Young v. Southern Farm Bureau Life Ins.
This text of 592 So. 2d 103 (Young v. Southern Farm Bureau Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Millie Howell Thomas YOUNG
v.
SOUTHERN FARM BUREAU LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*104 Alfred L. Felder, McComb, for appellant.
Samuel E. Scott, Ott Purdy & Scott, Jackson, for appellee.
En Banc.
PITTMAN, Justice, for the Court:
This action was instituted in the Circuit Court of Hinds County, First Judicial District, against Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company to recover the proceeds of a life insurance policy allegedly due the appellant, Millie Young. The cause came before Circuit Judge Breland Hilburn on Southern Farm Bureau's Motion for Summary Judgment based upon the theories of accord and satisfaction and the tolling of the applicable statute of limitations. After a hearing on appellee's motion, Judge Hilburn granted the motion for summary judgment ruling that an accord and satisfaction had occurred. Finding error in the judgment of the lower court, we reverse and remand this matter for trial on the merits.
I.
On September 18, 1980, Carlos Thomas purchased life insurance from appellee Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company. The policy provided for $25,000.00 in whole life coverage with an additional $25,000.00 in accidental death benefits. On December 18, 1982, the premium for the above coverage was not paid and remained unpaid beyond the thirty-one (31) day grace period for reinstatement.
On January 22, 1983, a notice of extended term insurance was mailed to Carlos Thomas giving him a sixty (60) day special offer in which the policy could be reinstated without evidence of insurability. The notice provided that the original policy of insurance had been converted, under the terms of that policy, to a policy of extended term coverage due to Thomas' failure to pay the required premium within the thirty-one (31) day grace period. The extended term coverage was for $25,043.50 and was in effect until February 9, 1984. The notice further stated that the original policy of whole life and accidental death could be restored without evidence of insurability, if the policyholder remitted the stated quarterly premium within sixty (60) days of December 18, 1982. It is undisputed that payment was not made within this sixty (60) day period.
On February 22, 1983, another special offer letter was mailed to Carlos Thomas containing Southern Farm Bureau's invitation to reinstate the previous insurance coverage for a special sixty (60) day period. This letter, like the January 22, 1983, correspondence, stated that the sixty (60) day period began to run on December 18, 1982. Because this sixty (60) day period had already terminated when the second special offer letter was mailed, Southern Farm Bureau asserts that this letter was sent to Thomas due to "managerial oversight."
On February 20, 1983, Millie Young presented her local agent with a check for the quarterly premium originally due December 18, 1982. A few days later, Young received the second special offer letter that contained the following in its final paragraph:
If this premium has been paid within the last few days, we thank you and you may disregard this notice.
Considering this final paragraph, Millie Young asserts that the original life insurance coverage, i.e. $25,000.00 whole life and $25,000.00 accidental death, was reinstated on her husband's life.
*105 On March 9, 1983, Southern Farm Bureau corresponded with local agent Ben Bennett informing him that the original coverage purchased by Carlos Thomas had lapsed effective December 18, 1982. The insurer related that Thomas would now have to complete a statement of insurability to apply for a reinstatement of coverage. The above correspondence also returned Carlos Thomas' February 20, 1983, check and requested that the agent return the draft to Thomas.
On March 18, 1983, Carlos Thomas severed the main artery in his leg in a power saw accident. As a result of this accident, Thomas died on March 29, 1983, at Oschner's Hospital in New Orleans, Louisiana.
In late June or early July, Southern Farm Bureau, through its agent Ben Bennett, disbursed the proceeds of the life insurance policy in effect at the time of Thomas' death. These benefits included extended term benefits totalling $25,472.02, but did not include accidental death benefits due to a policy provision that prevented any additional riders to be placed with a policy of extended term coverage. Thus, Millie Young was paid $25,472.02 on or about June 27, 1983.
Regarding the payment of the above policy of insurance, Ben Bennett stated by affidavit that on April 12, 1983, he went to the home of Millie Young to execute the necessary claims documents. Bennett stated that he explained to Young that she would only receive the extended term benefits of $25,472.02 because the accidental death provision was no longer in effect. To this end, Bennett stated that appellant signed a death benefits claim form providing that she would receive the extended term benefits only.
Millie Young, however, testified that when she signed the benefits claim form, the form was not filled out. She stated that she never understood that she was to receive less than $50,000.00 until agent Bennett brought the lesser amount to her home sometime around June 27, 1983. Millie Young asserted, in her answers to interrogatories, that agent Bennett told her that he was very sorry that he was unable to persuade Southern Farm to pay her the full $50,000.00 and that Young should sue him for the deficit because he was bonded.
In February of 1984, Millie Young negotiated the benefits check for $25,472.02.
On May 30, 1989, appellant Young filed suit in the Circuit Court of Hinds County, First Judicial District, six (6) years and two (2) months after the death of her husband. Young's complaint alleged that Southern Farm Bureau had breached its duty of fair dealing and good faith for the failure to pay the entire policy proceeds. The complaint sought: (1) $25,000.00 for the balance of the policy proceeds; (2) $250,000.00 in general damages; and (3) $5,000,000.00 in punitive damages against the insurer.
On June 29, 1989, Southern Farm Bureau answered the above complaint asserting the defenses of accord and satisfaction and procedural bar under the applicable statute of limitations. The insurer alleged that all proceeds due under the policy in effect at the time of Thomas' death had been distributed to Millie Young and, further, that this action was instituted more than six (6) years after the death of her husband.
On October 3, 1989, Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company filed its Motion for Summary Judgment, or in the Alternative Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, seeking a dismissal of this cause based on the theories of accord and satisfaction and the tolling of the statute of limitations. Appellant Young answered this motion for summary judgment alleging that her cause of action did not accrue until Southern Farm Bureau breached its duty in late June or early July of 1983. Appellant's answer further alleged that she did not intend to release her rights to the $25,000.00 accidental death benefits by signing the proof of loss form in blank.
After a hearing before Judge Breland Hilburn on November 28, 1989, Southern Farm Bureau's Motion for Summary Judgment was sustained on the ground of accord and satisfaction. The lower court found:
*106 1.
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592 So. 2d 103, 1991 WL 277793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-southern-farm-bureau-life-ins-miss-1991.