York v. Railway Officials & Employes Accident Ass'n

41 S.E. 227, 51 W. Va. 38, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 60
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 S.E. 227 (York v. Railway Officials & Employes Accident Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
York v. Railway Officials & Employes Accident Ass'n, 41 S.E. 227, 51 W. Va. 38, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 60 (W. Va. 1902).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, Judge:

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the circuit court of Wayne County, for the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars in favor of J. E. York, adm’r of Thomas Henry, deceased, against the Railway Officials and Accident Association, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Indiana. The proceeding was by notice under chapter 58, the notice setting out the policy of the insurance in full. The defendant filed a plea thereto, denying its liability and setting forth as the ground of its non-liability the failure of the intestate to pay the premium on the policy issued to him or any part thereof, and averring that the term of insurance was for one year, the premium, $42.00, payable in five equal installments of $8.40 each payable monthly beginning on the — day of March, 1899, and that in default of payment of any one of said installments the insured forfeited his rights under the policy and the rights of the beneficiary thereunder, unless the policy should be reinstated by tendering payment of the premium in default at the home office, and that the insured, Thomas Henry, did not pay any of the installments at the time specified nor at any time, that the policy thereby became void and was never reinstated by a tender of the payment of the premium or installments or any of them nor by the acceptance of any payments by the company. The [40]*40plaintiff; filed a replication to this plea averring that the premium had been paid according to the terms of the policy and issue was thereon joined. A trial by jury was had resulting in a verdict of three hundred and fifty dollars for the plaintiff, the amount of the face of the policy. The defendant moved to sot aside the verdict as being contrary to the law and the evidence but the court overruled the motion and rendered judgment upon the verdict, the defendant taking two bills of exceptions, No. 1 setting forth the evidence in the case and No. 2 a notice which was introduced and read to the jury by the plaintiff over the objection of the defendant.

It is not contended that the plaintiff had any right to recover if the premium on the policy of insurance was not paid and the sole question in the case is whether there was sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding that the premium was paid. The facts relating to the premium are as follows: Instead of paying the premium or any part thereof at the time the policy was issued the insured gave the insurance company what is termed a paymaster’s order for the entire amount of the premium to be paid in monthly installments of $8.40, out of his wages for the months of February, March, April and May, 1899, respectively, as to the first four installments and as to the fifth it was agreed that if the first, second, third and fourth should be paid when due the fifth installment should- not be collected. The insured was a freight brakeman in the employ of the Norfolk & Western Eailway Company and said order was directed to the paymaster of said railway company., It contained the following clause: “I agree that failure to deduct any of the above installments by said paymaster, from any cause is at my risk, and if any installment be not deducted as above provided for, all my rights and the rights of my beneficiary under said policy issued to me shall be void. I hereby waive for myself and my beneficiary under said policy any notice of the payment or non-payment of any installments provided for, and I further agree that in case of default upon any of the above installments, the same may be deducted from my wages in any succeeding month, at the option of said association, but such deduction shall only reinstate me from the date of such deduction and for the insurance period covered by it.” The first installment was not taken out of the wages for the month of February for the reason that Henry’s wages for that month as freight brakeman amounted to [41]*41but eight dollars and thirty-three cents, lacking a few cents of being enough to pay it. In that month he was promoted to the position of conductor, and earned eighty-four dollars and seventy cents as conductor for the same month. By an oversight on the part of.the paymaster, none of the installments were deducted, according to his testimony, although the insured earned money thereafter and until the time of his death as follows: March, seventy-two dollars and ninety cents; April, one hundred and ton dollars and forty-five cents; May, forty-three dollars and twenty-five cents; June, fifty-five dollars and twelve cents; July, fifty-five dollars and sixty-eight cents; August, fifty-eight dollars and eighty-three cents; September, ninety-two dollars and twenty-five cents; October, eighty-nine dollars and twenty cents; Novem]>er, six dollars and fifty cents. The paymaster testified that the order was filed with him about March 1, 1899, and then says: “The first installment was not collected because he had not earned sufficient wages as brakeman, under which occupation he was insured. We did not know at that’time nor until after his policy was voided by failure of paying the installments, that he was on the roll as conductor.” He further ■testified that neither he nor the railroad company had paid the defendant or any one for it any part of the wages of the intestate and that no deductions from said wages had been made at any time on account of said order. Charles A. Luse, chief clerk of the recording department of the Insurance Company, testified that on the 9th day of May, 1899, he filled out and enclosed in an envelope properly addressed to Thomas Henry at Ceredo, West Virginia, the post office address given in his application for insurance, what is called lapse notice No. 23493 and after stamping the same with the proper amount of postage deposited it in the post office at Indianapolis. The envelope had a return card printed on it but it was never returned. The notice was to the effect that the order had not been collected by reason of the name of the insured not appearing on the rolls. It further informed him what to do in order to reinstate his policy and notified him that whatever the cause of the lapsing of the policy might be it could only be made good by his being reinstated by the association. It also requested the insured to write full information on the back of the notice why payment was not .made when due’ and said: “If any mistake has been made it will enable us to adjust the matter.” The only evidence relating to this [42]*42notice is as to its contents and the fact that it was sent from Indianapolis by mail. The paymaster of the railroad company testified that all of Henry’s wages for the months of February, March, April, May, June, July, August and September were paid to him between the 20th and 30th of the month following each month in which the wages were earned and that at the time of his death there was due him for the month of October eighty-nine dollars and twenty cents and for the month of November six dollars and fifty cents, which amounts were paid to J. F. York, April 6, 1900. The administrator testified that he received the wages for October and November and that Henry at the time of his death had in his possession the'railway company’s check for forty-four dollars, one for ninety-two dollars and a third one for four dollars and ninety cents and that he thought the ninety-two dollar check was for wages earned in June and the others for different months from March until the time he was killed.

The notice set out in defendant’s bill of exception No. 2 is as follows: •.

“NORFOLK AND WESTERN RAILWAY ÜO.
“Office of Vice-President and General Manager, “RoaNOKE, Yav September 6, 1898.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.E. 227, 51 W. Va. 38, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/york-v-railway-officials-employes-accident-assn-wva-1902.