Southern Life & Health Insurance Co. v. Medrano

698 S.W.2d 457, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 10, 1985
Docket13-85-310-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 698 S.W.2d 457 (Southern Life & Health Insurance Co. v. Medrano) 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
Southern Life & Health Insurance Co. v. Medrano, 698 S.W.2d 457, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12161 (Tex. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

NYE, Chief Justice.

Southern Life & Health Insurance Company, appellant, sold a policy of joint whole life insurance to Jesus and Cipriana Medra-no. The face value was $8,000.00. Mr. Medrano subsequently died, and appellant refused to pay Mrs. Medrano the policy amount. The insurance company claimed that Mr. Medrano had made misrepresentations about his health on the insurance application. Mrs. Medrano brought suit, alleging that the insurance company had engaged in deceptive trade practices in violation of TEX.INS.CODE ANN. art. 21.21 (Vernon 1981) and also the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices — Consumer Protection Act, TEX.BUS. & COM.CODE ANN. arts. 17.-41-.63 (Vernon 1985). After trial to a jury, judgment was rendered in favor of Cipria-na Medrano. We agree with the trial court’s judgment, but modify it to include an additional 10 percent.

Appellant sells insurance policies on the “home service concept,” according to the trial testimony of its agent, Mr. Cristobal Flores. This means that it sends people door-to-door selling insurance. These people go into their subjects’ homes to give their sales pitches. They are also responsible for going to the homes of the people to whom they have sold policies for collection of monthly premiums. The salesmen are paid commissions according to the number and amount of the policies they sell.

In the present case, Mr. Flores came to Mrs. Medrano’s home and tried to induce her to buy insurance from him. She declined, saying that her husband was at work and that he made those decisions. Thereafter, Mr. Flores returned several times to the Medrano home, or, if Mrs. Medrano was not home, he looked for her across the street at her niece’s house. Finally, in June of 1977, Mr. and Mrs. Medra-no bought the $3,000.00 policy at issue here. Since neither Mr. nor Mrs. Medrano spoke or read English, Flores sold the policy by speaking Spanish to them. He filled out the application in English for them and, after it was filled out, had them sign at the bottom. He then left, promising to bring their policy to them soon. That was the last Mrs. Medrano saw of Flores until trial. Another salesman, Mr. Francisco Cerecero, delivered the policy and came by the Me-drano home regularly to collect the monthly premiums. He told the Medranos that Flores was “on vacation.”

Almost a year and one-half later, in November of 1978, Mr. Medrano died of a heart attack. When his widow notified the appellant of Mr. Medrano’s death, she was visited again in her home by salesman Cer-ecero, this time with his supervisor. The two told her that they would not pay the insurance policy. Their reason was a “two-year incontestability clause” which they claimed absolved the company from liability unless the Medranos had paid premiums for two years. The supervisor had brought with him, however, a check for the amount of premiums the Medranos had paid. He offered that to her in full satisfaction of her claim. She declined. Later, Mrs. Me-drano was told that she could not collect anything because her husband had falsely represented that he was in good health on the insurance application.

After numerous demands for payment proved unsuccessful, Mrs. Medrano filed suit in November of 1979. The case did not come to trial until June of 1984, almost six years after Mr. Medrano had passed away. At trial, Mrs. Medrano and her niece testified through an interpreter to the above facts, all of which were undisputed. Both of them testified that Mr. Medrano told Flores that he had been hospitalized with pneumonia in 1976, and was concerned that this would make him ineligible for insurance. This fact was disputed by Flores when he testified for appellant insurance company. He also stated on cross-exami *460 nation that he could not specifically remember taking the application. He merely made the general statement that he wrote down the answers that the Medranos gave him. Flores did not dispute that he spoke only in Spanish to the Medranos, that they did not and could not read the application form, and that he wrote down all of the answers.

The jury found that the answers Mr. Flores wrote down on the form were not the answers that Mr. Medrano gave him. The jury also found, in general, that appellant’s course of action was unconscionable. Appellant argues three points of error: 1) that appellee failed as a matter of law to prove a cause of action; 2) that the jury’s answers to two special issues were in fatal conflict; and 3) that the trial court improperly failed to submit special issues on its defensive theory.

Appellant alleges in its first point of error that appellee failed, as a matter of law, to prove a case of deceptive trade practices under TEX.INS.CODE ANN. art. 21.21 (Vernon 1981) (“Art. 21.21”) and under the Deceptive Trade Practices—Consumer Protection Act, TEX.BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. art. 17.41-63 (Vernon Supp. 1985) (“DTPA”). The crux of appellant’s claim appears to be that “the sole cause of action asserted by Appellee has its foundation in the cross-references made by the [DTPA] and Art. 21.21 § 16 of the Texas Insurance Code.” This argument conveniently ignores the fact that appellee has also pleaded a cause of action under the DTPA, entirely independent of Art. 21.21, by alleging that appellant had behaved unconscionably toward appellee. The jury specifically found that the conduct of appellant was unconscionable and that such conduct was a producing cause of appellee’s damages. These findings are clearly and unambiguously adequate to support a judgment under the DTPA, Art. 17.50(a)(3).

Most of appellant’s argument under this point is copied almost verbatim from Mobile County Mutual Insurance Co. v. Jewell, 555 S.W.2d 903, 910 (Tex.Civ.App.—El Paso 1977, writ ref'd n.r.e.). That case simply does not apply to the present case. Jewell held that Art. 21.21 does not apply to county mutual insurance companies. Id. Appellant cannot seriously contend that it is a county mutual. The subsequent discussion in Jewell of the provisions of the DTPA incorporated into Art. 21.21 is pure dicta. See Allstate Insurance Co. v. Kelly, 680 S.W.2d 595, 605 (Tex.App.—Tyler 1984, writ ref’d n.r.e.). Appellant substantially quotes, without benefit of quotation marks, the isolated discussion in Jewell of the interrelationship of the two statutes. No other cases are cited to support this “lifted” language. Appellant’s first point of error is overruled.

Appellant’s second point of error asserts a fatal or irreconcilable conflict between the jury’s answers to Special Issues 7 and 9. Those issues and their answers read as follows:

SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 7
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the Defendant or its agents, represented to Plaintiff that the life insurance policy in question would be valid and in force when it was void or voidable?
Answer “Yes” or “No”.
ANSWER: NO
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 9

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Bluebook (online)
698 S.W.2d 457, 1985 Tex. App. LEXIS 12161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-life-health-insurance-co-v-medrano-texapp-1985.