Standard Life and Accident Ins. Co. v. Taylor

34 S.W. 781, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 386, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1896
DocketNo. 1008.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 781 (Standard Life and Accident Ins. Co. v. Taylor) 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
Standard Life and Accident Ins. Co. v. Taylor, 34 S.W. 781, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 386, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 201 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

The policy sued on was made payable in ease of death of Hugh Taylor, the insured, to Lucinda Taylor,, whose relationship to the insured was stated both in the application and the policy to be that of daughter. Plaintiff, whose name is Lucinda, was at the date of the policy living with Hugh Taylor, and within a few months thereafter was regularly married to him. She claims that she was the beneficiary intended, and that the word 'daughter was written in the application and policy by mistake of the company’s agent. Intervenor, who is the daughter of Hugh Taylor by a former connection, with another woman, claims that her name, also, is Lucinda Taylor, and that she is the beneficiary. There is a conflict of evidence as to the name of intervenor, plaintiff’s evidence, tending to show that her-name was Georgia Ann Taylor, and that she was never called or known by the name of Lucinda Taylor until the terms of the policy became known, after Taylor’s death, when she assumed it for the purpose of claiming the money; while the evidence offered by intervenor tended to show that by her father she had been named and always called Lucinda. .The court charged as follows:

“As to whether'the policy was payable to Lucinda Taylor, the wife of." Hugh Taylor, or to Lucinda Taylor, daughter, you should look to all the facts and circumstances surrounding the taking out of the policy, and the said Hugh Taylor’s conduct since, to determine who he intended *389 the policy should be payable to.” And again: “If Hugh Taylor really intended that the policy should enure to Lucinda Taylor, the plaintiff, the wife of him, then you will find for the plaintiff, notwithstanding the policy read payable to Lucinda, daughter.”

The only evidence as to the circumstances immediately attending the issuance of the policy is that of the agent who issued it. He testifies unequivocally that Taylor stated the relationship as it was written in the application; that after the application had been written out, he distinctly read it, including the statement in question, to Taylor, and that the latter said it was right. There is evidence of some acts and declarations of Taylor, subsequent to the issuance of the policy, indicating an assumption or intent on his part that it was, or should be, payable to plaintiff. We are of the opinion that the charge was erroneous. If, at the time the policy was issued, there was a daughter of Taylor whose name was Lucinda, then there was no ambiguity in its terms, and no evidence of a mistake in the use of them, and hence the policy by its own terms would be payable to such a daughter. Bliss on Life Ins., secs. 317, 318.

We do not understand the law to be that parol evidence, in the absence of mistake, is admissible to change the effect of such instruments. When there is ambiguity in the designation of the beneficiary, parol evidence is admissible, as it is with reference to other documents,. to explain the meaning and develop the doubtful intention by identifying the person intended. But where there is no ambiguity, the language of the paper itself must govern, and courts will not go outside the policy to ascertain" an intention different from that clearly expressed by the terms used. Bacon on Benefit & Life Ins., sec. 263; Bliss on Life Ins., sec. 375; 2 Whart. Ev. sec. 1014, note, and authorities cited.

If it should appear that there was no daughter named Lucinda, then there would be an ambiguity in the language used which paroi evidence must resolve. There was a person having an interest in Taylor’s life going by the name used. There were also two daughters, neither of whom, in the case supposed, would answer to that name. It may be that in such case the name given would control the designation of the relationship, and, if not, evidence would certainly be admissible to identify the person intended. "But, if there was a daughter having the name used, the intention of the insured must be ascertained from the language of the policy itself. Of course we are not now speaking of a case, not presented by the evidence, in which there is evidence to show such a mistake in the use of the language as would, upon other principles, authorize a correction of the instrument.

The error committed against the intervenor requires a reversal of the judgment. The defendant has also appealed.

The policy made the representations in the application a part of the contract so as to constitute them warranties, and insured Taylor against accident in the sum of $1500 as a blacksmith, grading his risk as of the medium class; and stipulated that “if the insured is injured in any *390 occupation or exposure classed by this company as more hazardous than that stated in said application, the insurance shall be only for such sum as the premiums paid will purchase at the rates fixed by said company for such increased hazard;” and further, that the company would not be liable if the insured was injured through “unnecessary exposure to danger.”

The application for insurance contains the following statement: “My occupations, fully described, are as follows: Blacksmith. I am employed by Texas, S. V. & H. W. Ry. Co. I agree that my application shall be classed as medium. T understand and agree if I shall engage-in any occupation or work rated by the company as more hazardous than the class herein agreed to, that my insurance shall be limited to-the sum which the premium paid by me will purchase at the rate fixed by the company for such increased hazard.”

Among the classes of risks of the company was one including “car couplers, switchmen, yardmen and yard brakemen,” which occupations were treated as being, and were in fact, more hazardous than that of blacksmith, and in which the sum paid by Taylor would have procured insurance to the amount of $300.

The uncontradicted evidence shows that the duties of railway blacksmiths, generally, require them only to work with iron in the shops, and as clearly shows that at the time he took out his insurance and up to the time of his' death, Hugh Taylor, while he was listed on the pay rolls of the company as blacksmith, was in fact, on the score of economy, also engaged in coupling and uncoupling ears about the yard. This was not done simply as an occasional and voluntary service, but he was expected and required under his employment to perform such services whenever occasion required. In fact, the duties of this character, according to the evidence, were a part of his employment, and he was as truly a car coupler as he was a blacksmith. He was killed while trying to uncouple cars.

A number of passages from the charge and the refusal of special charges on this feature of the case are assigned as error. A decision upon the following will suffice for a disposition of the case as it stands upon the present evidence.

The court charged as follows: “How the court charges you that if deceased’s occupation was that of a blacksmith, and if, after he insured, he quit that and went into a business or pursued another occupation more hazardous than that of blacksmith, and while pursuing such occupation was killed, then defendant would only be liable for the amount of insurance the premium would insure in such occupation, but the temporary doing of something other than that in the line of business he was generally engaged in would not in law be pursuing a different occupation.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 781, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 386, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-life-and-accident-ins-co-v-taylor-texapp-1896.