Sovereign Camp, W. O. W. v. Durr

192 So. 45, 186 Miss. 850, 125 A.L.R. 702, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 284
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1939
DocketNo. 33873.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 So. 45 (Sovereign Camp, W. O. W. v. Durr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sovereign Camp, W. O. W. v. Durr, 192 So. 45, 186 Miss. 850, 125 A.L.R. 702, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 284 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

*855 McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the Chancery Court of Lincoln County, and from a decree in favor of the appellee for a death benefit under a policy on the life of her husband, Louis Durr, Jr. The decree was for the full amount of *856 the policy, less a lien thereon for the sum of $289.53, and less certain premiums accruing from March 1, 1933, to the date of the death of the insured on January 24, 1938, and which premiums had not been paid during said period for the reason that the insurer had cancelled the policy because of an alleged failure to pay the monthly premium due thereon for the month of February 1933, and which said premiums were tendered in the bill of complaint filed by the insured during his lifetime for the purpose of having the said policy reinstated.

Subsequent to the death of Louis Durr, Jr., which occurred during the pendency of the suit filed by him for a reinstatement of the policy as aforesaid, the appellee, being the wife and heir of the insured, as well as the beneficiary in the policy, filed a motion for a revivor and for permission to file a supplemental bill to have the policy reinstated and the terms and provisions thereof enforced. A bill of revivor and supplemental bill was filed by the appellee without having first obtained an order upon her motion to revive, but an order was later entered reviving the cause and permitting- her to file the supplemental bill of complaint, and she thereafter refiled the same. On this supplemental bill process was issued for the appellant and duly served in the manner provided by law. The appellant had contested the motion for a revivor and for the appellee to be allowed to file the supplemental bill of complaint; and hence the order of the chancellor sustaining the .motion and permitting the revivor and the filing of the bill is one of the errors assigned on this appeal.

In the case of McNeely v. City of Natchez, 148 Miss. 268, 114 So. 484, the Court declared that a personal action which survives is “an action brought for the recovery of personal property, for the enforcement of some contract or to recover damages for its breach or for the recovery of damages for the commission of injury to the person or property.” A suit to reinstate a contract has as its ultimate object the enforcement thereof. Upon the *857 death of Louis Durr, Jr., his rights and interest in having the cancellation of the policy set aside, and the contract of insurance reinstated, became vested in the appellee as beneficiary under the policy. Otherwise, she would not be entitled to have the contract reinstated and enforced even in a separate suit filed by her for that purpose. If no beneficiary had been named in the policy, it would be clear, under Section 516 of the Code of 1930, that the suit filed by the insured could have been revived in the name of his executor, administrator or other legal representative. The only authority called to our attention in the briefs of counsel on this point, wherein the beneficiary in an insurance policy or certificate was involved is that found in 1 C. J. S., Abatement and Revival, page 222, section 170, and National Council of Knights & Ladies of Security v. Scheiber, 141 Minn. 41, 169 N. W. 272, which recognize the right of an insurer to revive a suit for the cancellation of a policy against the successors in interest of the insured, including the personal representatives, transferee or beneficiary, when the suit is pending for that purpose at the time of the death of the insured, and we see no reason for allowing an insurer to revive an action in equity against the beneficiary, where the insurer is seeking the cancellation of the policy, and then denying the right to the beneficiary to revive a suit brought lay the insured against an insurer to set aside an alleged wrongful cancellation of a policy.

The rule is stated in 1 C. J. 238, Sections 512-3, as follows:

“Section 512. By Bill of Revivor. According to the strict chancery practice, whenever a suit abates by death, and the interest of the person whose death has caused the abatement is transmitted to a representative which the law gives or ascertains, as an heir at law or an executor or administrator, the suit may be continued by a bill of revivor merely.”
‘ ‘ Section 513. By Bill in Nature of Bill of Revivor, and Supplement. But when, by the death of a party, his in *858 terest in the property in controversy is transmitted by a devise or in any other manner than by operation of law, so that the title as well as the person entitled may be questioned, tlie suit cannot be continued by a bill of revivor. In such case an original bill in the nature of a bill of revivor and supplement must be filed. The ground of distinction is that bills of revivor proper are founded on mere privity of blood or representation by proof of law, and the original bills in the nature of bills of revivor upon privity of estate or title by the act of party. ’ ’

We are of the opinion that it was proper for the appellee, as the sole person interested in having the policy reinstated and the payment of the death benefit enforced, to proceed with this suit in equity by revivor and supplemental bill, in view of the fact that it was necessary to have the cancellation set aside and the policy reinstated before it could have been enforced at law. New process having been issued under the supplemental bill and duly served on the appellant, it having- thereafter filed its answer to the supplemental bill, it follows that the court acquired jurisdiction of the case to determine the rights of the parties. Moreover, even if the case had not been one of purely equitable cognizance, we would not be justified in reversing on that ground in view of Section 147 of the State Constitution.

Upon the trial on the merits, the issue was limited by agreement of counsel as follows: “It is agreed between the attorneys for complainant and defendant that the only issue of fact to be presented is whether or not the premium on the policy mentioned in the pleadings was paid for the month of February, 1933.” The appellant contends that the appellee failed to establish by a preponderance of the testimony the affirmative of that issue, and that therefore the chancellor should be reversed on the finding of fact. The record discloses that Emmett Durr, a son of the insured and of the appellee, testified that he lived in New Orleans, La., and that he sent a post-office money order to L. F. Noble, financial secretary of *859 the Woodmen of the World Camp at Grange Hall (the camp with which the insured, Louis Durr, Jr., had been connected) each month, for ah amount sufficient to cover his own assessment and that of his father; that he had done 'so for several years; and that he sent a postoffice money order for a monthly assessment under his father’s policy, which amounted to $1.03, on February 7, 1933. He was unable to testify with absolute certainty that this payment was for February, 1933 (which was required by the terms of the policy to be paid by the last day of the month), or whether it was for the preceding month.

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Bluebook (online)
192 So. 45, 186 Miss. 850, 125 A.L.R. 702, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sovereign-camp-w-o-w-v-durr-miss-1939.