Perea v. State Life Insurance

OPINION OP THE -COURT.

PARE-ER, J.-

-1. The first proposition presented is that the court erred in refusing to grant a continuance to a later day in the term. Appellant made a motion for continuance based upon two grounds: (1) Absence of leading counsel for appellant, who was familiar with all the facts, and upon whom local counsel relied for that reason; (2) absence of two witnesses in Santa Ee, physicians, whose knowledge of the insured’s physical condition prior to the issuance of the policy had just -come to the attention of counsel. A supplemental motion for a continuance to a later day in the term was filed on account of the absence of another witness, but this witness later appeared and testified. The court overruled the motion for a continuance.

It appears that thirty days prior to the term the case was noticed for trial by counsel for appellee by filing with the clerk notice to that effect. It does not affirmatively appear that this notice was served directly on counsel for appellant, but we conclude it was for the reason that the whole tenor and effect of the motion for continuance, and the affidavit in support thereof, as well as some colloquy between counsel and the court in discussing the motion, leaves one with the impression that counsel for appellant relied solely upon the exigencies of an ordinary term of court and the fact of notice is not specifically denied in the affidavit. We have, therefore, a condition of case-where counsel for appellant merely speculated on the probable course of events of the term, and where he took no-means to have associate counsel present until on the first day of the term, when he undertook to obtain his presence by wire. This will not do.

1 In so far as the motion is concerned in regard to the-witnesses in Santa Fe, it is sufficient to say that when the court asked if he desired a continuance until the next day to have them present, he declined to say he did. This case emphasizes the salutary rule that motions for continuance are ordinarly to be decided by the trial court, and his discretion, viewed from the facts, is not ordinarily to be reviewed. Territory v. Padilla, 12 N. M. 6.

2. It appears that the insured gave his note to the insurance solicitor^ the agent of the appellant, for a large portion of the first annual premium and that the appellant charged the part of the premium due to it to the agent at once and issued the usual receipt to the insured. The-note was not payable to the appellant but to the agent personally. Appellee offered to show the date of payment of the note but the proof was excluded as immaterial. The policy contains the following provision: “If any note or other obligation given for the first year’s premium, or any part thereof, on this policy shall not be paid when due, then this policy contract shall be and become null and void without any notice or action of the company notwithstanding any receipt which may have been given for such premium.”

2 Appellant contends that this provision, together with the failure to pay the note at maturitj1', which it offered to prove, worked a forfeiture of the policy and all rights-thereunder and cites Thompson v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S. 252, and Iowa Life Insurance Co. v. Lewis, 187 U. S. 335, in support of this contention. It appears that in-each of these cases the note for- the premium was given directly to the insurance companies and there were no circumstances surrounding the transaction showing a waiver ■on their part. Appellee contends that in this case all of the facts show an absolute waiver if, indeed, the forfeiture •clause in the policy has any application whatever. As above seen, this insurance company did not concern itself with the collection of the first premium of the insured at all. As soon as it issued a policy, it charged to its agent the part of the premium due to it, and it was immaterial to it how the premium was paid to the agent or whether it was paid at all. Defendant entrusted to its agents the discretion of collecting in advance or in giving such credit as they saw fit, holding them alone responsible for the premium. Under such'circumstances, it may well be doubted whether the note in question was a note given for the first year’s premium within the meaning of the forfeiture clause of the policy. The conduct of the insurance company in charging the premium to the agent and the act of the agent in taking a note to himself, operated .as a transfer of the insured’s indebtedness to the agent, and consequently as a payment to the company. Fidelity Co. v. Willey, et al., 80 Fed. 497; Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Logan, 87 Fed. 637; Griffith v. N. Y. Life Insurance Co., 101 Cal. 640; 25 Cyc. 827.

We, therefore, hold that the contention of appellant is not well founded. >

3 3. The last contention of appellant is that the court erred in instructing the verdict for appellee. This is based upon the proposition that there was sufficient evidence adduced to support a finding by the jury that some of the answers of the insured to the medical examination were false and, consequently, that the contract of insurance was avoided. The questions and answers have been heretofore given. It is to be noticed that no question was raised by the answer of appellant as to the truthfulness of the answers of the insured in so far as they relate to the number of consultations with a phyéician and the frequency of illnesses. The answer relied in each instance upon the fact that the insured had consulted a physician and had been treated for dyspepsia and indigestion, which he had denied. The testimony upon this point, consists wholly, as we view it, of the testimony of Dr. Richard Lund, the medical examiner of appellant, and the physician who attended the insured from time to time both prior and subsequent to the time of the issuance of the policy. We have carefully examined his testimony and believe the substance and effect of the same to be as follows: That the insured never suffered from the disease of dyspepsia or indigestion; that the manifestations of indigestion were symptomatic and the result of malarial poisoning; that the manifestations were of an acute form, passing away in a few days, and were in no sense a disease and led to no impairment of health. The physician also testified that according to the best of his knowledge and belief, that the answers of the insured were true. It is true he does state that in one instance the insured had acute indigestion without malarial symptoms, but throughout his testimony he adhered to the proposition that malaria was the disease present and indigestion in an acute form the result and the accompanying symptom.

Another physician, Dr. P. G-. Cornish, was called as a witness for the purpose of establishing the falsity of the insured’s answers. He was called into consultation by Dr. Lund, the previously named witness, during the insured’s last illness, and testified that he diagnosed his condition as hemorrhage due to an ulceration of the stomach. It was sought to show by him that the condition which he found must have existed for a long time prior and must have been present at the time the answers were given, and was caused by indigestion. A careful examination of his testimony, however, fails to give it that effect and he refused to say how long the trouble which caused the hemorrhage . had prevailed, or what, in his opinion, caused it.

It cannot be said, therefore, that the evidence furnished any basis for the submission to the jury of the truth or falsity of the answers of the insured. It appears, on the other hand, that the answers of the insured were true. It follows that the action of the court in instructing a verdict for appellee was correct.

There being no error in the record, the judgment of the lower court will be affirmed; and it is so ordered.