State Ex Rel. Business Men's Assurance Co. v. Allen

259 S.W. 77, 302 Mo. 525, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 815
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 11, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 259 S.W. 77 (State Ex Rel. Business Men's Assurance Co. v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Business Men's Assurance Co. v. Allen, 259 S.W. 77, 302 Mo. 525, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 815 (Mo. 1924).

Opinion

*529 GRAVES, J.

Certiorari to St. Louis Court of Appeals. That court heard and determined, upon appeal *530 from the circuit court, the case of Anna Melville, Respondent, v. Business Men’s Assurance Company of America, Appellant. In an opinion filed the St. Louis Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the circuit court, by which latter judgement nisi Anna Melville had been awarded a judgment of over $3600 against the relator in the present action. The judgment and opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals relator seeks to have this court quash, because it is alleged to.be in conflict with named decisions and opinions of this court.

The petition upon which our writ was awarded is quite long, but the salient features thereof can be shortly outlined. Anna Melville, wife of Charles Melville, deceased, sued the relator here in the St. Louis Circuit Court for $3600 and interest, alleged to be due her as the beneficiary in a policy issued to her deceased husband. The policy was for the sum of $3000, but it is conceded that under a rider attached thereto $600 additional insurance was given to such beneficiary. There was no claim in the lower court that the relator here (defendant there) was not liable. The only contest was to the amount of the liability. By answer the relator conceded liability to the amount of $1858, which was, as it alleged, half of the full amount provided for in the policy and rider attached thereto. In the answer filed by relator in the lower court, it was averred that there was a provision in the policy reading as follows:

“If the insured shall carry with another company, corporation, association, or society, other insurance covering the same loss without giving written notice to the association, then in that case the association shall be liable only for such portion of the indemnity promised as the said indemnity bears to the total amount of like indemnity in all policies covering such loss and for the return of such part of the premium paid as shall exceed the pro rata for the indemnify thus determined.”

It was further averred that deceased had (without notice to relator) taken and carried other insurance in the sum of $3750, and that by reason of this fact the re *531 lator here (defendant below) was only liable for $1858 for which it confessed judgment. That portion of the answer which pleaded the foregoing excerpt from the policy as a defense to one-half of the liability, was stricken out on motion in the circuit court, and such action affirmed by the Court of Appeals. The propriety of that action is the sole question here, and this is to be judged here, in this proceeding, in the light of our cases, and as to whether or not such ruling conflicts with principles of law announced by this court. -Details will be left to the opinion.

I. The policy was an accident policy, and no question was made as to the fact of the deceased having met his death by accidental means.

The relator was first incorporated as an assessment company, and the policy involved was issued when it was such a company. Later, it is averred in the answer, that it ehanged to a stock company with a level premium. The Court of Appeals says this in the opinion:

“The answer admits the allegations of the petition except as to the amount due plaintiff under the contract of insurance and except as to defendant’s alleged vexatious refusal to pay the loss. It then alleges that' defendant was originally incorporated under the laws of this State, under the name of ‘Business Men’s Accident Association of America,’ as an insurance company on the assessment-plan, and that ‘during its existence as an assessment accident insurance company it issued to Charles Melville the policy of insurance described in plaintiff’s petition;’ that- on or about March 1, 1920, defendant amended its articles of incorporation and by-laws to conform to Article II, Chapter 50, Revised Statutes 191.9, complying with Section 6105 of said article ‘providing for the incorporation of stock companies with the power to write insurance.’ Further allegations of the answer are to the effect that at the time defendant ‘ceased its corporate existence as an assessment insurance com *532 pany’ there was a fund of eighty-three cents belonging to the insured, and that, with his consent, this was applied to increase the indemnity of the policy twenty per cent and the policy, so increased, was continued as a level premium policy.”

From the opinion it appears that the plaintiff in the .case did not by her petition undertake to classify the policy, but pleaded its legal effect, and the abstract of record in the Court of Appeals shows that the petition made the policy sued upon a- part of the petition by reference and filing the samé therewith. We are permitted to refer to this petition, because it is referred to in the opinion, and thus incorporated in the opinion as fully as if written out therein. The policy nowhere appears in the abstract of record in the Court of Appeals. From the Court of Appeals opinion, it clearly appears that it was an assessment policy when issued. The statute concerning such policies became a part of the policy when it was issued, and remained a part thereof. [Schmidt v. Foresters, 228 Mo. 675.] This admission by answer fixed the status of the policy, until it was shown by evidence that the policy was of a different character. The Court of Appeals by its opinion proceeded upon the theory, and applied to the policy, the statutes applicable to that class of policies. The policy was a part off the petition nisi, and it was not even printed in the record in the Court of Appeals. The fact that the policy might have been otherwise classified seems to have been an afterthought. Nor is this matter seriously urged in this action, and no doubt for the reason that' relator would be confronted with a similar situation by other statutes. What relator presses here is that their answer pleaded a good defense pro tanto, and the court erred in striking out such answer, and the Court of Appeals opinion conflicts with our rulings in affirming this action of the trial court. And this, too, whether the policy be an assessment policy or a stock company policy. The real contention is that the clause of the policy pleaded, and set out above, was a good defense pro tanto to either class of accident policies. The Court of Appeals *533 ruled that such clause was no defense (pro tanto, or otherwise) because of Section 6157, Revised Statutes 1919. Upon this the court ruled :

“When this policy was written the defendant was doing business on the assessment plan, subject to the provisions of what is now Article III, Chapter 54, Revised Statutes 1919. Section 6157 of that article and chapter provides that every policy or certificate issued by any corporation doing business in conformity with the provisions of that article, promising a payment be made upon a contingency of death, sickness, disability or accident, ‘ shall specify the exact sum of money which it promises to pay upon each contingency insured against,’ etc.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W. 77, 302 Mo. 525, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-business-mens-assurance-co-v-allen-mo-1924.