Quindlen v. Prudential Insurance Company of America

342 F. Supp. 9
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1972
DocketCiv. A. 14123
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 342 F. Supp. 9 (Quindlen v. Prudential Insurance Company of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quindlen v. Prudential Insurance Company of America, 342 F. Supp. 9 (W.D. La. 1972).

Opinion

DAWKINS, Chief Judge.

RULING

The facts in this diversity action are essentially uncontested.

Stringfellow, an agent of Prudential, visited the apartment of Milton Quindlen, a retired Air Force Officer, and his wife, Frances Quindlen, on August *11 24, 1967. Mr. Quindlen applied for a $15,000 life insurance policy, completed Part I of the application that day and Part II was completed August 26, after his medical examination. Quindlen paid the first year’s premium on the policy applied for, $163.15, by authorizing the withdrawal of dividends accrued to another policy with Prudential. A “prepayment receipt” for this amount was delivered to Quindlen.

The agent forwarded the forms to Prudential’s southwestern home office in Houston, Texas, on or about August 27, 1967. The reviewing underwriter sent a request to the Shreveport District Office for additional information on August 31. The request was prompted by information which was disclosed on the pending application which did not appear on the previous application of June 1965 concerning a slightly elevated blood pressure. The Prudential agent called the Quindlen residence, spoke to Mrs. Quindlen, and inquired if her husband’s military medical records were available. Mrs. Quindlen thought the records were in Washington, D. C., or in transitu, but in any ease they were not accessible. Consequently, Stringfellow had the manager of the Shreveport office write the Houston office, asking whether or not the request for military records could be waived. The underwriting division replied, by way of an intra-company message and reply dated September 19, that the request could not be waived. After renewed demand for the medical records, Agent Stringfellow again called the Quindlen residence and was advised by Mrs. Quindlen that she assumed that the only way to obtain the records would be for the Houston office to write the appropriate authorities in Washington, D. C.

Mrs. Quindlen was asked twice whether she had available the military medical records of her husband. She did not deny that the agent told her the records had to be obtained. 1

Standard operating procedure in Prudential’s Houston office permitted constant review of such applications. On October 3, 1967, Quindlen’s file was reviewed and it was ascertained that the medical records had not been furnished. Accordingly, the pre-paid application was rejected.

Mr. Quindlen died on October 5, 1967. The first Prudential agent made aware of Quindlen’s death was Stringfellow. The rejection of the insurance application had taken place on October 3, two days before his death, without any knowledge of his condition. On October 6, a form card entitled “Notice of Rejection of Application” was prepared in the Houston office and mailed to the Shreveport office in order that the latter would be informed of the rejection and might so advise the applicant.

This Court in deciding diversity cases must apply the law of Louisiana, Erie Railroad Company v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S.Ct. 817, 82 L.Ed. 1188 (1938). In default of a State Supreme Court decision, we must, “where the State law supplies the rule of decision ., ascertain and apply that law even though it has not been expounded by the highest court of the State.” Fidelity Union Trust Company v. Field, 311 U.S. 169, 177, 61 S.Ct. 176, 178, 85 L.Ed. 109 (1940).

The issue is whether or not notice of cancellation is a condition precedent for rejection of a temporary life insurance binder. The Insurance Code of Louisiana, LSA-R.S. 22:636, governs cancellation by the insurer of any policy. We have been cited to no decision, nor do we know of one, by any appellate court of this State, or by the State Supreme *12 Court, interpreting Subsection E of Section 636.

In early 1967, Prudential agents were authorized to sell insurance on a prepaid plan. The advantage to the insured is obvious — -the immediate coverage in the interim between date payment is received and the date the Company either rejects or accepts the application on a prepaid basis. Prudential benefits by this to the extent that it is unlikely that an applicant will forfeit the annual payment in order to apply for a policy from another Company. Undoubtedly, Quindlen considered himself covered from the time he authorized the premium payment to be deducted from the dividends which he was receiving from his other policy with Prudential.

The language of the particular contract over which dispute has arisen reads, in pertinent part:

“ . . . NOTWITHSTANDING THE ABOVE PAYMENT NO INSURANCE SHALL TAKE EFFECT OR CONTINUE IN EFFECT EXCEPT AS SPECIFIED IN THIS RECEIPT.
“IF AND ONLY IF PART I OF THE APPLICATION AND PART II OF THE APPLICATION . . . ARE ALL COMPLETED ... and if and only if the Company has neither rejected the application nor declined to consider it on a prepaid basis, then:
“1. Insurance (Interim term insurance if requested in the application) in accordance with the terms and conditions of the policy applied for shall take effect on the effective date; provided, however, that the aggregate amount payable under this Section 1 shall not exceed $100,000.
-X- -X- -X- -X- * X
“Any insurance under (1) above may be terminated by the Company at any time during the proposed Insured’s lifetime by rejecting the application.
•X- X -X- -X * *
“If any insurance is terminated .- the Company’s sole liability shall be the return of the above payment.”

The provision of the Louisiana Insurance Code dealing with notice is R.S. 22:636:

“A. Cancellation by the insurer of any policy which by its terms is cancellable at the option of the insurer, or of any binder based on such policy, may be effected as to any interest only upon compliance with either or both of the following:
•X- -X- * -X- * -x-
“E. This Section shall not apply to temporary life insurance binders nor to contracts of health and accident insurance which do not contain a provision for cancellation prior to the date to which premiums have been paid, nor to the contracts provided in Part XV of this Chapter. Amended and re-enacted Acts 1958, No. 125.”

The parties to this suit pose entirely different interpretations of paragraph “E” of Section 636. It falls upon us to determine the meaning of this paragraph which, upon reflection, appears dubious.

We conclude that from a grammatical sense the adjectival clause beginning “which do not” modifies not only “contracts of life or health and accident insurance” but also “temporary life insurance binders.” The failure of the Legislature to insert a comma after “binders,” while using one after “paid,” suggests a law-making intent to have the adjectival clause attach to temporary life insurance binders.

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Bluebook (online)
342 F. Supp. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quindlen-v-prudential-insurance-company-of-america-lawd-1972.