Rhyne v. Jefferson Standard Life Insurance

154 S.E. 749, 199 N.C. 419, 1930 N.C. LEXIS 133
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 17, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 154 S.E. 749 (Rhyne v. Jefferson Standard Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhyne v. Jefferson Standard Life Insurance, 154 S.E. 749, 199 N.C. 419, 1930 N.C. LEXIS 133 (N.C. 1930).

Opinion

BbogdeN, J.

Tbe former appeal in this case, reported in 196 N. O., at page 717, contained tbe following declaration: “There was evidence from which tbe jury could find that tbe assured became insane in January or February, 1927, during tbe life of tbe policies in suit.” Tbe evidence for tbe plaintiff in tbe present case is substantially tbe same as that introduced at tbe former trial and referred to in tbe former appeal. Hence, unless tbe Court shall overrule tbe former decision in this case, tbe principle of “Law of tbe case” would apply to this appeal and thus determine tbe merits of tbe controversy.

Tbe question then, is, was tbe former appeal correctly decided?

It is conceded that tbe decisions upon tbe proposition as to bow far tbe insanity of tbe insured will excuse failure to furnish proof -of dis *421 ability, are not uniform and have been built upon divergent, theories of liability, thus working out variable conclusions of law. One of the first eases' dealing with the subject was Fire Insurance Co. v. Boykin, 79 U. S., 349, 20 Law Ed., 442. In that case an insane-man furnished proof of loss by affidavit to a fire insurance company to the effect “that he believed the building had been set on fire by an incendiary, that he had heard of repeated threats of a person whom he named that he would burn the premises, and that it was in consequence of these threats that he had procured the insurance which he was then seeking to • recover.”' When this affidavit was received by the insurance companies they refused to pay and notified the insured that they considered the-policy void. The contention was made that the insured was'.'insane when .he wrote the affidavit. The Court said: “If .he were so insane; as to be incapable of making an intelligent statement, this would, of itself, excuse that condition of the policy.” The Boykin c.a,se is .eited with approval in Hirsch-Fauth Furniture Co. v. Continental Ins. Co., 24 Fed. (2d), 216. The Court said: “In reply to the suggestion that the insured who, being insane* failed to file proof of loss within the time limit stated in the policy, could not recover, it was said that such a proposition is too repugnant to justice and humanity A» merit serious-, consideration.” The Boykin case was also eited with approval in Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Doll, 23 Fed. (2d), 443. In that ease the insurance policy provided: “If fire occur the insured shall- within six- days give notice of any loss thereby in writing to this company.” . The insured was injured in a tornado, was unconscious for some days, blind fo.r. several weeks and confined in a hospital. It is to be noted that the foregoing cases involve liability for failure to give .notice of destruction of property by fire.

The Supreme Court of Michigan considered the question in Reed v. Loyal Protective Asso., 117 N. W., 600. The notice clause was as follows: “Unless notice of any injury or of the beginning of.any sickness is received in writing at the home office of this association in Boston, Massachusetts, on or before the expiration of fourteen days from the commencement of such disability, . . . the claim shall be valid only for the period dating from the actual time the notification is received at the home office.” The insured was' injured by a fall in October and the notice was not filed until 1 December. . The insurance company contended: (1) That the contract is an unconditional agreement as to notice, and not subject to a construction, which does violence to its plain terms. (2) If this construction was a proper one, the plaintiff had not proved such derangement, and the proof conclusively shows the opposite.” The Court held that there was no evidence of mental derangement, but in view of a possible new trial, the Court proceeded to con *422 sider the question as to whether failure to give notice by reason of mental incapacity, would excuse the forfeiture. The Court said: “But we are committed to the doctrine in insurance cases, that a provision requiring a notice on pain of forfeiture will not be construed to require strict performance, when by a plain act of G-od it is made impossible of performance.”

The Supreme Court of Nebraska discussed the principle of law involved in the case of Woodmen’s Accident Association v. Byers, 87 N. W., 546. In that case the plaintiff undertook to recover upon a total disability contract of insurance. The policy stipulated “that as a condition precedent to any liability thereunder, the plaintiff shall give a written notice to the defendant at its home office in Lincoln, Nebraska, of any injury received for which indemnity is claimed, within ten days from date of such injury.” The accident occurred on 17 October, and the notice was mailed to the defendant the following November. The Court said: “A company of this character, organized for the purpose of providing indemnity to those suffering injury and loss from accident, should, and, we assume does, have a higher mission than merely the collection of revenues. If the provision quoted must under all circumstances, and regardless of conditions, be absolutely and strictly complied with according to the letter thereof, then the contract can only be regarded as a snare and pitfall sure to entrap the unwary and deprive them of the protection and indemnity contracted for on their part in the best of faith and honesty of purpose. If the contract is legally incapable of any other construction than that contended for, requiring a literal and exact compliance as a condition precedent to be performed in the time mentioned, then if for eleven days the insured is irrational and deranged in his mind as a result of the accident, as he appears to have been, and therefore incapable of complying with this provision, he would be altogether debarred from relief, and the failure would, on legal principles, be as fatal as would be the case if the time were forty-four days, as in the present instance. Such a construction would be shocking to our sense of justice, unconscionable, and unreasonable.”

The language employed by the Nebraska Court is perhaps stronger than that contained in any other case, but it tends to show the divergent attitude of the courts upon the question involved.

The Byers case, supra, was followed in Marti v. Midwest Life Insurance Co., 189 N. W., 388.

The Supreme Court of South Carolina passed upon the question in Levan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 136 S. E., p. 304. The trial judge charged the jury “that if at the time the unpaid premium became due Levan was totally and permanently disabled as defined in the policy, *423

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.E. 749, 199 N.C. 419, 1930 N.C. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhyne-v-jefferson-standard-life-insurance-nc-1930.