Stephenson v. North American Life Insurance

94 S.W.2d 937, 230 Mo. App. 560, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 134
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 S.W.2d 937 (Stephenson v. North American Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephenson v. North American Life Insurance, 94 S.W.2d 937, 230 Mo. App. 560, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 134 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action upon a disability provision of a life insurance policy. The case was tried before the court, without the aid of a jury, resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $2185.68. Defendant has appealed.

In order to obtain an intelligent understanding of the facts, it is necessary to allude to other policies of insurance and to litigation between the parties hereto growing out of them wherein plaintiff was also a party plaintiff and in which another insurance company, American National Insurance Company, of Galveston, Texas, was a party defendant.

The facts show that on the first day of June, 1927, the American National Insurance Company, of Galveston, Texas, issued to the Missouri State Teachers Association its master policy, effective from noon June 1, 1927, to noon June 1, 1932, and that plaintiff was thereafter an individual certificate or policy holder under said master policy of insurance. This individual policy was for life insurance in the sum of $5000, with the total sum payable to insured should he become totally and permanently disabled during the life of the policy.

The master policy and the individual policies issued thereunder, being about to expire, the Missouri State Teachers Association, on April 21, 1932, applied to the defendant for a master policy to run for a period of five years from its effective date, which was to be June 1, 1932. The policy was issued on the same day that the application therefor was made. There is no mention in the application for the policy, or in the individual policy issued to plaintiff under it, of the existence of the policies issued by the American National Insurance Company, but it will be noted, from an examination of the dates on •the policies, that the new policies were to become effective upon the expiration of the old ones.

The master policies and the individual certificates issued, respectively, by the companies were practically the same, except as to the time covered and, also, that the individual policy issued by the American National Insurance Company stipulated that the amount thereof ($5000) would be paid in one lump sum, while, thé one issued by the *562 defendant provided that the $5000 would be paid in installments, at the election of the plaintiff.

The agreed statement of facts in the case at bar recites:

“That on or about the 15th to the 20th day of May, 1932, and prior to the first day of June, 1932, the said Sam Charles Stephenson became, and still remains, totally and permanently disabled, within the meaning of 'that term as used in the policy herein sued upon.”

The facts further show that on or about April 15, 1933, the other suit, heretofore alluded to, was filed by plaintiff against the American National Insurance Company, in which the sum of $5000 was prayed and in which it was alleged that he became totally and. permanently disabled on May 15, 1932. On November 3, 1933, the defendant, in that case, answered, asking the court to cause the defendant in the case at bar, that is, the North American Life Insurance Company, of Chicago, to be made a party defendant. In compliance with that request, the court made the present defendant a party defendant in that cause. Ah amended petition was thereafter filed, in which the present plaintiff and the Missouri State Teachers Association were named as plaintiffs and the two insurance companies as defendants.

In that part of the amended petition alleging a cause of action against the American National Insurance Company, plaintiff stated that he became totally and permanently disabled on May 15, 1932 and, in that part of the petition stating a cause of action against the present defendant, or the North American Life Insurance Company, he stated that he became totally and permanently disabled on June 1, 1932. In his-prayer he asked judgment “against defendants for the sum of $5000 in a single sum of that amount.”

At the close of all of the testimony the court announced that it intended to give an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence offered by the defendant, North American Life Insurance Company, whereupon plaintiff took a nonsuit as to that defendant. There is nothing to indicate why the court indicated that it would sustain a demurrer, but it appears that it was developed in that suit that plaintiff had become totally and permanently disabled in the month of May,- or prior to the time the policies that were issued by the present defendant became effective. The case was submitted to the jurj^ as against the American National Insurance Company, alone, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $5000. Defendant appealed to this court where the judgment was affirmed. [See Stephenson v. Am. Nat. Ins. Co., 78 S. W. (2d) 876.] In the opinion in that case we said, 1. c.. 880:

“As will be readily apprehended, the mam contention, as between the two defendant insurance companies themselves, was to when the alleged total disablement of insured Stephenson began or occurred. If it was after June 1, 1932, the question of whether the insurance *563 sued for should be paid or not was a matter which concerned the first-named company, for its insurance had expired on that date. But .if the alleged disablement took place before June 1, 1932, then the second-named defendant, the North American Life Insurance Company of Chicago, could not be held liable in any event, because the disablement sued for arose before its insurance had become effective. ”

What we said in that case, of course, is in no wise binding upon the defendant in the case at bar, for the reason that it was not a party to the cause at the time it reached this court. We are merely stating what happened in this court in that case as a matter of history.

In the application for the master policy issued by the defendant herein, which application, as before stated, was dated April 21, 1932, appears an eligibility clause, reading as follows:

‘ ‘ ELIGIBILITY: This insurance shall be available only to persons who at the time of the application therefor are members of the Association. All such persons shall be eligible to insurance under this plan subject to evidence of insurability satisfactory to the Company, except that any member of the Association now insured under a similar plan under a master policy carried by the Association'with another company shall be eligible to insurance under this plan in an amount equal to or, at the option of the- member, less than the amount now carried under said plan, without evidence of insurability, provided the first annual premium for such insurance as provided herein is paid during the life of such member on or before the effective date of the contract hereby applied for or within thirty-one days thereafter, and provided such member is not totally and permanently disabled as of the date of the contract.”

As before stated, the master policy was issued on the same day. The master policy provides that it “shall be effective from the first day of June, 1932, for a term of five years. ’ ’ It also provides:

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W.2d 937, 230 Mo. App. 560, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-v-north-american-life-insurance-moctapp-1936.