Stalnaker v. Lincoln National Life Insurance

177 S.E. 615, 115 W. Va. 715, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 141
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1934
Docket7992
StatusPublished

This text of 177 S.E. 615 (Stalnaker v. Lincoln National Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stalnaker v. Lincoln National Life Insurance, 177 S.E. 615, 115 W. Va. 715, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 141 (W. Va. 1934).

Opinion

*716 Kenna, Judge:

Eulah Evelyn Stalnaker brought notice of motion in the court of common' pleas of Kanawha County against the Lincoln National Life Insurance Company of Fort Wayne, Indiana, on a life insurance policy issued jointly to her and her husband,. William C. Stalnaker, in the amount of $5,000.00 and providing that the survivor should be the beneficiary of the first to die. William C. Stalnaker died August 13, 1932. The issues were made up by appropriate pleas and specifications of defense to raise the questions hereinafter discussed, and after trial to a jury and verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $4,-008.10, representing the face of the policy after the indebtedness forming a lien against it in the amount of $991.10 had been deducted, the trial court, on motion, set aside the verdict as being contrary to the law and the evidence. From this action of the trial court, the plaintiff below prosecutes this writ of error.

The policy of insurance in question was issued December 21, 1920, and at the death of William Carl Stal-naker had been carried for something less than twelve years, the annual premium being $161.60. The policy was carried on an annual premium basis until December, 1929, when an irregular premium was accepted by the company carrying the policy to February 21, 1930. The insured then elected to pay the premiums on a quarterly basis, and such payments were received or credited by the company until July 2, 1931, when a quarterly premium was credited. On October 5, 1931, the current premium not having been paid, the cash surrender value of the policy was entirely absorbed by the loans against it for actual money borrowed by the insured, and by premiums for extended insurance advanced by the company under the automatic premium-loan feature of the policy. In this state of the policy, by its terms it was forfeitable upon thirty days’ notice to the insured telling them that at the end of the thirty days, the liability of the company under the policy would terminate by reason of the exhaustion of all value and the failure to pay premiums. *717 The policy expressly provides that during the extended insurance, the insured may at any time resume the payment of premiums. Through inadvertence occurring in the home office of the company, however, this situation was not discovered on October 4, 1931, and the notice of expiration was not mailed to the insured until May 15, 1932. On that day, there was mailed to the insured from the home office of the company a notice telling them that on June 15, 1932, by reason of the fact that the indebtedness against the policy equaled its cash surrender value, all of their rights under the policy would terminate unless premium payments were resumed in the interim. This notice contained no statement of the amount necessary to carry the policy further. However, at about the same time, the home office notified the local agent of the company of the situation, and instructed him to collect the sum of $91.16 from the insured prior to June 15, ■ 1932, in order to prevent a forfeiture of the policy. A regulation of the company introduced in evidence is to the effect that its agents are not to receive any less, than the sum named in instructions issued under these circumstances. These instructions were communicated to the insured, and the sum of $91.16 to carry the policy to February 21, 1933, was demanded by the local agent. There is testimony indicating that the insured protested against the demand for $91.16, and stated their willingness to pay the quarterly premium amounting to $42.88, in order to keep the policy alive. The suggestion of the payment of the quarterly premium by the insured is denied by the cashier of the local office to- whom the offer is testified to have- been made.

The testimony of the cashier in the local office is that he could not have, under the circumstances, accepted the quarterly premium but was required to collect the'sum of $91.16. Letters were sent by the local .office under date of May 19th, and June 10th, calling attention to the fact that the policy would be lapsed on June -15th, unless the sum of $91.16 was paid. On June 22nd, a letter was addressed to the Stalnakers notifying them that the policy had lapsed and enclosing reinstatement forms. On *718 June 29th, reinstatement forms were signed by both the Stalnakers and were sent to the local agent along with a check of $91.16 signed by Celia E. Hutton, Mrs. Stal-naker’s sister, who had loaned them the money. The testimony is to the effect that this check was actually drawn on June 27th and Mrs. Stalnaker testifies that she did not know that the check was connected with the reinstatement forms which were signed, but supposed that it was a payment, during the grace period, of the demand of the company to keep the policy in effect upon payment of that sum. On June 30, 1932, a receipt from the branch office was issued for the check for $91.16. July 27, 1932, the cashier of the local office wrote to William C. Stalna-ker informing him that his application for reinstatement had been rejected by the company, but that Mrs. Stalna-ker’s had been accepted, and offering to retain the policy in effect as to Mrs. Stalnaker on the basis of an annual premium of $99.45, and telling him that, together with the then loan value of the policy, the money in suspense in the company’s hands was sufficient to carry the policy on Mrs. Stalnaker to December 21, 1932. The letter requested that the company be informed as to the course the insured desired to take. A check was introduced in evidence drawn by defendant company to the order of William C. Stalnaker • for $91.16 as a refund of the amount paid by the Stalnakers on their application for reinstatement of the policy. Mrs. Stalnaker denied that the name “William C. Stalnaker” as indorsed upon this check, was in her husband’s writing.

The testimony altogether fails to make clear the exact reason for demanding of the Stalnakers the payment of the sum of $91.16 to constitute the resumption of payment of premiums. Isaac McNeel, the cashier of the local branch office of the company, testified that he did not figure what the amount of $91.16 represented, but that his understanding was that it represented the balance- of a current premium on an annual basis. He testified that after the home office had instructed him to collect $91.16, he would not have been allowed to receive payment of premiums on a quarterly basis. Mar *719 tin D. Johnson, the chief accountant for the company, to whose attention the error of the. company had been drawn about the first of July, 1932, after the notices demanding the payment of $91.16 had been sent'to the insured, testified concerning it, in part, as follows:

“Q When you wrote Mr. McNeel and asked him to collect $91.16, did you tell him when that would pay the policy premium to ? A The regular form telling him the minimum to collect was $91.16, provided the regular form showing the last charge shows the minimum to collect $91.16, and that minimum is aways for the balance of the current policy year.
Q Then that $91.16 would not have carried it anywhere? That was simply back payments? Is that it? A That is correct.
Q And had they paid that, their policy would still have lapsed? Is that true? A That is right.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.E. 615, 115 W. Va. 715, 1934 W. Va. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stalnaker-v-lincoln-national-life-insurance-wva-1934.