Prudential Ins v. Howard

18 Ohio Law. Abs. 688, 1935 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1447
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1935
DocketNo 635
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 688 (Prudential Ins v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prudential Ins v. Howard, 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 688, 1935 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1447 (Ohio Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

OPINION

By MATTHEWS, J.

It is noticed here that the plaintiff was asked on cross-examination if he had not [690]*690been indicted, tried and acquitted of the' murder of Dorain Kircher, and he answered that he had. Had this been competent, there was no issue raised by the pleadings to which it was relevant. A beneficiary who has murdered the insured forfeits all rights under the contract (Filmore v Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 82 Oh St, 208; Smith, Admr., v Todd, Admr., 155 S. C. 323, 70 A.L.R. 1529), but the forfeiture is an affirmative defense and, of course, must be pleaded. 22 O. Jur., §771, p. 869; 5 Joyce on Insurance (2nd Ed.) p. 4940; Rhode Island Ins. Co. v Fallis, 203 Ky., 112; Wendorff v Missouri State Life Ins. Co., 57 A.L.R. (Mo.) 615. No such defense was pleaded. To dispose of this phase of the case it should be stated that the record contains no evidence and no profert that would support such a defense.

At the trial it was undisputed that the defendant’s agent solicited the insurance, that Kircher signed -the application, that the application was forwarded to the defendant’s ‘.‘Home Office”, and that before the final policy of insurance was delivered Kircher had come to his death by violence. He had been found in an unconscious condition in his automobile in Yankee Creek, from ten to fifteen feet lower than the public highway bridge that crossed the creek at that point. The marks showed that the automobile had left the road and gone over the abutments into the creek. Kircher died without regaining consciousness.

There was no dispute that the premium was paid. It was paid by the plaintiff to the agent who had solicited the insurance and was sent by him to the defendant’s local office, where it was being held at the time of Kircher’s death. The plaintiff testified that Kircher gave him the money with instructions to take it to the agent but that he had no specific knowledge that it was in payment of the premium, although it is manifest from his testimony that he inferred it was for that purpose; and the agent so understood it and gave a receipt reciting that “Received $16.92 on Ord. Pol. in course of issue.” The receipt given by the local office to the agent shows that there was no doubt in the minds of the defendant’s agent that it was in payment of premium on Kircher’s insurance. There was no provision anywhere for the return of the premium under any circumstances. Nd action was taken on this application by the defendant’s “Home Office”. An investigation was instituted and this was in progress when Kircher was killed. From the evidence it appears that defendant was slow in investigating. Kircher gave his correct address as R. F. D. I, Middletown, Butler County, Ohio, but the agency employed to make the investigation asked for more specific information as to the address and by the time this had been obtained from the defendant’s agent Kircher was dead. In the application it was recited that Kitcher was a brorher-in-law of the plaintiff who was named as beneficiary. Answers to certain questions indicated that he was unmarried and had no brothers or sisters. His business and residence were given as the same. The amount of insurance was clearly stated as $3,000.00, but there were indications that originally the figure “1” was written and then “3” written over it.

The officers and employees of the defendant testified that it was because of these features of the application that a report from its investigator was required, particularly as to the inconsistency between the statement that he was unmarried and had no brothers or sisters, and the statement that the plaintiff was his brother-in-law. At the trial it was shown that while Kircher was married he had not lived with his wife for more than a year.

The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount prayed for and judgment was rendered thereon. It is that judgment which the defendant seeks to have reversed.

In support of the claim that the judgment should be reversed, it is urged that there is no evidence, or insufficient evidence, that the defendant had “approved and accepted” the application. And it is certain that the defendant had not concluded to issue the policy and assume the risk incident to insurance for the indefinite period of Kircher’s life. Neither had it concluded not to do so. It had that matter under advisement. It was not bound by the ultimate contract contemplated but not yet executed. Was it bound by any contractual obligation to Kircher when he died?

That an insurance company may be bound by an interim or temporary contract prior to entering into the final contract is clear from the authorities. It is most commonly illustrated by the “binder receipt” given upon payment of the first premium before the issuance of a fire policy. The same principle applies to life insurance and the question in the case is whether the parties intended such temporary insurance. That must be determined in this case by [691]*691the language of the application prepared and issued by the defendant, and signed by its agent and Kircher. In it the parties stipulated that: “It is undierstood and agreed, however, that if at the time of signing this application the full first premium is paid, the insurance shall take effect from the date of this application, in accordance with the provisions of the policy hereby applied for, provided this application is approved and accepted at the Home Office of the Company, in Newark, New Jersey, under the plan for the premium paid and the amount of insurance applied for.”

Now what was meant by this provision? Did it mean that unless the defendant had agreed to accept the risk incident to the insurance for the indefinite period of Kircher’s life, as it would if it issued the final policy, no protection was afforded at all? If this is what is meant then the language is meaningless because in that event when insurance prior to the issuance of the policy would be of any value to the applicant it would be non-existent. It seems clear that the payment of the first premium was intended to have the effect of giving the insured some protection based on the provisions in the application while the issuance of the final policy was under consideration and regardless of whether the final policy was ever issued. This seems especially true of an application for life insurance accompanied by declarations of the applicant and solicitor in lieu of a medical examination. By these declarations the defendant was assured by the approval of its agent and protected against any liability in the event of any wilfully false statement material to the risk of the applicant; and, of course, any conspiracy to defraud between the applicant and the solicitor would defeat a recovery.-*

To bring this interim or temporary insurance into operation it was not necessary that the application be approved and accepted in the sense that the insurer had approved and accepted the risk of the final policy, leaving nothing to be done excepting the preparation and delivery of such policy. Construing the language — as we must — -under the compulsion of the rule to resolve doubts against the defendant whose composition it is, we think it means only that the Home Office should approve and accept the application as an application conforming to its requirements as to plan, premium and amount. The risk then assumed would be, according to the express provisions of the application, subject to the same provisions as the final risk under the terms of the policy applied for.

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Related

Clements v. Ohio State Life Insurance
514 N.E.2d 876 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1986)
Smiley v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America
32 N.W.2d 48 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1948)
Leube v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America
72 N.E.2d 76 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio Law. Abs. 688, 1935 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prudential-ins-v-howard-ohioctapp-1935.