DocketNumber: No. 3817.
Judges: Walker
Filed Date: 3/7/1941
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On the 12th day of July, 1921, appellant, the National Life Accident Insurance Company, issued to Hyman Harris three policies of insurance in the principal amount of $10,000 the premiums payable in quarterly installments of $89.11 on the 12th day of July, October, January and April of each year. On each of the policies was attached the following rider:
Hyman Harris died in August, 1934, and appellant promptly paid to appellee, Fannie Harris, wife of the deceased and independent executrix of his estate, the principal amounts of the three policies.
This case was tried to the court without a jury, and the following facts from the court's conclusions of the facts give the nature of the suit: On the 12th day of February, 1931, Hyman Harris became totally and permanently disabled within the coverage of the total and permanent disability rider, which disability continued until the death of Hyman Harris. By reason of his disability, resulting from disease, Hyman Harris was not able to transact any business, nor to attend to any of his *Page 288 personal business; he was not able to make the quarterly payments on his life insurance policies. We give the following fact conclusions by the court:
"5. During such period of disability I. G. Harris, son of Hyman Harris, upon the instruction of his father, undertook the management and complete control of all of his father's affairs and business, both general and personal, and thereafter for the balance of his father's life had sole and complete control and management thereof to the exclusion of all knowledge and interest on the part of his father, Hyman Harris, the latter being in fact wholly incapable of attending thereto.
"6. In such capacity, I. G. Harris paid out of funds of Hyman Harris to the defendant quarterly premium payments upon premium notices transmitted by defendant and received by I. G. Harris, as of date February 12, 1931, in the amount of $89.11, and the same amount on subsequent premium notices on each of the following dates: May 12, 1931, August 11, 1931, November 12, 1931, February 13, 1932, May 6, 1932, August 9, 1932, November 12, 1932, February 10, 1933, May 10, 1933, and August 12, 1933, being the total sum of Nine Hundred and Eighty and 21/100 Dollars ($980.21).
"7. From immediately prior to February 12, 1931, all transactions with reference to such insurance policies and the payment of premium thereon was handled between I. G. Harris and the defendant herein, both with relation to the payment of same and the ultimate discovery of premium waiver by I. G. Harris, upon information from defendant's agent, Wingate, the said Hyman Harris having no part nor knowledge of such transactions.
"8. Prior to the furnishing of information to the said I. G. Harris by defendant's agent, Wingate, immediately before date of November 12, 1933, I. G. Harris had no knowledge of the existence of any type of premium waiver provisions generally in any form of life insurance policy, and first learned of such from defendant's agent, Wingate.
"9. During the period of payment of premiums by I. G. Harris, the policies of insurance were not in his control or possession but were in a private lock drawer of his father's safe, from which same were obtained only by breaking into such drawer upon and after being advised by defendant's agent Wingate that such policies might contain premium waiver provisions.
"10. During the period of payment of premiums by I. G. Harris after the occurrence of disability, because of the serious illness and dangerous physical condition of his father, and the natural delicacy of relationship of father and son, I. G. Harris refrained from discussing the insurance policies with his father and did not mention same nor the payment of premiums thereon, nor did he feel justified in seeking access thereto prior to learning of the possibility of premium waiver provisions existing and being attached to such policies.
"11. Hyman Harris had no knowledge of the payment of premiums after occurrence of his disability.
"12. Such payments of premiums were made by I. G. Harris without actual knowledge by him or by his father, Hyman Harris of the existence of the premium waiver provisions and the right to waiver of premium thereunder upon the insurance policies of Hyman Harris.
"13. On or immediately prior to November 12, 1933, I. G. Harris furnished satisfactory proof to the defendant at its home office accepted by it in writing, that Hyman Harris immediately prior to February 12, 1931, became wholly and permanently disabled by bodily injury or disease so that he was for life continuously and wholly prevented thereby from performing any work or transacting any business, for compensation or profit, or from following any gainful occupation.
"14. Defendant accepted such proof in writing and waived the payment of premiums commencing November 12, 1933, continuing the policies of insurance in force until death of Hyman Harris in August, 1934.
"15. Immediately prior to November 12, 1933, I. G. Harris made demand on defendant for refund of premiums paid, commencing February 12, 1931, to and including August 12, 1933, and defendant refused to return such premiums and still refuses to return same upon demand of the legally qualified executrix of the estate of Hyman Harris, the said Mrs. Fannie Harris, plaintiff in this suit."
On the facts, the court made the following conclusions of law: (a) The furnishing of proofs under the total and permanent disability rider was "a condition *Page 289 subsequent," to be performed within a reasonable time after the occurrence of the disability; (b) I. G. Harris furnished appellant proof in writing within a reasonable time after the occurrence of the disability; (c) I. G. Harris paid the quarterly premiums under a mistake of fact as to the existence of the premium waiver; appellant suffered no change of position to its prejudice by reason of the fact that I. G. Harris paid the premiums; (d) "Payer received no benefit as a result of making the payment, nor will receive any by return thereof, to which he was not otherwise entitled as a matter of law"; (e) "Proof of disability having been made within a reasonable time, defendant was not, at law or in equity, entitled to the premiums after the occurrence of disability"; and (f) appellee "as the qualified executrix of the will of Hyman Harris, deceased, is entitled to recover such payment of defendant together with interest thereon at the legal rate of 6% per annum from date of receipt of each payment by defendant to date of repayment of such amount to plaintiff".
This action was by appellee to recover the premiums paid by I. G. Harris, on his father's account, which matured from February 12, 1931, the date of the beginning of his father's disability, to November 12, 1933, the date appellant was furnished proof of his father's disability. The appeal was prosecuted by appellant from the judgment in favor of appellee for the amount of the premiums paid, with interest at six percent per annum, totalling $1,455.61.
As read by a layman, Minnesota Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Marshall, 8 Cir.,
So, the furnishing of the proof of disability was a condition subsequent, and not a condition precedent. In this connection, we make the following additional quotation from Judge McClendon's opinion in the Barnes case: "Further comment we think unnecessary, except to add that, if appellant, the author of the language of the policy, had intended to make the notice and proof of liability a condition precedent to effectiveness of the waiver, apt unequivocal language to that effect was available and should have been employed."
As supporting our construction of the premium waiver, we cite the following additional authorities: Bank of Commerce Trust Co. v. Northwestern Nat. Life Ins. Co.,
Appellant has cited many authorities in support of its proposition that the furnishing of the proof of disability was a condition precedent. These authorities may be distinguished on the following grounds: (1) Contrary to the construction by the Texas courts of premium waivers, certain of appellant's authorities seem to hold that all conditions requiring the furnishing of proof should be construed as conditions precedent. See Goldman v. New York Life Ins. Co.,
See also State Life Ins. Co., etc. v. Parry, Tex.Civ.App.
Against the court's fact conclusions sustaining the furnishing of proof of disability, under the total and permanent disability rider, appellant advances the following propositions:
(1) The disability began on February 1, 1931, but no proof of disability was furnished until immediately prior to November 12, 1933, thirty-three months delay. Appellant's proposition is that "such delay in furnishing such proof of disability is unreasonable as a matter of law." This contention is denied. The evidence raised the issue, found by the court in its corclusions of fact, that Hyman Harris, from and after the 12th day of December, 1931, was totally and permanently disabled to attend to any business whatever. Neither appellee nor her son, I. G. Harris, who attended to his father's furniture business subsequent to February 12, 1931, knew that these premium waivers had been attached to his father's policies of insurance, and there was no circumstance in the record giving him notice of these premium waivers. In fact, he did not know that life insurance policies could carry premium waivers; his first knowledge of such premium waivers was given to him by appellant's own agent, at the time stated by the court in its fact conclusions. The authorities cited by appellant in support of this proposition are not in point. In State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis v. Parks, Tex.Civ.App.
(2) Appellant asserts that there was no evidence that I. G. Harris acted for his father, the insured, "in any capacity other than as a mere volunteer in making such payments or that there was any mistake of fact on the part of insured." This contention is overruled. I. G. Harris testified (Q. A. reduced to narrative):
"I recall my father's physical condition during the beginning of the year 1931. All the last of 1930 he was still getting worse, stayed in bed more often than he was up; from the beginning of '31 he was in bed almost, I would say, three weeks out of every four weeks. My father did nothing around the store from that period on. He became inactive in the store from the last part of 1930. From that time on I was in active charge of the store (Hyman *Page 291 Harris was in the furniture business in Beaumont prior to his disability). My father came to the store at intervals. We got him to come to the store to get his mind off the pains he was in, trying to build up his resistance; trying to make him think he was better and getting along better. We didn't discuss with him business matters of any kind. He wouldn't stand for it; he wouldn't listen; he would just stand around in the store and look, and then go to another place. He made no suggestions to me about buying for the store or in relation to any other business of the store. We would tell him sometimes something, but he would just say `Use your own judgment'; wouldn't try to make any suggestions. From the time my father became inactive in the latter part of 1930 until he died he did no labor whatever. I signed all the checks and did all the buying and everything else that he used to do. When he first got sick, he gave me instructions with reference to his business; he told me to carry the business on like he was, and take care of all the bills that came due and payable, sign the checks and take care of all bills. He never did check up with me to see whether I was following his instructions or not; he left it all in my charge. During the time I was in the charge of my father's business I had knowledge of the premium notices on these insurance policies. The only thing I can tell you is that when the premiums came due through the mail, I put them on my desk and at the time they were due I paid them. I paid these premiums by check, and these checks were charged back to my dad's personal account. My dad did not discuss these policies with me. Dad was very close mouthed about his own personal business, and, of course, being his son, I never did delve into his own personal business; he was awful close mouthed about it; I never did ask him anything about it, and he didn't tell me anything about it. During the time I looked after my father's business the policies were at that time in a drawer in the safe, that was his own personal drawer, that he had his own key to, and no one ever went into that drawer — not even myself. During the time I was paying these premiums I had not examined the policies; the policies were my father's personal matters and I did not go into them. I did not make any attempt to discuss his policies with him. Dad was too sick a man to bring up anything about life insurance with him while he was sick. I wouldn't dare do anything like that, in the condition he was in."
(3) This being an action to recover premiums voluntarily paid by I. G. Harris, acting for his father, appellant asserts: "Where a voluntary payment is made under a mistake of fact, it is not recoverable back where the payee is misled or prejudiced by the mistake."
Appellant was in no way misled or prejudiced by the fact that I. G. Harris paid the premiums on his father's insurance policies.
(4) We give appellant's seventh proposition: "It is reversible error for a court before whom a cause is tried without the intervention of a jury to refuse to incorporate in its findings of fact all of the material issues and ultimate facts where, by written motion seasonably made, the omitted material issues and ultimate facts are brought to its attention."
Under this proposition, appellant contends that the court erred in refusing to make the following fact conclusions: "I find as a fact that from prior to February 12, 1931, until the death of Hyman Harris, he retained full management and control of his personal affairs and business and that the authority of I. G. Harris, the son of Hyman Harris, to attend to and look after his father's business was confined strictly and solely to the management of the furniture store and business, the only business in which Hyman Harris was interested."
"I find as a fact that from prior to February 12, 1931, until shortly after October 12, 1933, Hyman Harris was rational, had a good memory and was mentally competent to attend to his personal business."
There is in the record a statement of facts. A refusal of the court to make the findings requested by appellant in no way prejudiced its right to complain of the insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings actually made by the court. In the case at bar, the court filed conclusions of fact and law, which distinguishes this case from the authorities cited by appellant. The court did not commit prejudical error in refusing to make findings on these issues. Wandry v. Williams,
The judgment of the lower court should be affirmed, and it is accordingly so ordered.
Affirmed.
Courson v. New York Life Ins. Co. ( 1929 )
Bank of Commerce & Trust Co. v. Northwestern National Life ... ( 1930 )
Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen v. Dee ( 1908 )
Commercial Union Assurance Co. v. Preston ( 1926 )
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Wann ( 1937 )
Minnesota Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Marshall ( 1928 )
Pan-American Life Ins. Co. v. Welch ( 1934 )
Connecticut General Life Ins. Co. v. Warner ( 1936 )
State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis Ind. v. Parks ( 1935 )
Bank Sav. Life Ins. Co. v. Milan ( 1933 )
Southland Life Ins. Co. v. Gatewood ( 1938 )
State Life Ins. Co. v. Barnes ( 1933 )
Goldman v. New York Life Ins. Co. ( 1934 )
Southern Surety Co. v. Aronson ( 1928 )
Garrison v. Great Southern Life Ins. Co. ( 1934 )
Lewis v. Connecticut General Life Ins. Co. ( 1936 )