Pralle v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

252 Ill. App. 460, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 710
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 22, 1929
DocketGen. No. 33,013
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 252 Ill. App. 460 (Pralle v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pralle v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 252 Ill. App. 460, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 710 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought an action to recover $10,000 which she. claimed was due her under an oral contract of insurance entered into between her husband, John H. Pralle, and the defendant Insurance Company. There was a verdict and judgment in her favor for $11,197.25 being the full amount she claimed, with interest.

August 21, 1925, plaintiff filed her declaration in which she alleged that on April 15/1925, the defendant Insurance Company orally promised to insure John H. Pralle, her husband, against accidents “until and pending acceptance or rejection by it (defendant) of an application for insurance . . . and until the issuance of a policy by said defendant or until said application has been rejected by said defendant”; that on April 25, 1925, John H. Pralle was accidentally run over by a motor vehicle and killed. The common counts were added. On December 22, 1926, plaintiff by leave of court filed an amended declaration in two counts, each of which contained allegations setting up the contract of insurance substantially as in the original declaration. A number of pleas and replications were filed, but it is unnecessary to refer to them here. The case went to trial on December 7,1927, and during the trial, December 9, 1927, plaintiff filed an additional count in which it was alleged that John H. Pralle, her husband, on April 14, 1925, entered into an oral contract of insurance with the defendant through its agent, Ernest Webber, who had apparent authority to make such contract; that the contract provided that the defendant Insurance Company would pay plaintiff $10,000 in case John H. Pralle was accidentally killed at any time within one year from that date; that John H. Pralle accepted the proposition and paid the annual premium of $63. Afterwards and during the trial, December 12, 1927, plaintiff filed another additional count wherein she alleged the making of the insurance contract between her husband John H. Pralle and defendant, through its agent Webber; the agreement or contract being that in consideration of Pralle paying the annual premium of $63 defendant “would write up and deliver within a -reasonable time a policy dated and taking effect for one year”; that the agent at that time presented to John H. Pralle a form of application which Pralle signed but did not read and did not know the contents thereof.

On December 17, 1927, the jury returned its verdict in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant, fixing the damages as above stated. On February 24, 1928, upon motion of plaintiff an order was entered restoring lost instructions which the court had given to the jury, and on March 30, 1928, the record discloses the court entered an order stating that the matter came on to be heard upon the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and after argument of counsel and due deliberation by the court the motion was overruled and defendant excepted, whereupon defendant entered its motion in arrest of judgment, which motion also was overruled and the defendant excepted, and thereupon the court entered judgment on the verdict and the defendant’s prayer for an appeal was allowed.

The evidence shows that John H. Pralle, on April 15, 1925, and for some time prior thereto, was in the wholesale milk business at Crete, Illinois; he was 44 years old and lived with his family at 216 South Main street, Crete, Illinois; that the defendant Insurance Company maintained a district office at that time in Roseland, Chicago, Illinois; that Ernest Webber was employed by the defendant in the Roseland district and canvassed Crete, Steger, and other suburbs south of Chicago, and on the evening of April 15,1925, he went to Pralle’s home in Crete to solicit him for accident insurance. The evidence further shows that Webber had talked to Pralle on the subject a number of times prior to that date; that Pralle agreed with Webber to take $10,000 accident insurance in the defendant company; that Webber then produced a blank application which contained 30 printed questions and Webber testified that he asked Pralle all of the questions and wrote down the answers that Pralle gave and that Pralle then signed the application; that Webber then took the application and in due course of business turned it over to another representative of the defendant, whose duty it was to make an inspection, as was the custom where persons apply for such insurance, and to report the same. The evidence further shows that Albert A. Lupian, assistant manager of the defendant in the Roseland district, whose duty it was to make the inspection, testified that he got the application on Saturday, April 18th, and proceeded to make the inspection, as he was the one who did such work in a number of the suburbs in that vicinity; that he made three trips to Crete to see Pralle to verify the date of Pralle’s birth, his occupation, and the other answers appearing* in the application; that this was the usual custom followed where the application was for accident policies and the amount was $5,000 or more; that he was unable to see * Pralle on either of the occasions; that after the three trips, although he had not seen Pralle, he completed his inspection and filled out the blank report on the back of the application; that he had known Pralle by sight for some time; that he completed his report of inspection on April 25th but did not forward the application, as was the custom, to the home office in New York for acceptance or rejection because on that day he learned that Mr. Pralle had been accidentally killed by being run over by one of Pralle’s motor trucks which was used in his milk business. Pralle having died, the policy was not issued.

Harold and Mildred Pralle, son and daughter of plaintiff and John Pralle, the deceased, and Otto Hecht, a neighbor, gave testimony to the effect that they were at the Pralle home on the evening of April 15, 1925, when Webber, defendant’s representative, called on John H. Pralle in reference to the insurance; that they heard the conversation between Pralle and Webber; that Webber told Pralle to sign the blank application and that Webber would later fill out the answers to the questions, and that if Pralle would pay the annual premium, $63, at that time, he could be covered by insurance “from that time on”; that Pralle agreed to this, made out his check for the $63 and gave it to Webber who left with the application and the check ; that during the conversation between Webber and Pralle, Webber stated that he knew how to answer all the questions in the application except Pralle’s age, that thereupon Pralle asked his wife how old he was, as the matter had slipped his memory at that time, and Mrs. Pralle replied that he was 44 years old. Webber testified that he had known the Pralle family for some time and had written insurance for some of them since the death of John H. Pralle; that he was friendly with the family; that when he called at the Pralle home on April 15,1925, after again taking the insurance matter up with Pralle, he asked Pralle all the questions; that Pralle made answer to each of them and that the witness wrote down the answers as given by Pralle except the answer to question 29, where he inadvertently wrote the answer “No” when the answer given was “Yes.” He further testified that a blank receipt was attached to the bottom of the application; that he tore it off, the paper being perforated, filled out the receipt and gave it to Pralle. A copy of it is in the record. By it defendant acknowledged receipt of $63 from Pralle “on account of application made this date to the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 Ill. App. 460, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pralle-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-illappct-1929.