Thompson v. Security Trust & Life Ins.

41 S.E. 464, 63 S.C. 290, 1902 S.C. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 31, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 41 S.E. 464 (Thompson v. Security Trust & Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Security Trust & Life Ins., 41 S.E. 464, 63 S.C. 290, 1902 S.C. LEXIS 77 (S.C. 1902).

Opinion

The opinion of, the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gary.

This is an action on a policy of insurance on the life of W. W. Thompson, who died on the 8th of August, 1899. The policy was issued on the 29th of December, 1898, and this action was commenced on the day of November, 1899. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the policy.

1 The appellant’s first exception is as follows: “I. Because his Honor erred in refusing to allow the defendant the opening and reply.” The complaint alleged that the defendant, by its authorized agent, Elliott Estes, issued the said policy of insurance. The defendant, in its answer to the complaint, denied the agency of Elliott Estes, and also denied several other allegations of 'the complaint. The rule for determining who is entitled to the opening and reply is thus stated in Addison v. Duncan, 35 S. C., 165: “The true test is, who would be entitled to a verdict, if the *292 case is submitted to the jury simply upon the pleadings, without evidence being adduced by either side? If the plaintiff, then, unquestionably, the defendant being the actor, would have the right to open and reply.” The rule is affirmed in Beckham v. Railway Company, 50 S. C., 25, in which the Court says: “The true rule in the cases where defendant acquires the right to open and reply is well stated in the opinion of Mr. Chief Justice McIver, in Addison v. Duncan, 35 S. C., 165, to exist in those cases where the defendant by his pleadings admits the plaintiff’s cause of action as stated in the complaint, and relies solely upon an affirmative defense, based upon the facts stated in the answer; so that without evidence by defendant, the plaintiff would be entitled on the pleadings to a verdict.” It is evident that it was not the intention of the defendant to admit the plaintiff’s cause of action and to rely solely upon the defenses set up in the answer, otherwise it would not have inserted the carefully prepared denials in its answer to the complaint. The denial that Elliott Estes was the agent of the defendant was, in effect, a denial that the defendant entered into the contract as set forth in the complaint, and while there is an admission in the answer that the defendant insured the life of W. W. Thompson, it has no just ground to complain that' the Court by its ruling cast upon the plaintiff the burden of proving those allegations of the complaint that were denied by the answer.

2 The second excqrtion is as follows: “II. Because his Honor erred in refusing to admit in evidence the affidavit of W. W. Thompson, made May the 8th, 1898, in suit of Jesse M. Thompson v. C. P. & A. E. Brown, in which deponent said, ‘that deponent has been for a year and is now in frail health forbidding most of the time attention to business.” The case of Dial v. Life Association, 29 S. C., 560, shows that this exception cannot be sustained.

*293 3 *292 The third, fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh exceptions assign as error that his Honor, the presiding Judge, should *293 have charged the defendant’s requests therein set forth without qualification or modification. They fail to specify wherein the qualification or modification was erroneous and are, therefore, too general to be considered.

The eighth exception, however, specifies the particular in which it is alleged the qualifications and modifications were erroneous. The eighth exception is as follows:

4 “VIII. Because his Honor erred in charging the jury: ‘Now all those requests to charge from the eighth through twelfth, are based upon the contract set out in the complaint — that is, the terms of that contract which the Court has already read to you, and they are sound propositions of law, provided we bear in mind that every contract which the law takes cognizance of and enforces mustbe a reasonable contract. Parties may bind themselves to unreasonable things; they may make hard contracts and be bound by'them or be estopped from asserting rights to the contrary of such contracts, but where persons enter into a contract, no matter what the terms may be. whether they are hard or not, when the contract comes to be construed by the Court, it will always construe the contract to be a contract made between reasonable beings, made in good faith on both sides, and upon the grounds of reason and common sense and justice, and will hold parties bound by the terms of their contract within the limitations of common sense and reason and justice. The Court will never construe any contract to be against good conscience, no matter what the stipulations of the contract may be; and if an insurance company reserves to itself the right to allege that there is something improper in the contract and reserves to itself the right to avoid the contract because of such allegation, then the allegation must be made; and until the allegation is made, the contract stands as a valid, binding contract upon the insurance company. • Well, if the company goes a step further, and not only provides that it must make such an allegation, that there is something improper, some fraud *294 or concealment or untruth, but that the other party shall be notified that defendant does allege such a failure in the contract, then, until such notice is given, the contract is still a binding contract upon the insurance company. It cannot, if those be the stipulations of the contract, simply annul the policy of insurance without giving notice; and if it further provides that the other party may h,ave a reasonable time within which to file evidence that there is nothing improper in the contract, then the contract will be a binding, valid contract until such reasonable time is given the other party to file such evidence; and if the insurance company further provides in its policy that the evidence furnished by the other party must be satisfactory to it, the insurance company, then the law will hold that the insurance company is going to1 determine the question of whether the evidence is satisfactory or not, by the same principle which would govern any reasonable or ordinary person acting honestly and justly, and in accordance with the principles of reason and common sense; and if the evidence should be furnished by the other party as required, and it should be such as a person of ordinary reason and honesty and justice and common sense would consider satisfactory, then the insurance company will be held bound to accept such evidence, whether, as a matter of fact, it is accepted or not, when the matter comes to be investigated and passed upon by a court; and so in this case, if you should find that the insurance compan)?- did make all these stipulations in its contract, that the parties concerned, the insured and this plaintiff here, did furnish evidence, it must be for you to say whether that evidence was such as would be satisfactory to a person of ordinary common sense and honesty and justice and reason.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.E. 464, 63 S.C. 290, 1902 S.C. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-security-trust-life-ins-sc-1902.