Provident Life Insurance & Investment Co. v. Baum

29 Ind. 236
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 29 Ind. 236 (Provident Life Insurance & Investment Co. v. Baum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Provident Life Insurance & Investment Co. v. Baum, 29 Ind. 236 (Ind. 1867).

Opinion

Ray, J.

The appellee, Napoleon Baum, sued the appellant, in the court below, on an accident insurance policy, issued by the’appellant on the life of one Americus Baum. The policy, as set forth in the complaint, states:

“In consideration of eighteen dollars, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, The Provident Life Insurance and Investment Company do hereby insure Americus Baum against loss of life in the sum of $3,000, to be paid to Napoleon Baum, or his legal representatives, within ninety days [237]*237after sufficient proof that the assured, at any time after the date hereof, and before the expiration of this policy, shall have sustained personal injury caused by any accident, within the meaning of this policy, and. the conditions hereunto annexed, and such injuries shall occasion death within ninety days from the happening thereof; sufficient proof being furnished to this company.

“Against personal injury, in the sum of fifteen dollars per week, for a period not exceeding altogether twenty-six weeks, for any single accident, within the meaning of this policy, and the conditions hereto annexed, by wffiich the assured shall sustain any personal injury which shall not be fatal, but which shall absolutely and totally disable him from the prosecution of his usual employment; satisfactory proof being furnished to this company/''

Then it is provided, in one of the subsequent clauses, as follows:

“All sums which may, from time to time, be paid by way of compensation to the said assured, by virtue of this policy, shall be accounted in diminution of the sum hereby insured, and be indorsed on this policy, so that in ease of subsequent injury, whether fatal or otherwise, during the continuance of this policy, the total amount to be paid by said company shall not, in any case, exceed the principal sum hereby insured.”

The policy was declared to be for one year, and there was added, also, this clause:

“In the event of injury, within the meaning of this policy, occurring to the assured, he, or, in case of his death, his legal representatives, shall, as soon thereafter as possible, give notice thereof to the company, at their office in Chicago, or to the agent writing this policy, together with the full name, occupation and address, of the assured, with full particulars of the accident or injury.”

The complaint consisted of four paragraphs, to each of which a demurrer was overruled. The death Of Americas Baum was alleged to have resulted from a gun shot wound. [238]*238The interest of the plaintiff' in the life of the assured was stated in a somewhat different form- in each paragraph.

In the first paragraph, such interest is set forth as follows: “ That the said assured was the brother of the plaintiff, and, by the persuasion and advice of the defendant, the assured caused said policy to be made payable to the plaintiff.”

In the second paragraph, as follows: “That the said assured was the brother of the plaintiff, and at the time of the execution of said policy, the assured, in consideration of natural love and affection, assigned the same to the plaintiff, and to avoid the expense and trouble of executing a. separate instrument of assignment, authorized and directed the defendant to make the said policy payable to the plaintiff’, which the assured was then and there advised by the defendant he might lawfully do, the defendant well knowing that the plaintiff' was the brother of the said assured, and that the consideration of said assignment was natural love and affection, and nothing else.”

In the third paragraph, as follows: “ That the assured was the brother of the plaintiff; and that the plaintiff; as such brother, had an interest in the life of the assured, and that the assured, from motives of natural love and affection, caused said policy to be made payable to the plaintiff’.” In the fourth paragraph, as follows: “That the said plaintiff had an interest in the life of said assured to the extent of three thousand dollars.”

An answer, in several paragraphs, was filed, consisting of a general denial, and, in other paragraphs, setting up that the death was- the result of suicide, and alleging that the plaintiff had no interest in the life of the deceased, on which issues were joined.

The question of interest is also raised by an instruction of the court to the jury, and is reserved by a special bill of exceptions, under section 347 of the practice act. ' 2 G-. & II. 210. "We quote from the bill of exceptions as follows: “ The cause came on,” &e., “ and the parties had given evidence proper to be submitted to the jury in the cause, [239]*239tending to prove that the said Napoleon Baum, the plaintiff; at the time of the issuing of said policy of insurance, and of the death of said Amerieus Baum, was a young man in good health, of about twenty-three years of age, not living with said assured, and in no manner dependent on him for his support, and that said Napoleon had no interest whatever, of a pecuniary nature, in the life of said Amerieus; and thereupon, at the proper time, the court charged the jury as follows:

“ It is wholly immaterial; in this case, whether said plaintiff' had or had not any interest of a pecuniary nature in the life of said Amerieus.”

The bill of exceptions also states that “ evidence ivas given to the jury on the trial, proper to be submitted to them in the case, tending to prove that the death of said Amerieus Baum occurred from a gun shot wound, in Borter county, Indiana, about six miles from Valparaiso, and about an hour and a half of easy travel from Valparaiso, which then was the post office of said plaintiff, and from which place there was a daily mail to and from Chicago, and that one day was sufficient time for him to go or send to Chicago, where was the office of said defendant; that said plaintiff* was then engaged at his home, where said death occurred, in making hay, and that there was no obstacle in the way of his going or sending to said office, other than his ordinary farming operations, and that he neither gave, nor caused any notice of the death of said Amerieus Baum to be given to said company, until eight or ten days after his death; but it was also proved that said policy of insurance was, during all that time, in the trunk of said Amerieus Baum, at Chicago, and had never been in the possession of, or seen by said plaintiff*, till the end of said eight or ten days, and that when the plaintiff, at the end of said eight or ten days, notified said company of said death, the officers of the company gave him a blank form for an affidavit in regard to said death, and stated to him that it would be sufficient if he made it out and returned it within three or four [240]*240weeks, which he did; and thereupon, at the proper time, the court gave to the jury the following chai’ge, to-wit:

“ The fact that the plaintiff did not know of the condition in the policy of insurance, in regard to notice to the company of the death of said Americus, if you find from the evidence that such is the fact, excused the plaintiff' from such notice, until after he was informed of such condition, and the failure to give notice for such time, under such circumstances, is no ground of defense.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Ind. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-life-insurance-investment-co-v-baum-ind-1867.