Powell v. Liberty Industrial Life Ins. Co.

1 So. 2d 834
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 1941
DocketNo. 6230.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 So. 2d 834 (Powell v. Liberty Industrial Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Liberty Industrial Life Ins. Co., 1 So. 2d 834 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

This suit was filed on January 10, 1939, in which the plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendant, as administrator of the Succession of Robert Williams, deceased.

It is alleged that Robert Williams was issued a policy of insurance on September 3, 1923, providing among other things for disability benefits at the rate of $5 per week, not to exceed 20 weeks in each 12 months of disability due to sickness. It is alleged that the deceased became insane in February, 1933, and was incarcerated in the hospital for the insane at Pineville, Louisiana, where he remained until his death on April 27, 1938.

Plaintiff further alleged that demand was made upon defendant for disability benefits at the rate of $5 per week, which demand was made by a relative of the deceased shortly after Williams was placed in the asylum and that the defendant company acknowledged said demand but refused payment thereof. It is not alleged that the party making the demand had any authority to do so.

It is further alleged that the deceased became insane before he ceased paying the premiums on his policy and that the disability from insanity relieved him from furnishing proof of disability and likewise incapacitated him and justified the payment of disability provisions under the policy.

The plaintiff in this suit seeks to recover $550, being disability benefits at the rate of $5 per week for 110 weeks, beginning March 1, 1933, and ending April 27, 1938. Secondly, a statutory penalty of a similar amount was prayed for, together with attorney's fees in the sum of $100, under the provisions of Act 310 of the Legislature of Louisiana for the year 1910. This second claim is not urged here.

To plaintiff's petition the defendant filed exceptions of no right and no cause of action, which exceptions were levelled chiefly at the fact that the failure to assert a right of action within two years after its accrual prevented recovery under the specific provisions contained in the contract of insurance.

The trial court sustained the exceptions and dismissed the suit. An appeal was perfected to this Court and on May 29, 1939, we rendered an opinion reversing the lower court and sending the case back to be tried on the merits. See, La.App., 190 So. 838. The defendant then answered the petition specifically setting up the defense that any action on the part of plaintiff was barred by failure to assert same within the two years of the accrual thereon and, in the alternative, that recovery should be limited to a specific provision contained in said policy.

The case was tried below upon a statement of facts and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff for the full amount prayed for, but rejected the demands for penalties. The defendant is now prosecuting this, a suspensive appeal. *Page 836

The following facts are agreed upon by plaintiff and defendant:

"1. The insured, Robert Williams, became insane during February, 1933, and during February, 1933, was placed in the Central Louisiana State Hospital for Insane in the Town of Pineville, Louisiana, where his insanity required that he remain and where he remained, as an insane person, to the date of his death in the same institution on April 27, 1938.

"2. That the insured, Robert Williams, while necessarily confined in the asylum on account of his insanity, was not confined to his bed while in the asylum.

"3. That premiums were paid up to and only up to April 10, 1933, on the policy sued upon and that on April 12, 1933, the policy was receipted for by an authorized representative of the defendant company and retained by the company.

"4. That the existence of the total disability from sickness, that is, the insanity of the insured was made known to and the knowledge admitted to have been received by the insurance company before April 10, 1933, when the last premium was paid, and that the insanity prevented him from furnishing proofs or giving notice of his disability or sickness.

"5. That no suit has been filed against the defendant company except the present suit.

"6. That defendant company has always denied liability and refused payment.

"7. That Cleveland Dear, a reputable attorney of the Alexandria Bar, would testify that a reasonable fee for plaintiff's attorney, if allowed by the Court, would be $100.00."

The three provisions of the policy we are called upon to interpret are as follows:

1. "No suit shall be brought nor action commenced against this company under this policy until 60 days after the claim has arisen thereunder, nor after two years shall have elapsed since the time that the right of action shall have accrued."

2. "One-half of the amount otherwise payable hereunder will be paid for a period not exceeding six weeks for sickness that does not confine the insured to bed, but does confine him or her strictly to the house for seven consecutive days."

3. "The policy provides for weekly benefits for sickness to be measured by seven consecutive days that the insured is by reason of illness confined to bed and under the care of a duly licensed and practicing physician. The number of weekly benefits payable in any twelve months is limited to 20."

The question of whether or not insanity is a sickness coming under the provisions of this policy has been settled in the affirmative in the cases of Lewis v. Industrial Life Insurance Company, 185 La. 589, 170 So. 4, 107 A.L.R. 286, and Clesi v. National Life Accident Insurance Company, 195 La. 736,197 So. 413.

It is admitted that the insanity of the insured was made known to defendant before the last premium was paid. Therefore, it was unnecessary that other premiums be paid during the period of insanity to keep the policy in effect, for the reason that defendant owed to the insured in sick benefits far more than the amount of the premium due thereafter. Olezene v. Eagle Life Insurance Company, Inc., 11 La.App. 153, 121 So. 881; Carter v. Washington Fidelity National Life Insurance Company, 10 La.App. 14, 120 So. 424; Benefit Association Railway Employees v. Bray,226 Ala. 444, 147 So. 640.

In the case of Hickman v. Pan-American Life Insurance Company,186 La. 997, 173 So. 742, 743, the Supreme Court of this State, after reviewing the jurisprudence of the Nation on the question, does the insanity of the insured excuse or relieve him from the provisions of the policy as to payment of premiums on time, giving notices specified in the policy, etc., had this to say:

"There is no good reason why we should analyze the conflicting opinions on this question. The courts that maintain that insanity is not an excuse for a failure of a policyholder to pay a premium falling due during such disability adhere to the letter of the contract, and maintain that such an excuse cannot avail the policyholder if it is not so stipulated in the policy. The courts that hold the other way say that the parties entering into a contract of insurance providing for a total disability benefit, and requiring proof thereof to be furnished by the insured to the insurer before default in the payment of a premium, do not contemplate that the cause of the disability may be insanity, and may therefore make it utterly impossible to give the notice within the period stipulated; *Page 837 hence these courts maintain that it goes without saying that one of the parties to such a contract shall not be obliged to do something which providence alone has made impossible.

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Bluebook (online)
1 So. 2d 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-liberty-industrial-life-ins-co-lactapp-1941.