Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Johnson

235 S.W. 650, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1921
DocketNo. 6613.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 235 S.W. 650 (Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Johnson, 235 S.W. 650, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1171 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This is a suit upon an accident, health, and disability insurance policy issued by the Provident Life & Accident Insurance Company to Joe Johnson, and payable to the latter’s estate. The principal sum of the insurance was $2,000 to protect Johnson against “effects resulting directly *651 and exclusively of all other causes from bodily injuries sustained during the life of this policy, solely through external, violent, and accidental means,” except by suicide. Johnson was shot to death in a difficulty with another man, and upon the refusal of the insurance company to pay the amount of the policy, suit was brought thereon by Maceo Johnson, by next friend, Mattie Smith. Ma-ceo Johnson is the minor son of the insured. The cause was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and upon the answers thereto judgment was rendered in favor of Maceo Johnson for $3,342.20, which sum included $1,050 attorney’s fees, and a penalty of $240.

At the outset appellant, the insurance company, challenges the sufficiency of the pleadings or evidence to show any right in the plaintiff to maintain this suit or recover any judgment. It urges that the trial petition is insufficient in that while it shows the insurance policy to be payable to the estate of •Toe Johnson, appellee’s father, it nevertheless fails to allege that there is no administration upon the estate of the father and no necessity for such administration, or any necessity for suit by an heir. The only allegations in the petition, relating to the right of appellee to maintain the suit and recover upon the policy, were that the policy was payable to the estate of appellee’s father, that Mattie Smith, as temporary administra-trix, had collected a life policy of $250 issued to appellee’s father, but without showing that this temporary administration had ended, and—

“that said deceased died intestate, and left surviving him as his only and exclusive heir at law, plaintiff herein, a minor, now 17 years of age, who is entitled to receive the full amount on said policy.”

[1] In the court below appellant did not question the sufficiency of these allegations, nor was the general demurrer acted upon, and the matter is presented in this court, for the first time, as fundamental error. Upon this account appellee objects to a consideration of the question at this juncture in the litigation, and it seems appropriate to dispose of this contention before entering into a discussion of the merits of the question presented. In determining the sufficiency of allegations as to a material or particular fact, in the absence of exceptions to such allegations, every reasonable intendment must be indulged in favor of the pleading, and if the latter contains no direct or specific statement of the fact, but from the petition as a whole the allegation of such fact may be reasonably inferred, then such inference must be given effect. This rule applies, even as against a

demurrer general in its nature. Land Co. v. McClelland, 86 Tex. 179, 23 S. W. 576, 1100, 22 L. 11. A. 105; Gibbens v. Bourland, 145 S. \V. 275. So, even in the absence from the petition in this case of specific allegations that there is no administration upon the estate of appellee’s father, and no necessity of such administration, or any necessity of suit by the heir, if there are other allegations from which a court may reasonably infer those facts, then such inference will be given effect, and the petition deemed sufficient. It is conceded that there are no specific allegations of the fact mentioned, and so we are relegated to general allegations to ascertain if these facts are necessarily inferable therefrom.

[2, 3] Appellee contends that his allegations that his father died intestate, leaving appellee “as his only and exclusive heir at law,” and that appellee “is entitled to receive the full amount due” on the insurance policy sued on, amount in effect to allegations of no administration or necessity therefor. We have been unable to agree with appellee in this position, however. The fact that appellee’s father died intestate, and that appellee was the only surviving heir, will not support an inference of any other fact than those specifically stated. From these facts no inference could arise that there was no administration, or necessity therefor; the reverse could just as reasonably have been inferred therefrom. Appellee in his petition, alleged that at the time of the issuance of the policy sued on the insurance company issued to Joe Johnson a life policy for $250, and that after the insured’s death the company paid to appellee’s next friend, as temporary administratrix, the amount of the life policy. There was no allegation, however, of the continuation or termination of the administration, and so that allegation raises no presumption or inference that would tend to supply the omitted allegations as to administration, or necessity therefor, although it might tend to create the presumption that there was, at least at one time, a necessity for some sort of administration. The remaining allegation, upon which appellee relies to supply the omitted allegations, is that appellee “is entitled to receive the full amount due on said policy.” We are unable to escape the conviction that this statement in the pleading cannot be construed to serve this purpose. At best, it is but the statement of a purely legal conclusion, without showing any facts upon which the conclusion is based, and in our opinion cannot be construed to create the inference that there was no administration upon the estate of appellee’s father, nor any necessity therefor. It was said in Simonton v. Light Co., 28 Tex. Civ. App. 374, 67 S. W. 530, that—

“In considering the question of the sufficiency of the petition, we must disregard the statement by the pleader of mere legal conclusions and test the petition solely by the facts stated therein.”

*652 If the allegation, that appellee was “entitled to receive the full amount due on said policy” had stood alone as the only ground of appellee’s right to recover, it would surely have been subject to a special exception that it was too general, and a mere conclusion of law of the pleader, and, although no such exception was lodged against it, nevertheless it cannot serve to supply an allegation of specific vital facts essential to appellee’s right to recover. Laas v. Seidel, 95 Tex. 442, 67 S. W. 1015; Baker v. Hahn, 161 S. W. 443; Ry. v. Brown Co., 166 S. W. 40. In the Laas Case it was contended that the allegation that the estate was solvent would support ithe inference, and thereby supply the omission to allege that “there was no administration, nor necessity for administration” ; but the Supreme Court, by Mr. Justice Brown, overruled this contention, saying that—

“The estate might be solvent, and yet there would be a necessity for administration to pay the debts, and to settle the affairs of the estate, to get it in proper shape for distribution among the heirs. The law does not provide that administration shall be had upon insolvent estates, only, nor that heirs may sue for the property if the estate be solvent.”

So it may be said here that the allegation that appellee was entitled to receive the full amount of the insurance policy does not within itself negative a necessity for or pendency of administration.

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.W. 650, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-life-accident-ins-co-v-johnson-texapp-1921.