Southern Travelers' Ass'n v. Levy

13 S.W.2d 460
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 1928
DocketNo. 3605.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 S.W.2d 460 (Southern Travelers' Ass'n v. Levy) 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 Travelers' Ass'n v. Levy, 13 S.W.2d 460 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

LEVY, J.

The suit was by appellee upon two benefit certificates which obligated the appellant to pay $50 a week during the time of total disablement to wprk, and $25 a week during the time of partial disablement, in case such disability was due to bodily injury resulting from accidental means. In a trial without a jury the court awarded judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $263.43, with interest.

While the certificates were in force, and, on August 2, 1927, at 3:45 o’clock p. m., the insúred received bodily injury by accidental means, which totally disabled him from work for five weeks, and which partially disabled him for a further period, uncertainly shown, of “two or three weeks.” Heavy pieces of timber suddenly fell to the ground, striking the appellee, who was standing nearby, and severely fracturing the right ankle and foot. There was no controverted issue as to his injury or the cause thereof. Errors are predicated upon other and different grounds.

The appellant insists that the demurrer to the petition should have been sustained because the contract upon which the suit was based consisted of the articles of incorporation, the by-laws of the association, the application for membership and the certificate of membership, and the plaintiff did not plead the substance or tenor of any of these, except the certificate of membership. It is believed that a cause of action was shown in the petition. If the whole of the contract was not in point of fact set forth in the petition, the failure to do so may have been reached by objection to the evidence when offered.

The several propositions of appellant present the points in view, in effect, that the appellee was not entitled to any benefits on account of the accident because the appellee’s application misstated his real occupation and duties, inducing acceptance and classification of a risk not authorized by the laws of the association, and' because the injury to appel-lee happened while he was engaged in a business or occupation different from that stated in his application for insurance and different from that for which he was insured against risk. The association, it appears, divided its risks into classes, and charged premiums or assessments in accordance with the classification. Certain risks were excluded from acceptance by the association; for instance, a foreman “whose work” is “manual labor” in the actual construction and repair of buildings. The association used a classification manual, made a part of the benefit certificate, providing classes, namely.:

Industrial Commercial
AA-A ... 1. Select.
B . 2. Preferred.
C . 3. Ordinary.
D . i. Medium.
B . 6. Special.

A “general contractor” is under class D in case “he does any manual work,” and under class B in ease he does “office work.” “A superintendent and supervisor only” is under class O. A “contractor not otherwise classed” is in class E in case “he goes on the work.” The appellee’s certificates were classed in class B, which class covered “accidents of all kinds.” The by-laws of the association, as pertinent, provide:

“Article XL. Misrepresentations. Section 1. — Any untrue statement in a member’s application for membership shall render his certificate of membership void, and he shall be entitled to no benefits under the same.”

Appellee’s application for membership, with his answer, as pertinent, shows:

“4. Name and location of firm represented by you. Security Mortgage Company.
“Town. Texarkana.
“State. Arkansas.
“6. What is your occupation? Superintendent of Construction.
“8. Ha ye you any other duties? No.
“26. I agree that this application, the laws of Texas, the charter and by-laws now in existence and as may be amended, and the certificate shall be the contract for membership *462 in this association, and that same is not to he binding on the association until the application is accepted and the certificate of membership issued.
“27. I warrant the above statements to be full and complete and true.”

The Security Mortgage Company in the line of its business built houses for sale on installments, and repaired houses taken over by default of payment of mortgage debts. The appellee was the superintendent of construction and repair of houses, as occasion required, for the Security Mortgage Company. He also, when not engaged in work for the company, contracted such character of work for other people. The appellee had a crew of men under him doing the actual work of building and the manual labor required. He merely supervised and directed the men under him and in his employ as to the work. He testified:

“I just showed them (the men) how, and I did not do any of the carpenter work myself. * * * I did not do any of the manual labor myself. * * * My work required me to be at the construction during the time it was going on. I kept right with them (the men). * * * I have set doors and windows once in a while when in a tight, but that is all I would do on any job.”

The evidence is further without conflict that from 1911 to the date of trial the ap-pellee’s regular “occupation” or means of earning a livelihood was that of superintendence of the construction of buildings. As testified to by- the appellee, and not controverted:

“My employment since 1911 is being a foreman, contracting running jobs for people and looking after work; I was a foreman or supervisor of construction of buildings. * * * I just showed them how, and I did not do any of the carpenter work myself.”

In the light of this undisputed evidence all the statements in the appellee’s application were shown to be literally true. 1-Ie did not, according to the evidence, misstate his occupation or duties thereunder in the application. Appellee was in fact, as stated in the application, principally representing or serving the “Security Mortgage Company” at Texarkana, Ark., in the line of his regular “occupation” or means of livelihood, which was that of “superintendent of construction.” 1-Ie performed “no other duties” besides- his regular occupation for the mortgage company. In the following respect only does the appellant claim that untrue statements were made as to occupation and duties by appel-lee. The secretary testified:

“When we saw on his application that..he was superintendent of constructioh for the Security Mortgage Company we thought that the superintendent for that concern would sit at his desk and figure specifications, because they' are investment bankers. We did not have a-class-for, that kind, only as bankers. We have no class whatever for construction foremen. We looked up the Security Mortgage Company in Dunn and Bradstreet, and saw vyhat class of work they were engaged in, and from that we came to the conclusion that he (appellee) was doing such work as we could take.

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13 S.W.2d 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-travelers-assn-v-levy-texapp-1928.