Spencer v. Continental Casualty Co.

60 P.2d 339, 16 Cal. App. 2d 176, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 256
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 21, 1936
DocketCiv. 10851
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 60 P.2d 339 (Spencer v. Continental Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spencer v. Continental Casualty Co., 60 P.2d 339, 16 Cal. App. 2d 176, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 256 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

DORAN, J.

This is an appeal from an order granting, in part, plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial after judgment of nonsuit had been entered in favor of defendant.

Plaintiffs alleged that defendant insurance company insured decedent Almon Clark Spencer, quoting from the complaint, “among other things, against sickness, and agreed, in the event of any such sickness, to pay to said decedent or his therein named beneficiaries, Emma J. Spencer, his wife, and C. Almon Spencer, his son, the plaintiffs herein, the sum of fifty and no/100 ($50.00) dollars per week during the continuance of the same, and, in the event of the death of said decedent from any such sickness, the sum of ten thousand and no/100 ($10,000.00) dollars; that in evidence thereof said defendant on or about the same date, to wit: The said ninth (9th) day of November, 1926, made, *178 executed and delivered to said decedent its policy of disability insurance, in writing, upon which plaintiffs in part rely, dated said date, and numbered P. D. 7095877.”

It was further alleged that decedent was sick, infirm and incapacitated for a considerable period before his death, which occurred on or about the 26th day of January, 1930. The action sought to collect the principal sum of $10,000, and a sum equal to a certain number of weekly indemnity payments alleged to be due under the terms of the policy.

The answer denied these allegations generally and specifically.

At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ case, defendant moved for a nonsuit on the grounds: First, that the insurance policy which was in evidence provided that the principal sum of $10,000 was to be paid only in the event of accidental death and that the death of decedent resulted from natural causes; second, that the policy provided that the indemnity payments were payable to the insured; that the estate of the insured was not represented in the action in that no administrator or other per-sonal representative representing the estate appeared as a party thereto. Motion for a nonsuit was granted.

Thereafter, plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial on the grounds set forth in paragraphs 1, 3, 4, 6 and 7 of section 657 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Said motion was supported in part by an affidavit of Emma J. Spencer, one of the plaintiffs, to the effect that affiant and C. Almon Spencer were the sole heirs of said decedent, and that on the 5th day of February, 1935, a petition for the appointment of affiant and said C. Almon Spencer, as joint administrators of the estate of the said Almon Clark Spencer, which estate consisted only of the disability benefit afforded by the policy -of insurance involved in the within action, was filed in the probate court. Affiant further alleged that in the ordinary course of events affiant and C. Almon Spencer would be entitled to be substituted as plaintiffs herein in their representative capacity; that said petition for letters of administration was not filed until after the entry of judgment herein for the reason that upon the issues presented in the plaintiffs’ complaint and the defendant’s answer and by reason of the failure of said answer to except to the legal capacity of plaintiffs to sue upon the policy of *179 insurance herein involved, plaintiffs could not with reasonable diligence have filed or been expected to file such petition for said letters of administration.

Said motion for new trial was granted on March 15, 1935. Thereafter, to wit, on March 26, 1935, the court entered the following order entitled “Amended Order Granting Plaintiffs’ Motion for a New Trial”. “The motion of the plaintiffs for a new trial in the above entitled cause having regularly come on for hearing in Department 17 of the above entitled court, before Honorable Carl A. Stutsman, judge presiding, George A. Judson -of counsel for plaintiffs, appearing for plaintiffs, and Clarence B. Runkle of counsel for defendant Continental Casualty Company, appearing on behalf of said defendant, and the matter having been duly argued and submitted, and the court having ordered said motion granted only as to the issues involving disability benefits under said insurance policy, and denied as to the issues involving death benefit, and having ordered that the granting of the motion be based upon the ground of error of law by the court, in that the answer of the defendant fails to affirmatively allege that the plaintiffs are not the proper parties to sue for or recover disability benefits provided for in the insurance policy mentioned in the complaint, and that said answer consequently fails to raise the issue that plaintiff could not sue for said disability benefits and the written order prepared and submitted by counsel for plaintiffs, and signed by the court, granting said motion for new trial, which order was dated March 5, 1935, having failed to speak the truth and correctly set forth and show the order made by the court, and said order having been inadvertently made and good cause therefor appearing: It is hereby ordered that said order of March 15, 1935, granting plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial herein be and the same is hereby amended to provide that plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial be and the same is hereby granted as to all the issues involving disability benefits provided in the insurance policy mentioned in plaintiffs’ complaint and that said motion to said extent is granted only upon the ground of error of law in construing the issues raised by defendant’s answer, in that said answer is insufficient to tender in some specific pleading the issue as to whether or not the plaintiffs, or either of them, had capacity to sue, or to be the proper *180 parties plaintiff, to recover disability benefits provided for in the contract of insurance set forth in plaintiffs’ complaint, and upon all other grounds of said motion, the same is denied. It is further ordered that plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial as to the issues involving the death benefit provided in the insurance policy set forth in the complaint be and the same is hereby denied. ’ ’

It is contended by appellant: First, that the answer was sufficient to raise the issue that plaintiffs had no cause of action for disability benefits under the policy; and, second, that a motion for a new trial is not available as a remedy to correct any error that the trial court may have made in construing the pleadings.

Respondent, on the other hand, asserts as a counter statement that “The question involved in this case is whether two plaintiffs, who are the wife and son of an insured and also the beneficiaries under a life insurance policy covering the life of the insured, and who are also the sole heirs of the deceased insured, who died intestate and whose estate had not up to the time of the trial been probated, may sue for and recover a disability benefit also provided by the policy, which was by the terms of the policy payable to the insured.”

Quoting from respondents’ brief, it is contended, “Linneweber v. Supreme Council, 30 Cal. App. 315 [158 Pac. 229], is in point upon the right of the plaintiffs, themselves, to sue for and recover the disability benefit. It was upon the basis of the language contained in the last paragraph of that decision that the order granting the new trial in this matter was phrased as it was.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 P.2d 339, 16 Cal. App. 2d 176, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-continental-casualty-co-calctapp-1936.