Union Central Life Insurance v. Burnett

136 Ill. App. 187, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 606
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,291
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 Ill. App. 187 (Union Central Life Insurance v. Burnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Central Life Insurance v. Burnett, 136 Ill. App. 187, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 606 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cook county. The cause was before the Branch Appellate Court five years ago. Bennett v. Union Central Life Insurance Company, 104 Ill. App., 402. From that court it was taken to the Supreme Court, where the judgment of the Circuit Court for the defendant, the Union Central Life Insurance Company, which had been affirmed by the Appellate Court, was reversed. Bennett v. Union Central Insurance Company, 203 Ill., 439. The cause was remanded by the Supreme Court to the Circuit Court and was there again tried. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, Rose B. Burnett (formerly Bennett) against the Insurance Company for $3847.28. A motion for a new trial having been overruled, judgment was rendered on the verdict. From this judgment the defendant appealed, and this appeal is now before us for decision.

A full statement of the facts of the case is prefixed to the opinion of the Appellate Court—104 Ill. App., 402—and a full statement of the pleadings is contained in the opinion of the Supreme Court (203 Ill., 439), and therefore they need not be repeated here. An inadvertent error (which, however, we do not agree with counsel for appellant in considering material) in the opinion of the Supreme Court may be properly noted. It is said therein (203 Ill., 448) that the replication under discussion stated that the tender to the insurance company of the amount of four notes held by it against the assured on March 19, 1901, was after the death of the assured, but before either of the two latter of these notes fell due. This is not correct. March 19, 1901, was after all four of the notes were due. The order on C. M. Hardy was alleged by the replication to have been drawn on and accepted by him on January 7, 1899, which was after the maturity of the first two notes and before the maturity of the last two, but the alleged collection of the judgment from which the order was to be paid and the tender of the amount of the notes to the insurance company were after the maturity of them all, as well as after the death of F. W. Bennett, the assured.

As can be seen by the opinions of the Appellate and Supreme Courts, to which we have referred, the action is by the widow (since remarried) of the assured, F. W. Bennett, on a policy of life insurance for $3,000, issued- by the defendant company and payable to her.

The defense of the company was and is that the premium for the first year was never paid, and the policy by its terms was forfeited. Four notes dated June 30, 1898, were given for said premium, one payable to the order of C. W. Sampson, the agent of the defendant, who solicited and delivered the policy, for $42.19, due three months after date, two others each for $42.19, payable to the order of the defendant company six and nine months after date respectively, and a fourth for $60, payable to the order of the defendant company twelve months after date. The policy contained a condition that failure to pay any of the first three annual premiums or any notes given for any premium at maturity should nullify the policy without any action on the part of the company, and the three notes running to the order of the company contained the same provision. As nothing was ever actually paid on the premium or on these notes to the company, the company holds the policy forfeited. This view was sustained by the circuit judge before whom the case was first tried and by the Branch Appellate Court when the ease was here before. The opinion of Hr. Justice Freeman held the condition of forfeiture self-executing, and discussed the contentions of the plaintiff in and by which she endeavored to avoid the claimed forfeiture of the policy, and declared them all unsustained and unsustainable. They were that there were three lines of evidence that the forfeiture had been waived by appellant:

First. There was a letter of the defendant company to the assured, dated December 31, 1898, after two of his notes had matured, asking him to give the matter of the one due December 20th his attention “so the insurance will be protected.”

As to this the Appellate Court said: “We do not regard this language as a waiver of any condition of the policy, assuming for the sake of the argument that a forfeiture could be waived by the writer. * * * The letter is not inconsistent with the view that the forfeiture of the policy is an accomplished fact. * * * But the policy contains the following provisions: ‘The contract of insurance between the parties hereto is completely set out in this policy and the application for the same, and none of its terms can be modified, nor any forfeiture under it waived, save by an agreement in writing signed by the president, vice-president, secretary or assistant secretary of the company, whose authority for this purpose shall not be delegated.’ If, therefore, the letter in question could be treated as an agreement in writing, waiving the forfeiture, it would be nevertheless ineffectual unless signed by one of the four specifically mentioned officers of the company. It purports on its face to be signed only by the manager of the Chicago agency.”

Second. It was alleged in the pleadings (the first additional replication of- the plaintiff filed June 15, 1899) that on January I, 1899, the assured, Bennett, drew a written order on O. H. Hardy in favor of the Union Central Life Insurance Company for the amount of the four notes, to be paid out of money belonging to him which might be collected on a certain judgment in the order described; that this order was accepted by Hardy in writing on its face; that it was delivered to the defendant by said Bennett and was accepted by the defendant; that afterwards and on March 19, 1901, Hardy tendered the full amount of the notes to the defendant.

The replication referred to had been demurred to by the defendant before the first trial, and the demurrer sustained, but it is one of the contentions in this present appeal that the facts alleged in it were competent, material and admissible in evidence under the declaration and the general issue and the special plea of forfeiture through non-payment of the notes and the traverse thereof, which remained in the case.

To prove the alleged facts the testimony of C. M. Hardy was offered at the first trial, and the trial judge admitted some parts of that offered and excluded some parts. The judge having remarked that Sampson, who solicited and delivered the policy and took the notes and turned them over to the company, had so testified, but that he did not see how that showed that Sampson was authorized to represent the company with reference to the payment of those notes, the counsel for plaintiff asked “whether he would be permitted to go ahead and show what passed between Mr. Hardy and Mr. Sampson." The court ruled that this might go in, and overruling various objections allowed in evidence the statement that on January 7, 1899, at Mr. Hardy’s office, by Mr. Bennett and Mr. Sampson together there was an instrument delivered to Mr. Hardy, signed by Mr. Bennett and accepted by Mr. Hardy in writing on its face, and that this paper after the acceptance was delivered to Mr. Sampson. Then in answer to the court's question: “Is the paper you hold in your hand a substantial copy of the paper you refer to, in the condition it was at the time you say you delivered it to Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 Ill. App. 187, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-central-life-insurance-v-burnett-illappct-1907.