Seiders v. Merchants Life Ass'n of United States

54 S.W. 753, 93 Tex. 194, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 128
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1900
DocketNo. 843.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 54 S.W. 753 (Seiders v. Merchants Life Ass'n of United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seiders v. Merchants Life Ass'n of United States, 54 S.W. 753, 93 Tex. 194, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 128 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The plaintiff sued the defendant upon a policy of life insurance upon the life of her husband, - P. W. Seiders, for the sum of $3000. The defendant pleaded, among other things, that the deceased, in his application for insurance, represented and warranted that he had never made application for insurance to any other company which had been rejected, and that the said representations were false in fact. The plaintiff replied, setting up the law of the State of Missouri hereafter copied in the statement of the case. The trial was had before the district judge, who filed conclusions of fact, of which 'we make the following condensed statement: The defendant was incorporated under the laws of the State of Missouri, and. *197 has its principal office in the city of St. Louis in that State. On the 28th day of September, 1897, it was doing business in the county of Travis and State of Texas through its resident agent, W. A. Elder, who was authorized agent and district manager for the corporation. On that day, P. W. Seiders, who was the husband of the plaintiff and resided in Travis County, made application to the company through Elder, its agent, for a policy of insurance on his life in the sum of $3000. Seiders was examined by the defendant’s medical examiner.

The application was signed by Seiders and delivered to Elder in Travis County, to be forwarded to the defendant’s home office in St. Louis. The application contained the following questions and answers :

“16. Did any life insurance organization ever reject your application? Ans. — Yes. Postpone? Ans. — Yo. Change plan? Ans. — Yo. Or reduce amount applied for? Ans. — Yo. If so, give name of each and when. Ans. — Provident, $1000, July, 1897.
“19. "Was any policy ever issued upon your life which was after-wards canceled by company, or association, which issued it? Ans. — Yo.
“45. Do you use ardent spirits, wine or malt liquor? Ans. — Yes.
“46. If so, what kind and largest quantity in any day? Ans. — One glass beer and not regularly. Sometimes two months without any.’’

The application also contained a clause by which the insured agreed that if he had made any false or fraudulent statements in his application, or should use alcoholic or malt liquors in excess of the “present use,” as stated, the association should be released from the insurance and liable only to an amount equal to the actual reserve on the said policy. Upon the receipt of the application at the home office in St. Louis, the defendant, on the 2d of October, 1897, duly executed under its seal a policy which contained these provisions: “The Merchants Life Association of the United States, * * * . in consideration of the first annual premium of $64.05, the written and printed application for this policy and the pajonent of all premiums as stated in the insurance plan indorsed hereon, which application and plan are hereby made a part of this contract, does promise to pay to Mary Seiders, wife of the insured, at the office of the association in the city of St. Louis, State of Missouri, $3000, within thirty dai's after receipt and approval by it of satisfactory proofs of the death of Pinkney W. Seiders, Austin, Texas.” The policy being executed by the defendant company, was mailed by it in St. Louis to W. A. Elder, its agent in Austin, Texas, and by him delivered to Pinkney W. Seiders, in Travis County, Texas, October 4, 1897, when Seiders paid Elder $16.02 in cash and executed three promissory notes, each dated St. Louis, Mo., October 1, 1897, for the sum of $16.01 each, payable to defendant company, or order, at its home office in St. Louis, in three, six, and nine months respectively from date. The cash payment and the notes constituted the first annual premium, amounting to $64.05. The cash and the notes were forwarded by Elder to the defendant at its home office. The first and *198 second of the notes were paid by Seiders' to Elder in Travis County, Texas, as they fell due.

Pinkney W. Seiders died April 11, 1898, and proofs of his death were duly forwarded to the defendant on May 1, 1898, and payment of the policy demanded, which was refused and suit brought.

Before. signing the application for this policy, Seiders had applied to the New York Life Insurance Company for a policy of insurance and also to the Provident Life Insurance Company, and in each case his application had been rejected. His answers to the questions upon this point were untrue. Before signing the application, Seiders had procured a policy from the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, which was afterwards canceled. After the execution and delivery of the said policy sued upon, Seiders did use alcoholic and malt liquors in excess of the amount stated in his application.

The following is an extract of the statute of the State of Missouri in force when this contract was executed and at the time of the death of Seiders: “No defense based upon misrepresentations made in obtaining or securing a policy of insurance on the life or lives of any person or persons shall be deemed material or render the policy void, unless the matter misrepresented shall have actually contributed to the contingency or event on which the policy is to become due or payable, and whether it so contributed in any case shall be a question for the jury.” NTone of the, facts misrepresented in the application contributed to the death of Pinkney W. Seiders.

The trial court found that $300 was a reasonable fee for the services of plaintiffs attorney in bringing this suit; that the annual premium amounted to $64.05, of which sum $48.04 and $1 interest has been paid in cash and a note for $16.01, which cash payment and note were tendered into court by the defendant. The trial judge entered judgment against the plaintiff which was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.

The question in this case is, does the law of the State ,of Missouri apply to this contract? If it does, the plaintiff was entitled to recover and the judgment must be reversed; if it does not, then the judgment must be affirmed.

The defendant in error insists that the contract of insurance was made in Texas and must be governed by the laws of this State. The plaintiff in error contends, (1) that the life association, being a corporation created by the laws of the State of Missouri, its contract, though made in Texas, must be construed by the statute of the State of Missouri, -which was pleaded and proved; (2) that the contract is to be performed by the defendant in error in the State of Missouri and must be interpreted by the laws of that State.

We are not inclined to hold that a corporation, created by the laws of another State, brings with it into this State the general statute laws of the State of its creation, but, in view of our conclusion upon another point, it is not necessary to decide the question. Conceding that the *199 contract of insurance ivas made in Texas, it is made payable at the home office in the State of Missouri, and all premiums are likewise made payable there. It does not provide for any act to be done elsewhere by the company. A tender of the money at the home office would have been valid.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W. 753, 93 Tex. 194, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seiders-v-merchants-life-assn-of-united-states-tex-1900.