Corcoran v. Mutual Life Insurance
Corcoran v. Mutual Life Insurance
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The policy sued on this case was issued by the defendant company upon the life of James Corcoran, and was payable to his wife Frances Corcoran if she survived him, otherwise to their children. The policy was obtained in 1877. James Corcoran died in January, 1894, leaving his wife and three children to survive him. Mrs. Corcoran made proof of her husband’s death, and claimed the amount due upon the policy as the payee named therein. She alleged that the policy had been mislaid or lost, and was required to make such proof of the fact as she was able, and to give a bond of indemnity to the company before the insurance money was paid to her. This she did, and on the 30th day of April, 1894, the money was paid to her. On the 25th day of February, 1895, nearly one year after the payment to Mrs. Corcoran, this action was brought, the plaintiff claiming title to the policy by virtue of an assignment by James and Frances Corcoran to W. H. Dill, made in October, 1890, as collateral security for an indebtedness and an assignment from Dill to himself on the 10th day of March, 1892, accompanied by an assignment of the indebtedness to secure which the assignment to Dill had been made. The policy stipulated among other things that the company would take no notice of any assignment until it bad been furnished with a duplicate, or a certified copy thereof, delivered to the company at its principal office. The defendant set up as a defense to the action the payment to Mrs. Corcoran, and the provision of the policy just referred to. To this the plaintiff replied that the company had waived the stipulation; and upon this question the case went to trial. As a proof of waiver the plaintiff gave in evidence his own letter to the secretary of the company, of March 29, 1892, referring to the assignment by the Corcorans to Dill, and by Dill to himself, and asking whether he should forward the policy to the company to have an approval of the transfer made
The judgment is now reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Frances Corcoran, for the use of Wm. H. Dill, for the use of S. B. Philson, cashier v. The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Evidence — Letter—Province of court and jury. Where a letter produced in evidence is plain and direct in its statements, and without ambiguity, its construction is for the court. Insurance — Life insurance — Notice of assignment — Waiver—Letter— Loss of policy — Evidence—Province of court and jury. A life insurance company paid the amount of a policy of insurance on the life of C. to C.’s wife. It was claimed that the policy was lost, and before the policy was paid, C.’s wife was required to give to the company a bond of indemnity. Subsequently suit was brought upon the policy by a person claiming under an assignment from D. to whom C. and wife had assigned the policy. The policy stipulated that the company would take no notice of any assignment until it had been furnished with a duplicate, or a certified copy thereof, delivered to the company at its principal office. The company set up this stipulation as a defense, and the plaintiff replied that the company had waived the stipulation. The plaintiff gave in evidence a letter from the assignee to the secretary of the company, referring to the assignments, and asking whether he should forward the policy, or should send the assignments only. The secretary replied that the company had no record of the transfers, but if furnished with duplicate or certified copies of the assignments, the company would file them as notice of claim, and directed him to communicate with the general agent of the company in Philadelphia, the principal office being in New York. Plaintiff proved that he sent the policy by a messenger to the agent in Philadelphia, and that the messenger in the agent’s absence showed the policy to a clerk, who, after looking at it, returned it without comment. No copies were in fact sent to either the New York or the Philadelphia office, and no note or memorandum of the assignments were found in either office. Held, (1) that the construction of the letter of the secretary, and whether it was a waiver of the stipulation in the policy, were questions for the court; (2) that the jury should have been instructed that if the production of copies for filing was actually waived by the Philadelphia office, then the plaintiff could recover, but if not, then he must look to the person who actually received the money; (3) that the fact that C.’s wife did not produce the policy when she demanded payment, but alleged that the policy was lost, raised no presumption that the policy was held by another. In an action upon a policy of insurance by an assignee of the policy, the plaintiff insisted upon a waiver of a provision in the policy that re quired copies of assignments to be furnished to the company for filing by it as notice of claim by the assignee, and asked the court to permit the jury to find proof of such waiver in a letter signed by the secretary of the company. The plaintiff presented a point to the effect that the letter was not an agreement signed by the president or secretary of the company, waiving or changing any of the terms of the policy. The court replied, “I cannot affirm this point,” but added that the letter of the secretary must be taken as speaking not for himself as an individual, but for the company as its officer. Held, that the answer, while amounting to a denial of the point, placed that denial upon a ground not raised or involved in any phase of the controversy, and was therefore erroneous.