a certain stipulated date, or a future date on which a policy is to become effective may be fixed,......”

The contract in suit provides on the face thereof: “In Witness Whereof, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company has caused this policy to be executed on the date of issue stated in the schedule.” By the very wording of the above clause, it is clearly indicated that the Company contemplated that the policy would be and actually was executed on a different date than itsi effective date; the effective date being referred to as the date of issue stated in the schedule and not the date of actual execution or delivery.

In Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Hurni Packing Co., 263 U *402 S. 167, 68 L. Ed. 235 (1923), recovery depended on the meaning of the words “date of issue.” Suit was brought on a policy applied for September 2d, dated August 23d, actually executed September 7th and delivered about September 13th. The court, after discussing the meaning of the word “date” then went on to determine the date of issue, and on that point said, at p. 175: “Here the words, referring to the written policy, are ‘from its date of issue.’ While the question, it must be conceded, is not certainly free from reasonable doubt, yet, having in mind the rule first above stated, that in such case the doubt must be resolved in the way most favorable to the insured, we conclude that the words refer not to the time of actual execution of the policy or the time of its delivery but to the date of issue as specified in the policy itself. Wood v. American Yeomen, 148 Iowa, 400; 403, 404; Anderson v. Mutual Life Insurance Co., 164 Cal. 712; Harrington v. Mutual Life Insurance Co., 21 N. D. 447; Yesler v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 A.2d 870, 133 Pa. Super. 397, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-pasuperct-1938.