White v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.

157 So. 2d 6, 275 Ala. 581, 1963 Ala. LEXIS 384
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 3, 1963
Docket3 Div. 999
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 157 So. 2d 6 (White v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co., 157 So. 2d 6, 275 Ala. 581, 1963 Ala. LEXIS 384 (Ala. 1963).

Opinion

HARWOOD, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict in a declaratory judgment nroceeding. The judgment found that Dr. John B. White, the husband of the appellant, Kathleen N. Wickman White (defendant in the court below) was not covered by an amendment to a group life insurance policy issued by the appellee, the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, to Jackson Hospital and Clinic, Inc.

In its complaint below the insurance company alleged that it issued a policy of group life insurance on 19 December 1949 to the Jackson Hospital and Clinic. The policy covered all of the employees of said hospital who received specified annual earnings which determined the amount of life insurance as shown by the policy; that John B. White, M. D., the husband of the appellant, was employed by the said hospital on December 28, 1958, and was covered through the terms and conditions of said policy for the sum of $10,000; that the appellant was designated as beneficiary to receive the proceeds due under said policy in the event of the death of her husband.

The complaint further alleges that effective 19 December 1959, the said policy was amended to increase the amount of insurance on the life of Dr. White from $10,000 to $30,000, and that the .said amendment provided:

“Provided that if an employee Is not actively at work on the effective date of this amendment, the changes. as herein provided shall not become effective .as to such employee until the .next following date on which he is actively at work on full time.”

The complaint further averred'that Dr. White was not actively at work on .the effective date of said amendment (19. December 1959) and that Dr. White was not actively on full time subsequent to 19 December 1959 and prior to his . death on 13 February 1960, and that the amendment therefore did not become effective s.o far as Dr. White was concerned; and that the appellee insurance company had admitted its liability to the appellant In the sum of $10,000, the amount due under the policy prior to its amendment.

Thereafter the' appellant filed her plea and demanded a jury trial. In her-plea this appellant denied that the amendment of 19 December 1959 increasing the benefits under the policy to $30,000 was not effective as to Dr. White; she denied that Dr. White was not actively at work on the. effective date of the amendment; and ’denied that Dr. White was not actively at work on full time after 19 December 1959, and prior to his death on 13 February 1960.

Appellant joined in the prayer for declaratory judgment and prayed that the court render a judgment decreeing that the insurer was indebted to her for the increased benefits as provided by the amendment effective 19 December 1959.

At the conclusion of the testimony the court below gave to the juryj at the appellee’s request, the general áffirmative charge with hypothesis. The jury returned a verdict consonant with the court’s instructions, [584]*584■and judgment was entered pursuant to the 'verdict. Hence this appeal.

The evidence introduced in the proceedings below shows without contradiction that Dr. John B. White was employed by the Jackson Hospital and Clinic as a staff surgeon. In October 1959, he became ill and entered Jackson Hospital on 27 October 1959. After a few days he went to a hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, and there, after an exploratory operation, it was determined that he was afflicted with a cancer of the lungs, -and that the condition was inoperable.

His physicians in Atlanta determined that he should undergo cobalt treatments. At first Dr. White was a patient in the hospital in Atlanta but later moved to a motel, and still later rented a small home near the hospital where he resided until a day or two before his death. All evidence shows that Dr. White was determined to recover; that ■he looked upon hospitalization as a sur- ■ render to his disease, and for this reason his physicians did not insist that he remain in the hospital.

The evidence shows, however, that Dr. White underwent cobalt treatments in Atlanta virtually continuously from 1 Decem•ber through 31 December 1959.

As before noted, the policy sued on was amended on 19 December 1959, with the proviso already set forth. On 23 December 1959, Dr. White took a cobalt treatment in the early morning, and then flew to Montgomery. Dr. White went to his home and there he was picked up by the secretary and .bookkeeper of his firm and driven to the Jackson Clinic. It was customary to have a Christmas party at the Clinic each year .and this year, according to the secretary, ■Dr. White’s friends were invited in addition to the office personnel because of Dr. White’s illness.

Dr. White’s visit to his office, and its purpose, we think is well illustrated by the ■testimony of Mrs. White who is also a physician and was a partner in the medical firm of Campbell, White and Wickman, Mrs. White being professionally known as Kathleen N. Wickman, M. D.

“A Well, after the delivery work itself there was a lot of repair work and checking the baby and talking to the family and so forth and I estimate I must have gotten downstairs about three o’clock.
“Q Did you find that they had a Christmas party in progress down there ?
“A Yes, it was going on full swing when I got there.
“Q At that party, were there patients and friends of Dr. Jack White’s?
“A Oh, yes. We had a real mixture. There were friends there, there were patients there, there were nurses there and an occasional doctor would come in and it was just a crowd of folks there.
“Q What, if anything, had been done to tell those patients that he would be there in that office on that day, the 23rd of December, 1959?
“A Well, this had been planned for some time and Josephine knew that he would be in and she spread the word around that he would be in the office on the 23rd.
“Q Had a rumor gotten out that his arm and shoulder had been removed?
“A Yes. That was the main reason that Jack planned to be back at that time. When he went to Atlanta he was complaining of pain in his • arm and shoulder and the cobalt therapy helped that and he was feeling better and he had a large number of phone calls from patients and some of them called him and some of them wrote to him and they told him that they had heard that his arm had been removed, and he didn’t want them to think that and he wanted to be in his office and he wanted some patients to come in and see him so that they could go out through the [585]*585country side and disprove this rumor and he wanted his patients .to know that he was doing well and that he was improving and that he was being taken care of and as soon as he was able that was the most convenient time to come back and see these folks.”

It appears that during the time Dr. White was at his office on 23 December 1959, he told Lester Holley that he would have his secretary write a letter to an insurance company in reference to the claim for accident insurance pertaining to an accidental injury Mr. Holley had suffered previously and for which Dr. White had treated him.

Jimmy Lee Crenshaw had been receiving weekly treatments from Dr. Campbell, Dr. White’s partner, for a heart condition. He was quite friendly with Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
157 So. 2d 6, 275 Ala. 581, 1963 Ala. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-massachusetts-mutual-life-insurance-co-ala-1963.