Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World v. Cooper

21 S.E.2d 410, 194 Ga. 208, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 558
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 14, 1942
Docket14049.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 S.E.2d 410 (Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World v. Cooper, 21 S.E.2d 410, 194 Ga. 208, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 558 (Ga. 1942).

Opinion

Reid, Chief Justice.

Certiorari was granted in this case, by reason of the rulings made in the case of General American Life Insurance Co. v. Butts, 193 Ga. 350 (18 S. E. 2d, 542). It brings under review first the rulings made by the Court of Appeals in Sovereign Camp W. O. W. v. Cooper, 62 Ga. App. 390 (8 S. E. 2d, 161), where the plaintifFs petition was tested and held good against demurrer. At the time of that decision applications for *209 certiorari were subject to Eule 50 of this court, then of force. Code Supp. 1933, § 24-4554; 187 Ga. 843. In compliance with this rule, later repealed (190 Ga. 894), exceptions pendente were filed in the Court of Appeals, and the case was sent back for trial, upon which a verdict was directed in favor of the plaintiff, and upon the defendant’s motion for new trial being overruled the case was again brought by bill of exceptions to the Court of Appeals, and the judgment was affirmed. Sovereign Camp W. O. W. v. Cooper, 66 Ga. App. 265 (17 S. E. 2d, 556). A full statement of the nature of the ease, the pleadings, and the questions of law involved may be found in those two reports of the case. In the application for certiorari and in the exceptions pendente lite filed in the Court of Appeals error is assigned on the rulings of that court, which held that the petition stated a cause of action as against the grounds of demurrer urged, and which also held that a verdict for the plaintiff was demanded.

The plaintiff’s petition as originally filed claimed a breach of the insurance contract by the defendant, by reason of its failure to notify the insured as to the time when the loan valué on the policy was or would be exhausted in payment of the premiums, so as to permit him to resume their payment from his own funds. When the demurrer challenging his right to such notice under the contract was interposed, he filed an amendment setting up, among other things not here important, what he construed to be a course of dealing with reference to the manner of paying his premiums, established between him and the financial agent of the defendant, who was the clerk or secretary of its local camp, and a named bank through which payment was to be made. The pertinent portion of plaintiff’s amendment was as follows: "5. By adding thereto a new paragraph, to be known as 16-Á, as follows: Several years, at least three years, prior to the time when petitioner elected to avail himself of the automatic premium-loan provision of the certificate quoted in paragraph 10 of the petition, he entered into an agreement with his bank, the Bank of Eastman, at Eastman, Georgia, and with J. W. Bramblett, the Financial Secretary of the local camp of defendant, who was defendant’s sole agent for the collection of membership dues, to the effect that said bank would pay such drafts as were drawn upon petitioner by the said financial secretary of defendant for the payment of the monthly amounts *210 due on said certificate of insurance, and to the further effect that the said Bramblett would present to the bank drafts for the payment of the required dues and assessments. Pursuant to such agreement over a period of at least three years, each month the said Bramblett would draw a draft on petitioner and present it to the said bank, which.would pay the draft. So it was that a.custom or course of dealings between petitioner and defendant was established for the collection of the said dues, assessments or premiums, and the said agreement above described was never revoked and was in full force and effect in January, 1935, and at all times thereafter. Petitioner further alleges that had defendant notified petitioner that the accrued cash value of said certificate had been or was about to be exhausted, or had the defendant even notified the said financial secretary or clerk of the local camp of that fact, the custom of payment herein described would have been resumed and there would have been no occasion on the part of defendant to attempt to abrogate and forfeit this contract with petitioner.” While the grounds of demurrer to these allegations were overruled, the Court of Appeals did not expressly deal with them, having held that, irrespective of any such course of dealing, the plaintiff was entitled to notice as claimed, and that failure to give it constituted a breach of the contract on the part of defendant. On the second appearance of the case (66 Ga. App. 265, 17 S. E. 2d, 556) it was stated: “The rulings of this court on the former appearance of the case here established as the law of the case that the plaintiff’s right to recover damages sustained by him because of the repudiation and cancellation of his contract of insurance, as alleged in the petition, was not based upon a consideration of whether or not there had been a course of dealings between the parties, entitling the insured to notice as to when the loan or cash value of the certificate would be exhausted, but that the right to recover was due to the fact that (1) there had become operative a provision of the certificate” (which was set out), although the recital of these contentions was contained in the statement of facts at pages 391 and 392 of 62 Ga. App.

An earnest effort is made by counsel for the plaintiff to show that even under the principles ruled in the Butts case, supra, the plaintiff in the present case was entitled to notice, as ruled by the Court of Appeals. While we have examined and considered these *211 contentions carefully, since, after stating the terms of the policy contract in this case (not then under review except in the abstract sense as precedent), this court said in the Butts case, supra (193 Ga. 357) : “It seems necessarily to follow, from our views as expressed, that the decisions in the Brown and the Cooper [this] cases, supra, on which the majority opinion of the Court of Appeals in the present case is based, are erroneous. We can see no essential difference, under the terms of the contract, in regard to notice of the amount of loan value of the policy before the due date of the premium, so that the insured, if he desires to borrow it, may know how much need be paid to satisfy the premium, and notice, after he has failed to pay the premium, of how long the net loan value would carry the policy under the automatic clause. The duty of notice, under the terms of the contract, seems no greater in the one case than in the other. When the insured has failed to pay a premium when due, if he desires to exercise his right to continue his policy in force beyond the time of automatic extension, he should so notify the company in order that the necessary information can be forwarded to him. The company is not required to anticipate his desire to continue the policy beyond the term of extension after having failed to pay a premium,” and since we are convinced that this states a sound principle of law, there would seem to be no reason to further review the cases there considered and applied.

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Sovereign Camp W. O. W. v. Cooper
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21 S.E.2d 410, 194 Ga. 208, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sovereign-camp-woodmen-of-the-world-v-cooper-ga-1942.