Simmons v. Western Indemnity Co.

210 S.W. 713, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 428
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1919
DocketNo. 8996
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 210 S.W. 713 (Simmons v. Western Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Western Indemnity Co., 210 S.W. 713, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 428 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

[1] This is an appeal from a judgment for defendant under an instructed verdict. We are not advised as to whether the ground upon which -the peremptory instruction was given was that, in the opinion of the court, the uncontroverted evidence sustained one or more of the defendant’s pleas of limitation, or that the court concluded that the facts showed that the policy was not in force at the time of the insured’s death. In this connection, it may be well to state that in our opinion the fact that the Western Indemnity Company on October 16, 1913, in writing, assumed all the liabilities of the Western Casualty & Guaranty Insurance Company, which company issued the policy declared upon, would not extend or in any way affect the question of limitation. The contract of assumption of liability by the appellant company, while for the benefit of the policy holders in the Western Casualty & Guaranty Company as their rights existed at the time of such assumption, could not reasonably be held as the issuance of a new policy upon the life of one who was dead at the date of the contract between the two companies, or as prolonging any period of limitation which had begun to run.

It is agreed in the statement of facts that on October 16, 1913, the Western Indemnity Company “assumed, in writing, all liabilities” .of the Western Casualty & Guaranty Insurance Company. If the insured in any policy issued by the Western Casualty & Guaranty Insurance Company had died prior to the assumption of liability by the Western Indefh-nity Company, such right of action against the company issuing the policy, as the beneficiary named might have had, was fixed at the time of the reinsurance, and her right of recovery would be determined according to the terms of the policy as originally issued. As to policies matured by death, the beneficiary’s rights would not be enlarged because of such assumption by the reinsuring company.

Taking the view of the evidence most strongly in favor of the plaintiff below, it may be said that the record discloses the following state of facts, to wit: On May 10, 1912, the insured, Abe Belton, took out a policy in the Western Casualty & Guaranty Insurance Company, hereinafter called the “guaranty company.” This policy provided for sick benefits and monthly accident indemnities in the sum of $30, and was in the principal sum of $300. The premium for May and June, 1912, was paid by the insured pri- or to his injury, which occurred during the first week in June while he was engaged as a laborer for a paving company in Houston, Tex. The insured was treated by a physician in Houston, and was confined to his bed until July 15th, when he returned to his home in Gainesville, where he was likewise confined to his bed and under medical treatment until August 7th, following, when he died. Within 90 days the widow and beneficiary, appellee here, caused letters to be written to the guaranty company at Houston and Dallas, in both of which cities the company had offices. In these letters, there being some five or six of them, the company was informed of the accident to the insured and his subsequent death therefrom, and was requested to send blanks for proof. No answer was received. The widow was an illiterate negro, unable to read or write, and made no further effort to collect on the policy until the latter part of 1915, when she turned the policy over to her attorney for' collection. The attorney immediately set about to locate the guaranty company, and learned that it had left the state of Texas and returned to the state of Oklahoma, and that it had reinsured its risks in the Western Indemnity Company, hereinafter called the “indemnity company,” and that the indemnity company had assumed the rights and all liabilities of the old company. He then wrote to the indemnity company at Dallas, giving it the date of Belton’s death and all particulars with reference thereto, and asked the company to send him blanks to make proof of death. The manager of. the claim department replied: That he had examined the books carefully and had failed to find any claim made under the Belton policy. That the company had never received any letters from Belton’s widow giving information of the insured’s death and requesting blanks for proof of death. That, if any claim against the company had ever existed by reason of Belton’s alleged injury and death, at the time the company was informed thereof the claim was barred by limitation. That while the company did not ordinarily take advantage of the statute of limitation, yet, in this instance, the accident had happened so long ago that it would be impossible for the company to obtain trustworthy evidence of the man’s injury or the cause of insured’s death. Hence the company refused to recognize the claim. The correspondence between the indemnity company and appellee’s attorney seems to have occurred during March and April of 1916. Suit was filed March 15, 1916, or three years, seven months, and eight days after the insured’s death.

Plaintiff sought to recover the sum of $330, together with interest and attorney’s fees, the $30 being claimed for total disability of [715]*715insured “for the second month that said Abe Belton was confined to his room and unable to work.”

Part XI, under the head of “Indemnity Payments,” of the policy, provides that claims of disability of less than one month’s duration shall be payable after the termination of the disability only, while another clause provides that in consideration of the extra premium paid the indemnity mentioned extended to cover the first week of any illness for which the insured would be entitled to benefit according to the terms and conditions of the policy. Just why the claim was made for indemnity covering the second month’s illness, and not the first, is not disclosed either in the record or in the briefs.

[2] There is no claim made by plaintiff that the premium for either July or August, 1912, was paid. The policy provides that—

“The payment of any past-due premium shall not continue this insurance in force beyond the first day of the succeeding month.”

But it has been held that recovery may be ■had upon a policy for injury, resulting in loss of time or death, occurring during the period for which premium has been paid, though death of the insured took place after such period. Burkheiser v. Mut. Acc. Association, 61 Fed. 816, 10 C. C. A. 94, 26 L. R. A. 112; 14 R. C. L. § 148, p. 976. If this holding be sound, and we are of the opinion that it is, then, if limitation does not bar a recovery, it would seem that the peremptory instruction should not have been given.

The policy contains the following clause:

“No proceedings at law or in equity shall be brought against the company for recovery under this policy until ninety days from the date of filing proof, nor shall the same be brought at all unless commenced within two years and ninety days from the date when the final proofs of claim are filed with the company.”

[3]

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W. 713, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-western-indemnity-co-texapp-1919.