Ritchie v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

66 P.2d 622, 145 Kan. 525, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 176
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 10, 1937
DocketNo. 33,208
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 P.2d 622 (Ritchie v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ritchie v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 66 P.2d 622, 145 Kan. 525, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 176 (kan 1937).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action to collect the principal sum of a life insurance policy and to set aside a release of liability on the policy executed by the insured and the beneficiary. Judgment was for the plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

The petition, after formal allegations, alleged the issuance of the policy for $1,000 on January 1, 1929; the initial payment of $1.62 when the policy was delivered; that the policy provided for payments of $1.62 on the first of each month thereafter; and that there was an agreement between the beneficiary and insured that she would make the future payments of premiums as they became due; and that insured was to cause no change to be made in the beneficiary during the life of the policy and that the agent of defendant delivered the policy with notice of this agreement.

The petition further alleged that on or about the first of every month thereafter plaintiff made the payments when due until the first day of September, 1933.

The petition further alleged that there was a provision in the policy for a grace period of thirty-one days, as follows:

“A grace period of thirty-one days, without interest charge, will be granted for the payment of every premium after the first, during which grace period the insurance shall continue in force . . .”

[526]*526The petition then alleged that on September 29, 1933, an agent of defendant with full power to act for defendant came to the house of plaintiff and demanded the payment of the September premium; that plaintiff informed this agent that she would be unable to pay the whole of this premium until the 30th of that month; that this agent promised to return and collect this premium on the 30th of that month; and that contrary to this promise this agent failed to appear on that day, although it had been the custom of defendant prior to September 30, 1933, to send one of its agents to the house of plaintiff to collect her monthly premiums.

The petition further alleged that the last day of grace provided in the policy expired the second day of October, 1933; that on this day plaintiff tendered to this agent at her home the full amount of the premium; that this agent refused to accept this premium at that time and wrongfully stated that the day of grace had expired for the payment of this premium on October 1, 1933, which was Sunday, and that it would be necessary for the insured to pass a satisfactory physical and medical examination before he would be eligible for insurance in defendant company; that plaintiff informed the agent of defendant that she was ready and willing to pay the premium for September and would continue to make the payments on the policy as they became due; that this agent stated to plaintiff that it would be useless for her to undertake to make any further monthly payments on the policy because the defendant would not accept them unless the insured could pass a satisfactory physical examination because the policy had lapsed on October 1, 1933, for failure to make the September payment.

The petition further alleged that on the second Friday in December, 1933, plaintiff called at the district office of defendant and stated that she would make the payments, but was told that defendant would not accept the premiums unless insured could pass a satisfactory physical examination.

The petition further alleged that at each of the times when defendant had stated to plaintiff and insured that insured would have to pass a satisfactory physical examination before he would be eligible for reinsurance, insured was ill with tuberculosis.

The petition then alleged that, on or about January 19, 1934, defendant mailed from New York to insured and plaintiff its check for $1.28, payable to plaintiff and insured; that appearing on the back of this check was the following:

[527]*527“10 1949
“This check must be endorsed in ink by the payee. If endorsement is made by mark (X), it must be witnessed by two (2) persons who can write, giving their places of residence in full.
“Release — Endorsement.
“The undersigned acknowledge payment and hereby release and forever discharge the said Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of and from all manner of claims and demands whatsoever arising under or by reason of the numbered policy or policies on the reverse side. Signatures.”

The petition then alleged that at the time of receiving this check and at no time prior thereto did plaintiff or insured know what the law was with reference to whether the last day of grace on the policy had expired on the first day of October, 1933, as claimed by defendant.

The petition further alleged that accompanying this check was a letter addressed to insured and plaintiff; that this letter had been lost or destroyed; that this letter stated in substance that defendant had looked into the insurance laws and been advised with reference to such laws as to the grace period under that policy for September, 1933, and that it was a fact that this grace period had expired on October 1,1933.

The petition further alleged that neither plaintiff nor insured were familiar with the insurance laws applicable to the construction of the grace period in the policy, and relying on the statements in the letter and believing them to be true, endorsed the check, but laid it aside and did not cash it until the 21st day of April, 1934; that both plaintiff and insured at that time still believed that the representations in the letter were true; and at the time of cashing the check relied upon these representations and believed that the policy had lapsed.

The petition further alleged that these representations with reference to the laws applicable to the grace period were false and known by defendant to be false; that these false representations were made by defendant for the purpose of wrongfully deceiving plaintiff and insured into believing that the grace period had expired on October 1, 1933, and that the policy had lapsed on that day; and that insured and plaintiff, relying upon these representations, were deceived into believing that the policy had lapsed; that on October 20,1934, insured died, and the policy became due plaintiff in the principal sum of $1,000.

The petition then alleged that during all the time in question defendant maintained at Pittsburg a district office in charge of a district manager and certain assistant district managers.

[528]*528The petition then alleged that at the time of his death insured had not discovered that the representations made by defendant in its letter were untrue; that plaintiff did not discover until shortly after the death of insured that the representations were untrue and that she had been defrauded thereby.

The petition then alleged a demand for the payment of the policy and á refusal to pay.

The prayer was for judgment canceling the release on the back of the check and for $1,000, with interest, less accrued premiums.

There was a motion to strike certain of these allegations, but since the motion refers to numbered paragraphs and the petition in the abstract does not number the paragraphs, and since defendant does not make a point in its brief of the overruling of this motion, it will not be discussed here.

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Related

Patton v. Sartin
87 P.2d 589 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P.2d 622, 145 Kan. 525, 1937 Kan. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ritchie-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-kan-1937.