William Henry Wall, Jr. And Hallie A. Wall v. The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York

467 F.2d 321
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 21, 1972
Docket71-3329
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 467 F.2d 321 (William Henry Wall, Jr. And Hallie A. Wall v. The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Henry Wall, Jr. And Hallie A. Wall v. The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, 467 F.2d 321 (5th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Circuit Judge:

This is a Georgia diversity suit for wrongful cancellation of a life insurance policy on the life of Dr. William H. Wall, Sr. Georgia law permits a suit for wrongful termination of a policy to be brought immediately by the insured or upon maturity of the policy. The alleged wrongful termination occurred in 1962, and no premiums were paid thereafter. After the termination the company maintained a reduced amount of paid up term insurance on the insured until early 1964. He died in 1967, and his beneficiaries sued, claiming damages for breach of contract, a statutory penalty for bad faith, attorney fees and punitive damages. After a non jury trial the District Court entered judgment for the beneficiaries in an amount equal to the face of the policy and denied all other relief. The insurer appeals. We reverse and remand.

During life Dr. Wall had been the insured under two life insurance policies issued by Mutual Life, the $10,000 policy here in litigation (“the policy”) and another policy significant only in an evi-dentiary sense. Dr. Wall was not always prompt in his payments. Available records for the period 1955-62 disclose at least eight instances in which his check tendered in payment of a quarterly premium on the policy was dishonored. Similarly, for the period 1960-64, available records disclose several dishonored checks tendered for premiums on the other policy.

The policy provided for a 31-day grace period after the premium due date during which if the premium were paid there would be no lapse. In addition, company practice was to allow an addi *323 tional 15 days during which it would accept payment of the overdue premium without the necessity of formal application by the policyholder or evidence of insurability. At times the company refers to there being no “lapse” until 46 days expires, at other times to there being “automatic reinstatement” of the policy by payment without the extra 15-day period. In any event, the District Court resolved this semantical difference, if it is a difference, by its finding that the policy remained in force on condition that payment was made within the 46 days.

A quarterly premium on the policy was due June 28, 1962. According to an affidavit by a company official, an examination of its existent records disclosed the following events. At some time prior to July 30, on a date not known, Dr. Wall tendered á check in payment of the June 28 premium. The company infers that this was returned by the bank for insufficient funds on July 30, because a reversing entry was made on the company books on that date. It is unable to show by hard evidence that it notified Dr. Wall of the dishonor because its files covering the period were routinely destroyed after retention for two years. The implication is, however, that he was notified because on or about August 9, within the 46-day allowable period, the company received another check dated August 9 and in the same amount. It did not consider this unusual because of the number of times in the past in which it had received a worthless check followed by a good replacement check (or a postal money order), all during the 46-day period. It deposited the August 9 check, but on August 17, after the 46 days had expired, that check too was dishonored for insufficient funds. This check was not returned to Dr. Wall but sent to the home office or its permanent files to substantiate the lapse of the policy.

The plaintiffs’ contention of the facts, made in a brief to the trial court but never the subject of evidence, is somewhat different. They claim that the check dated August 9 was the first and only check for the June 28 premium and that Dr. Wall was never given notice of its dishonor. The company affidavit states that because of the destruction of records it is unable to show that it notified Dr. Wall of this check’s being dishonored. 1

The trial judge made no findings as between the affidavit by the officer of Mutual Life and the contentions of plaintiffs — in fact there was no trial as such — because he concluded that under either set of circumstances the plaintiffs were entitled to recover.

The parties agree that Dr. Wall was sent a notice of the next quarterly premium due September 28. The back of the notice says: “Neither this notice nor any payment under it shall waive any lapse or termination for non-payment of a prior amount due.” The Mutual Life affidavit explains that the billing cycle for premiums began 30 days before the premium due date, and since the August 9 cheek was not returned to the company until after August 17, it is possible that knowledge of its dishonor may not have reached the billing division in time to stop the sending of notice of the September 28 premium.

Dr. Wall sent a check for the September 28 premium. On October 29 the company wrote him as follows:

Thank you for the check in the amount of $84.10. However, this policy lapsed for nonpayment of the June 28, 1962, premium, and has not been reinstated, so the cheek is being returned to you.
Enclosed is the necessary form to be completed on the front side by you if you wish to reinstate the policy. The reverse side should be completed by a medical examiner in your city. When this has been done, please return to us and we will forward to our Home Office for their consideration.
*324 A return envelope is enclosed for your convenience. If the reinstatement is desired, please return your check with the completed form.

There is no evidence that Dr. Wall ever responded to this letter.

On November 7, 1962, Mutual again wrote Dr. Wall, stating inter alia:

We are very sorry your policy has lapsed because the premium has not been paid. If, however, you have paid the premium recently, and were notified of its acceptance, please ignore this letter. If that is not the case, perhaps you will wish to apply for reinstatement of your original contract. If so, please let us know immediately, so that we may tell you how that can be done.

The letter then advised that as a consequence of lapse the cash value had been applied to purchase paid up term insurance of $6,193 for one year and 250 days, expiring March 5, 1964. The letter instructed that it be attached to the policy as a record of the policy status and that Dr. Wall keep the company informed of his address while the term insurance was in force. Again, there is no evidence of any response from Dr. Wall.

Dr. Wall was not, however, out of touch with Mutual Life. The other policy was continued in force until his death and the benefits thereunder paid. With respect to it, in 1963 he availed himself of the 46-day period by submitting a cashier’s check to cover a check which “might not clear,” and in 1964 the company received a bad check from him and requested and received a replacement check within the 46 days.

The District Court misconceived the legal effect of the previous dealings between the parties. 2 We begin with the proposition that in Georgia “a check is not payment until itself paid unless explicitly taken with a contrary understanding,” Kersh v. Life & Casualty Ins. Co., 109 Ga.App.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Moore v. Travelers Indemnity Insurance
408 A.2d 298 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
467 F.2d 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-henry-wall-jr-and-hallie-a-wall-v-the-mutual-life-insurance-ca5-1972.