Zeigler v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States

259 N.W. 769, 219 Iowa 872
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 2, 1935
DocketNo. 42845.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 259 N.W. 769 (Zeigler v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zeigler v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States, 259 N.W. 769, 219 Iowa 872 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

*873 Powers, J.

The appellant herein, the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, hereinafter referred to as the Insurance Company, issued to the Chicago, Great Western Railroad Company, hereinafter referred to as the Railroad Company, a policy of group life insurance about the first of January, 1931, covering all of the employees of the Railroad Company who should elect to participate therein. Under the plan adopted, the Railroad Company and the employees both contributed to the premium payments. The Railroad Company made the payments and deducted the employee’s share from his pay check. Arthur Zeigler, a locomotive engineer of the Railroad Company, duly elected to participate in the group insurance and there was issued to him by the Insurance Company a certificate in which the Insurance Company certified that it had contracted to insure his life for the amount of $2,000, and in which his wife, Nellie C. Zeigler, the plaintiff and appellee herein, was named as beneficiary. On December 8th, following, the superintendent of the Railroad Company advised Mr. Zeigler by letter that because of his violation of one of the rules of the Railroad Company which resulted in a wreck near Austin, Minnesota, on December 1, 1931, “it becomes my unpleasant duty to dismiss you from the Company’s service and you will please accept this as due notice thereof.” The letter further requested Zeigler to acknowledge receipt and to turn in the Railroad Company’s property in his possession. Zeigler, in due course thereafter, acknowledged receipt of the letter,'turned in the Railroad Company’s property, and was not thereafter in the actual employ of the Railroad Company. He was killed in an automobile accident on July 3, 1932. The present action is by the beneficiary to collect the insurance. The trial below resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, and the Insurance Company has appealed.

Many errors are assigned by appellant. They relate to a failure of the court to sustain objections to the introduction of testimony, to the refusal of the court to direct a verdict against the plaintiff, to instructions given by the court, and to the failure of the court to set aside the verdict on motion and grant a new trial, Practically all the errors assigned revolve around appellant’s claim that the record conclusively showed that Zeigler had been discharged long prior to his death, that he was not an employee of the Railroad Company at the time of his death, and was not, on that account, within the provisions of the group policy of insurance issued to the *874 Railroad Company. This proposition presents the only substantial question in the case.

Policies of group life insurance are relatively new and have not been, to a very wide extent, the subject of judicial consideration. Moreover, the policy contracts are so different in their terms, and the machinery devised and used for the collection of premiums and distribution of benefits are so varied, that only a limited aid can he obtained by an examination of precedents. Such policies are, however, contracts and, like other contracts, must be enforced according to their terms. And being contracts for insurance, if need for construction arises, they must, in accordance with a well-established rule, he construed liberally in favor of the insured.

The policy in the instant case, after providing that the insurance of the employee shall automatically cease upon termination of his employment with the employer, contained this exception:

“Except that the employer may elect that all employees who, while insured hereunder, are temporarily laid off or given leave of absence or are disabled or are retired on pension, shall be considered to be in the employment of the employer during such period.”

The policy also contained a provision that the employee, upon leaving the service of the Railroad Company, should have the right to convert the insurance without examination to any other form of life insurance which the Insurance Company issued' except ternr insurance.

• The record before us shows that Zeigler, shortly after the receipt of the letter referred to above, prepared a letter to be sent to the Insurance Company requesting a conversion; that before the letter was mailed, a Mr. Segner, who occupied the position of foreman of locomotive engineers for the Railroad Company and had been Mr. Zeigler’s immediate superior, and who had been a member of the group of railroad officials which had investigated the wreck near Austin, Minnesota, and which was responsible for placing the blame on Zeigler which resulted in his discharge, called on Zeigler at his home; that Segner then told Zeigler not to convert his insurance, that he would he back to work in thirty or sixty days, and to send in his monthly premium to the Railroad Company. Zeigler did send in the premium pajonents required of him each month thereafter until his death. Such premium payments were *875 received and accepted by the Railroad Company, and the Railroad Company paid Zeigler’s premium to the Insurance Company in full, supplementing the amount contributed by Zeigler with its own portion of the premium payment. Moreover, the same Mr. Fowler who had written the letter of dismissal to Zeigler continued to report each month to the auditor of the railroad for certification to the Insurance Company that there was no change in Zeigler’s status and that he continued to be an employee of the Railroad Company, and after Zeigler’s death, Fowler sent to the beneficiary blank forms for proof of death with instructions as to their execution and return. A vice president of the Railroad Company, following Zeigler’s death, wrote a letter in which he said that he had “every reason to advance belief at a proper time favorable consideration would have been directed to Zeigler’s reinstatement.” And the Insurance Company, following Zeigler’s death, wrote a letter to the Railroad Company making inquiry as to why a claim had not been presented, and said:

“We understand that this man left your employ as of January 1, 1932, but that he expected to be recalled and that his insurance was continued in force during this period. Kindly let us know whether or not the insurance was in force at the time of his death. * * * If the certificate was in force at the time, please let us know why a claim has not been presented.”

To this letter the auditor of the Railroad Company replied by letter- in which he said:

“Our records indicate that he was still in service and we, of course, paid your company the premiums due under his certificate. * * * It is without question of fact that his insurance was in force at the time of his death.”

Some three months after the employment was terminated, Zeigler requested reinstatement. That request seems to have been refused.

It is the contention of the appellant that since Zeigler was discharged from the employ of the Railroad Company, the insurance as to him had been terminated, and that while the Railroad Company might elect to treat one who was temporarily laid off as still in its employ for the purpose of continuing the insurance, it had no such right of election as to one who had been permanently dis *876

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Bluebook (online)
259 N.W. 769, 219 Iowa 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeigler-v-equitable-life-assurance-society-of-united-states-iowa-1935.