State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis Ind. v. Parks

89 S.W.2d 289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 25, 1935
DocketNo. 4508.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 289 (State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis Ind. v. Parks) 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
State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis Ind. v. Parks, 89 S.W.2d 289 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

This case is an original one in Texas in its facts, so far as our investigation has disclosed. The queer reasoning and antagonistic views of the courts in other jurisdictions, regarding the controlling issue presented here, together with the importance of the question to insurance companies and their policyholders generally, compels a rather extended discussion of what appears to us to be a simple and easily solved legal question.

Appellee sued appellant on Januafy 25, 1934, for monthly disability benefits, aggregating $1,125, together with penalty and attorney’s fees. These monthly payments of $25 each were alleged to have accrued and became due and owing under two policies of insurance, both identical in terms and containing the controversial clauses hereafter quoted. The disability is alleged to have occurred in May, 1929, and recovery was sought and obtained for forty-five months thereafter,, or until February, 1933. Cancellation was also sought of policy loan agreements, but this passes out with the disposition we make of this case and will not be further noticed. Judgment was entered for appellee as prayed for.

The policies each contained the following clauses:

“Total and Permanent Disability: If the insured, after paying at least one full annual premium and before default in the payment of any subsequent premium and before attaining the age of sixty years, shall become wholly and permanently disabled by bodily injury or by disease, so that he is and will be permanently, continuously and wholly prevented thereby from performing any work for compensation or profit, or from following any gainful occupation, the Company, upon receipt at its Home Office of due proof of such disability of the insured as may be required by the Company, will grant the following benefits :
“First: Will waive payment of premiums thereafter becoming due;
“Second: In addition will pay to the insured a monthly income equal to one per cent of the original amount of insurance. The first monthly payment will be made upon satisfactory proof of disability as above provided, and the subsequent monthly payments will be made on the first day of each month thereafter during such disability. * * *
“Proofs similar to those originally required of such continuous disability must be furnished at any time, if requested by the Company, but not of tener than once a year, and if the insured should fail to furnish such proofs, or should so far re *290 cover as to be able to engage in any gainful occupation, the obligation on. the part of the Company to waive payment of premiums and pay to the insured a monthly income shall cease, and the insured shall resume payment of premiums in accordance with this contract beginning with the first premium becoming due after failure to furnish such proofs or after the date of such recovery.
“If there be any indebtedness on account of or secured by this policy the accrued interest thereon shall be deducted from each income payment.”

Appellee was permanently disabled in May, 1929. He did not furnish any proof of disability until February, 1933, nor did he allege or prove any excuse for such failure. On July 1, 1933, appellee filed suit against appellant in county court, alleging in part: “Plaintiff alleges that he made proof of such disability and furnished the defendant with such proof on or about the 6th day of February 1933, and under the terms and provisions of said policy, the defendant should have paid to the plaintiff, upon receipt of such proof; the said sum of $25.00 and likewise the defendant should have paid and is bound and obligated to pay by the terms of said policies ‘ a like sum on the first day of March, April, May, June, July, August, Sept. Oct., and November 1933, or the total sum of $225.00.”

Judgment was recovered for $349, and paid by appellant. Thereafter, this suit was filed for disability benefits occurring prior to the dates last mentioned; that is, from May, 1929, to February, 1933. We do not pass on appellant’s plea and proof of res adjudicata.

Under the above facts, appellant here claims that the furnishing of proof of total disability marks the beginning of the period for which it is liable for disability benefits, the appellee that the beginning of disability marks such period.

Stated otherwise, in plain language, appellee contends in effect that this and other courts have plainly decided that under the policy stipulations already quoted he may recover a lump sum, as he did here, without making any proof of disability for nearly four years, and without pleading or -proving any excuse for such failure, this because proof of total and permanent disability established liability and waiver took effect as of such date. This contention is based largely upon the following language of Judge McClendon in State Life Ins. Co. v. Barnes (Tex.Civ.App.) 58 S.W.(2d) 189, 190 (writ refused): “While the authorities in other jurisdictions are not in accord upon the question, those in this state, which we think are supported by the better reasoning, hold that the waiver took effect at the time of the disability, and did not depend upon the time when proof thereof was furnished.”

Judge McClendon had before him a radically different state of facts from these. He merely was attempting to state the law of the case before him, and in our opinion the quoted expression does not rule this case. The disability in the Barnes Case last mentioned was insanity. This has often been held to be a valid excuse for failure to make proof of disability. See Annotations in 54 A.L.R. 611, 59 A.L.R. 1080, Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance (2d Ed.) vol. 7, p. 5918, where many authorities are collated. Proofs were made in the Barnes Case within a reasonable time after the death of Barnes and the discovery of the waiver provision of the policy. The construction placed by Judge McClen-don on the policy did not completely read out of it some of its important provisions. Moreover, one of the questions in the Barnes Case was one of, forfeiture of all rights, not favored in law and not present in this case. Waiver of premium payments and forfeiture of the policy were the controlling questions, not liability, as here, for monthly benefit payments to one still living upon receipt of proof of disability. Here the appellee was able to go about and attend to some business. He was in complete possession of his mental faculties and was living still at this trial and able to vigorously testify. He waited almost four years before he filed any proof of disability. This was an unreasonable time as a matter of law. Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance (2d Ed.) vol. 7, p. 5916. Under such' facts and in the face of the above stipulations of the policy, we find no case where recovery has been allowed, though many expressions occur under other facts, which sustain appellee’s theory.

In our opinion, under the present facts, the liability of appellant for monthly payments began upon the filing of proofs of disability with it by appellee, and judgment should have been for appellant.

This conclusion is inescapable, it seems, when the quoted language of the policy is *291 interpreted and construed in the light of the facts and circumstances surrounding the contracting parties.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-life-ins-co-of-indianapolis-ind-v-parks-texapp-1935.