Shumpert v. Service Life & Health Ins. Co.

68 S.E.2d 340, 220 S.C. 401, 1951 S.C. LEXIS 116
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 30, 1951
Docket16566
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 S.E.2d 340 (Shumpert v. Service Life & Health Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shumpert v. Service Life & Health Ins. Co., 68 S.E.2d 340, 220 S.C. 401, 1951 S.C. LEXIS 116 (S.C. 1951).

Opinion

StukES, Justice.

Respondent recovered verdict and judgment for actual and punitive damages against appellant upon a cause of action for fraud and deceit in the issuance of insurance. There were two policies, one of which was upon the life of respondent in the sum of $250.00 with his wife, Martie, as the beneficiary. It was so recited on the outside of the policy but it was described as a “Family Protective Policy.” The other is described in the record as a hospitalization, surgery, accidental death, and dismemberment policy, which recites a group policy issued to South Carolina Farm Bureau as an individual or as the head of the family, and all of the named members of the family were referred to as insured. The wife of respondent was listed. There was but one application which will be dealt with in more detail hereinafter because its nature and the transaction of the solicitation and procurement of it distinguish the case and materially support respondent’s contention of fraud and deception.

He testified that in November 1948 he was approached at his work by Mr. Rish and Mr. Holliday who said that they were representing the appellant company and solicited him to take a policy. He told them that he was not much interested in one on himself but would like to have a policy upon his wife who was sick. He was told by the agents that they would write a joint policy which would cover both. Respondent told the agents that he did not know whether his *405 wife could be insured because she had cancer, and the agents told him that would make no difference because he was a Farm Bureau member and the insurance was to protect Bureau members who were poor and they could get a policy in their company. Respondent delayed decision although he was assured by the agents that it would help him to take care of medical bills and funeral expenses and assist in taking-care of his children; that it made no difference what respondent or his wife should have, whether, quoting from the record,. “T. B., cancer or anything”. The agents explained that the joint policy over respondent and wife, which they recommended, would pay either survivor $1,000.00, and $250.00 would be paid immediately for burial expenses and the balance of $750.00 later. Something like a check would be attached to the policy which would be paid upon death and it could be taken for that purpose to the insurer’s office or to an undertaker. Respondent saw agent Rish in January 1949 at Pelion and in the meantime agent Holliday had visited respondent’s home and missed him. At the meeting in Pelion; Rish explained the policy again and said particularly that in case of the wife’s death the insurance would, quoting again from the testimony, “help out with the burial, and taking care of the children, and the funeral expenses and all”; and the agent repeated the assurance that it covered all kinds of sicknesses, even “T. B.” or cancer, and would pay the burial expenses in either case.

At this January interview with Rish the latter filled out an application and respondent signed it. When asked on the stand what he was told the premium would be, respondent answered:"* * * $250.00 burial premium and $750.00 after burial,” showing that he did not know the meaning of the word “premium”, which demonstrated his ignorance. Further questioned, he said that the cost would be $21.41 for six months. Respondent further testified that he was told that the application which he signed was, quoting, “some kind of a paper connected with the policy, showing that I had paid for the policy.”

*406 The application, which was -introduced in evidence, is a cryptic document, which the trial judge later remarked on motion for new trial was unintelligible to him. In a column captioned vertically “Amount of life,” opposite respondent’s name entered horizontally at the left, are the figures 250 and blank opposite the name of his wife. However, the very next of the nine, columns is entitled, “A. D. & D.” and entered opposite each of the names of respondent and his wife are the figures 1000. The application was entitled “Application for Insurance”, which served for the issuance of both policies ; and in it the name of repondent’s wife appeared as conspicuously as his, both under the following caption above them: “Member (Beneficiary or other insured).” Extended to the right, opposite each name, are the nine columns of information with all of the eighteen blanks appropriately filled except the seventh column (amount of life) which was left blank with respect to the wife, but in the next, eighth, column, headed vertically “A. D. & A.”, the figures 1,000 were inserted opposite the names of respondent and his wife. Presumably, copies of the application accompanied both policies. Sec. 7988, 1948 Code Supp.

Respondent said that he did not read the application because he could not read to amount to anything although Rish told him he should read it, whereupon Rish read it to him, which respondent said he thought was a proper reading because he had confidence in Rish. The first semi-annual premium of $21.41 was paid and Rish gave him a receipt dated Jan. 28, 1949, which recited that it was accepted subject to the approval of the Home Office and to the conditions of the policy, and said that a policy would be forthcoming in a week or ten days; and the two policies were received by mail in about that time. Respondent kept them in the envelopes in which they came. He did not ask his wife to read the policies to him because he did not want to worry her or embarras her with the information that he had bought insurance to cover the expenses of her burial; and his children, who were in school, were not asked because, quoting, “I took it *407 for granted that what Mr. Holliday and Mr. Rish told me was O. K. and I didn’t ask them (the children) to read them. I just took them and put them up.” His wife became bedridden from her affliction in June before her death in November, suffered pain and took drugs, including morphine, for a year or year and a half.

On cross-examination respondent said that he practically finished the third grade in school, having attended about five, six or seven years of three to four months each year, but he was sick and at home a part of the time and left school at about seventeen or eighteen years of age to help his father who, in bad health, ran a gin and grist mill. He has signed some legal papers but usually had someone with him who read them to him. He would not have bought the policies if he had known that the agents’ statements about them were untrue, but he believed the agents to be good and honest men.

Upon the death of respondent’s wife he went to see Rish in Pelion and told him of it. Rish assured him that he need only go to the insurer’s office in Columbia and the policy would be paid. This advice was followed but the young lady in the office examined the policies and told him that he had only accident insurance on his wife, which respondent denied and told her that he bought only a life insurance policy. This was the first mention to respondent of an accident policy. He went back to Rish and asked him to go to the insurer’s office and help him. Rish said there was nothing he could do and thereupon became speechless. Respondent is a sharecrop farmer without any other business experience and can do very little reading, not enough to understand anything like an insurance policy or a business letter. From the witness stand he identified in the courthouse Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 S.E.2d 340, 220 S.C. 401, 1951 S.C. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shumpert-v-service-life-health-ins-co-sc-1951.