3 Ga. App. 685 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The plaintiff in error brought an action on a •contract of insurance issued by the defendant company on the life of her husband, Walter B. Arnold. The defendant demurred to certain portions of the petition, and its demurrer was sustained by the lower court, and exceptions pendente lite were filed to the .•judgment sustaining the demurrer. The case was then submitted to the judge, without the intervention of a jury, upon,!an agreed ■statement of facts, and a judgment was rendered, finding the company not liable on the contract of insurance. Exception is •taken also to this judgment.
Plaintiff’s petition set out, that on the 29th day of January, 1901, the Empire Mutual Annuity & Life Insurance Company issued and delivered to her husband a policy of insurance upon his life, whereby said company insured the life of said Arnold for an •annuity of $600, and promised, upon receipt and acceptance of .satisfactory proof of death of the insured, to pay petitioner, during the continuance of her widowhood, said annuity of $600, and, •at her death or remarriage, to pay the said annuity to her minor •children until they may die or reach the age of twenty-one years. It was further alleged in the petition that the premiums, according to' the terms of the policy, are payable, $187.50 cash, payable •one fourth on the 29th day of January, April, July, and October •of each year, and that the policy further provides that “a grace of thirty days will be allowed in the payment of premiums hereafter ■due on this policy.” The petition further alleged, that the full annual premiums for the years 1901 and 1902 had been paid in full to the company; that on the 22d of May, 1903, the company took a note from petitioner’s husband for the balance then due for the 1903 premium, the note being for $181.50 and' maturing October 15, 1903, and that there had been paid upon the note on March 7, 1904, the sum of $50. It was further alleged, that on the 7th of March, 1904, the company accepted from said Walter B. Arnold a note for the balance of the 1904 premium, to wit, the sum of $168.50, maturing October 1, 1904. Copies of the insur.ance policy and of the notes above mentioned were attached to the ■petition. In the 10th paragraph the petition alleged that Walter B. Arnold, the insured, was taken to his bed with typhoid fever,
The defendant company demurred as follows: “(1) Paragraph 11 of the petition should be stricken because it is not alleged that there was any specific amount of money actually tendered, or that ‘the friend and neighbor’ was acting by authority from the insured. Besides, the allegations are immaterial and irrevelant. (2) .Paragraph 12 should be stricken because immaterial and irrelevant. (3) Paragraph 13 should be stricken because: (a) Immaterial and irrelevant. (6) It appears from said paragraph that said Watterson was a mere volunteer and had no authority to act for the insured, (c) It is not alleged that said Calloway, as'agent of defendant, was authorized to deal with such matters or had power to make any negotiations or promises, in the transactions-complained of, that would be binding on defendant. (4) Paragraph 15 should be stricken because the facts alleged show it is not such a tender of money as the law requires; and besides, it is immaterial and irrelevant.” The plaintiff offered an amendment to the 11th and 13th paragraphs of the original petition, but the court sustained the demurrer of the defendant, and struck paragraphs 11th, 12th, 13th, and 15th of the petition.
The defendant filed an answer denying liability on the contract of insurance, on the ground that one of the conditions of the policy of insurance was that if any premium was not paid on or before the day it was due, the policy became void; and set up, in its answer, that the note of May 22, 1903, contained a provision that if said note was not paid at maturity the policy should be ipso facto null and void; and that, contemporaneously with the acceptance of the note dated March 7, 1904, and as a part of the agreement, the company delivered to said Arnold a receipt specifying that the non-payment of the -note due October 1, 1904,
In the statement of the facts submitted to the presiding judge, it was agreed by the parties, that on the 29th day of January, 1901, the Empire Mutual Annuity & Life Insurance Company executed, issued, and delivered to W. B. Arnold the policy of insurance, a copy of which is attached to the petition, whereby said company insured the life of said Arnold for the consideration named in said policy for an annuity of $G00, and promised, upon sufficient proof of death, to pay said annuity (payable quarterly), to be paid during the continuance of her widowhood, and that the premium specified to be paid was $187.50, the policy providing that sáid premium shall be paid in advance upon the delivery of said policy, and on or before the 29th day of January in every year until twenty full years have been paid, or until the prior death of the insured; said policy providing further that each policy holder has the right, at the time any premium falls due, to pay a quarterly or semi-annual premium, according to the company’s schedule. If the yearly premium is not paid in full at the beginning of the policy year, but is paid in 'installments, all unpaid portions of said installments should be considered and charged against the policy. It was further agreed that the policy had the following entries upon it at the time it was delivered. “Premiums payable as follows: $187.50 cash, payable on 29th day of January, April, July, and October of each year;” and that the policy further provides that “a grace of thirty days be allowed in the payment of premiums hereafter due on this policy.” It was admitted that the annual payments for the years 1901 and 1902 were paid in full to the company, and that the company took from Walter B. Arnold, on May 22, 1903, for the balance then due said company for the 1903 premium, his note for $181.50, maturing October 15, 1903, and that a payment of $50 was made
Four questions are raised by the record. The controlling question in the case is, whether the company waived the provisions of the policy which declare a forfeiture in the event that premiums are not paid when due; because, unless this be true, the three remaining points presented by the record need not be considered. In our consideration of this question, we start with the cardinal proposition that the contract shall be most strictly construed against the insurer, and influenced by the well-settled rule that forfeitures are not favored, and that courts will seize every opportunity to defeat a forfeiture. These principles' are so well settled as to require no citation of authority.
It was uncontradicted that the first two premiums were paid. On the 29th of January, 1903, the third premium was not paid, and the company had the right, without any express declaration on its part, or without the necessity for any act, to hold the contract terminated, unless the insured availed himself of the thirty daj^s of grace stipulated in the contract. This the insured did not do. Instead, however, of treating the contract as void and standing by the terms “nominated in the bond,” it' appears that the company, in the month of May, 1903, after the time when the insured could have made even a quarterly payment on the premium, elected to continue the contract by allowing the insured a $6 dividend, as if his policy had never terminated, and by taking his note for the remainder, due the subsequent October. It is. true that this note provided that if it were not paid at maturity thepoliey should be avoided, but it is plain that'the company abandoned its right to forfeiture on account of the non-payment of this note at maturity, if it possessed this right, because long thereafter it accepted payments on the note, and in taking the second
On January 29, 1904, the deceased should have paid a fourth premium. But, as in the previous year, he did not pay on the day set for payment, nor within the thirty days of grace allowed, either in whole or in part, by quarterly or semi-annual payment, and the company again had the absolute right, under the express provisions of the contract, to treat the contract as terminated and totally void. Instead of attempting to pursue this course, however, the company again took from the insured a promissory note, due October 1, 1904, for the remainder of the premium which should have been paid January 29 previous, after deducting the dividend for the previous year. This note did not contain the provision that non-payment of the note at maturity would void the policy, but a contemporaneous receipt accepted by the insured contained this stipulation, and rendered that stipulation as effectual a.s if it had been incorporated in the note itself. Before maturity
When the insured died the case stood thus. The insured had given a note, and accepted a contemporaneous receipt providing for a forfeiture of the policy if his note was not paid at maturity, which (as we have held before) was just as effectual for the purposes intended as if the provision of the receipt had been incorporated in the note. This note, however, represented the premium on the policy until Jánuary 29, 1905, a date three months subsequent to the death of the insured. It may be questioned whether, under the course of dealings between the parties, in view of the fact that the policy of insurance did not require its forfeiture for the non-payment of the notes, it would' have been forfeited in case the insured had lived, but certain it is that it can not lie held to have been forfeited so far as the beneficiary is concerned. When the first premium was paid upon the policy the contract not only became complete between the insurer and the assured, but the' beneficiary obtained a vested right in the contract, which could neither be defeated nor affected by subsequent contracts made between the insured and the insurer, in which she did not participate. It can not be questioned that if the original contract of insurance (which is evidenced by the policy and all papers contemporaneous therewith and attached thereto as a part of the contract of insurance) had provided that non-payment of notes taken in lieu of premiums should work a forfeiture of the policy, nonpayment of this note due October 1, 1904, would have rendered the contract null and void. But such is not the stipulation of the policy now under consideration. It simply provides that if the premium is not paid at maturity, the policy shall be avoided. In other words, the policy, except for the waiver of the company, was voidable, if not void, when the last note was taken. When, however, the company elected to waive the payment of the premium in cash, and took a note in lieu of cash, it did something it had the power to do, and the effect of its action was (so far as the beneficiary is concerned) to complete the payment of the pre
We conclude, therefore, that so far as- the beneficiary under the contract of insurance is concerned, the-contract was valid and enforceable at the time of the death of the insured, with the right on the part of the company, under a provision of the policy (which seems to recognize and foresee just such contingencies as this), to retain the amounts due it which are-represented by the notes. Our decision rests upon four well-established principles: (1) Conditions and provisions contained in a contract of insurance will be strictly construed against the insurer. (2) The giving of a note by the insured for a premium, and acceptance of such note by the insurer, is equivalent to a cash payment, and default in payment of such note at maturity will not work a forfeiture of the policy, unless the original contract of insurance, as well as the notes, contains a stipulation to that effect. (3) The beneficiary of a contract of insurance having a vested right therein, the rights ■ of such beneficiary can not be affected by any acts or dealings between the insurer and the insured which may tend to engraft new conditions upon the contract of insurance, without the consent of the beneficiary. (4) Further, any agreement or course of action on the part of the insurance company, which leads a party insured honestly to believe that by conforming thereto a forfeiture of his policy will not be incurred, will estop the company from insisting upon the forfeiture, though it might be claimed under the letter of the contract.
1. In our decisions in Missouri Insurance Co. v. Lovelace, 1 Ga. App. 446 (58 S. E. 93), North British Insurance Co. v. Tye, 1 Ga. App. 380 (58 S. E. 110), and Athens Ins. Co. v. Toney, 1 Ga. App. 492 (57 S. E. 1013), this court has committed itself to the position that policies of insurance will be liberally construed in favor of the object to be accomplished, and that the conditions and provisions of every contract of insurance will be strictly construed against the insurer who prepares and proposes the contract. To use the language of the Supreme Court in Mass. Life Association v. Robinson, 104 Ga. 256 (30 S. E. 918), “if a policy of insurance is capable of being construed in two ways, that interpretation must be placed upon it which is most favorable • to the insured.” The construction of the policy in the present case is
The question as to the extent of the authority of an agent of the company to waive the prompt payment of the premium on the ■day upon which it is due, or the like authority on 'the part of an agent to waive payment in cash, or to accept an evidence of debt in lieu of cash payment, does not enter into this case, for it is stated in the agreed statement of facts that both the notes given by the insured for premiums were taken and accepted by the defendant company itself, and it is- well settled that the proper officers of an insurance company can waive the payment of premiums in cash.
The contention of the defendant in error is, that the receipt ■which was accepted by the insured contemporaneously with giving the note provided that the policy should be void unless the note was paid at maturity, and that as the note was not paid at maturity, the-policy itself was thereby avoided. It has been frequently held in this State that where the policy contaiped the stipulation that when notes given in payment of premiums were not paid at maturity, the policy should be null and void, and that the non-payment of such notes worked a forfeiture of the policy. Sullivan v. Indemnity Association, 101 Ga. 809 (29 S. E. 41). This holding is absolutely correct, because in such cases the'payment of the note is one of the conditions of the contract — conditions precedent to its creation. But it is quite another thing to hold, in the
2. So far as we have been able to discover, in every case where it has been decided in this State that the non-payment of premium notes forfeited the policy of insurance, the policy itself ■contained an express stipulation to that effect. The exact question whether a policy, not containing a provision for a forfeiture upon the non-payment of notes given for premiums, shall be avoided because notes containing such stipulation and accepted by the company for the premiums in lieu of a cash payment are not paid has, so far as we can find, never been decided in this State. But many courts of the highest standing have held that where a promissory note is taken in payment of a premium, the failure to pay the note will not forfeit the policy, although it is so stipulated in the note, — and such is the doctrine of the text-books on insurance, — when there is no condition in the policy providing for forfeiture on the non-payment of notes. “When the condition as to forfeiture' for non-payment on maturity of a note given for the premium is contained only in the note, the mere fact that the note is not paid at maturity does not of itself avoid the policy. Such a provision is a condition subsequent, of which the company must avail itself by clear and unequivocal acts. It must demand payment at the proper time, and, if no payment is made, it must declare the policy void.” Joyce on Insurance, §1211. So also it is said in May on Insurance, §345 E: “If there is not a stipulation to that effect, .failure to pay a premium note at maturity will not defeat the policy. And a stipulation in the premium note itself, that its non-payment shall avoid the policy (no such provision being contained in the policy), is nugatory. Where a com
When the first premium was paid the contract was complete. Hipp v. Fidelity Ins. Co., 128 Ga. 491 (57 S. E. 892). And unquestionably at that time the rights of the beneficiary were vested. This principle has been settled in this State ever since the decision in Smith v. Head, 75 Ga. 755; it was impliedly recognized in Cason v. Owens, 100 Ga. 143 (28 S. E. 75), and was expressly reaffirmed in Perry v. Tweedy, 128 Ga. 402 (57 S. E. 782). If the policy itself had provided for a forfeiture upon non-payment of .the note given for premiums, that effect must be given to the contract. But many courts of last resort have held, as we think justly, that where the policy itself (as in this case) contains no such stipulation, such a -condition contained in a promissory note, given for a premium, will not be engrafted upon the prior contract of insurance.
In Insurance Co. v. Hardie, 37 Kan. 674, where a note given in payment of a premium on a policy contained a stipulation for a forfeiture of the policy because of the non-payment of the note at maturity “as provided in the policy,” and the policy itself did not provide for a forfeiture on account of the non-payment of the note, it was held that the condition of forfeiture, mentioned in the note, was nugatory. In McAllister v. Ins. Co., 101 Mass. 588, in which there was a: provision in the policy, as in this, that it should be void for the non-payment of any premiums, the court
In considering the effect of the non-payment of a note taken for the payment of a premium, as a separate contract apart from the policy, it is to be borne in mind that the payment of the first premium completes the contract of insurance; that the contract of insurance is not for one year, but for the life of the insured or a term of years; that the insurance company has the right to take notes (either the notes of the assured or of any other person) in payment of annual' premiums; that the company can, at its pleasure, include or omit from the contract of insurance which it prepares and proposes a stipulation providing for a forfeiture of the policy upon the non-payment of such notes, but that after all, the payment of the annual premium, after the first premium is paid, is a condition subsequent “the non-performance of which may or may not, according to circumstances, work a forfeiture of the policy.” Thompson v. Ins. Co., 104 U. S. 252.
Nothing contrary to this principle is ruled in any of the cases cited by counsel for defendant in error. In National Life Asso. v. Brown, 103 Ga. 382 (29 S. E. 927), the contract of life-insurance itself stipulated that “if all stipulated payments or notes
In Iowa Life Ins. Co. v. Lewis, 187 U. S. 335, which is cited’, hy counsel for defendant in error, we are unable to find any withdrawal of the approval of the Supreme Court of the United States - of the decision in Insurance Co. v. French, 30 Ohio State, 240, as-contained in Thompson v. Ins. Co., 104 U. S. 252, so far as the-principle now under consideration is concerned. In the Lewis-case, on page 248, Justice McKenna, after holding that the payment of the premium can be .exacted simultaneously with the delivery of the policy, and discussing at some length the question as to-whether the receipt for the premium, delivered concurrently with the delivery of the policy itself, constituted part of the contract,, proceeds to say, that it was contended in the Thompson case,, supra, that “the mere taking of notes in payment of the premium was, in itself, a waiver of the conditional forfeiture, and Insurance Co. v. French, 30 Ohio St. 240, was cited to support the contention.” Justice McKenna then proceeds to say: “To the contention and citation it was replied [quoting the language of Justice Bradley on p. 257 in the opinion in the Thompson case] :• fBut, in that case [the French case], no provision was made in the policy for a forfeiture in case of the non-payment of a note-given for the premium, and an unconditional receipt for the premium had been given when the note was taken; and this fact was specially adverted to by the court. We think the decision in that case.was entirely correct. . . But in this ease the policy does contain an -express condition to be void if any note given in payment of premium should not be paid at maturity. We áre of the-opinion, therefore, that whilst the primary condition of forfeiture for non-payment of the annual premium was waived by acceptance-of the notes, yet, that the secondary "condition thereupon came into operation, by which the policy was to be void if the notes were.
We are satisfied, therefore, that our holding that the non-payment of the second note at maturity, although the receipt wrote into it the provision contained in the receipt, did not avoid this policy, which contained no such condition, is not only in accord with justice and a proper construction of the contract of i?isur
In construing the dealings between the assured and the insurer, it can rather be inferred (if the sickness of the deceased had not intervened) that the company would have taken another note, for the payment of the premium to become due January 29, 1905, than that it would have insisted upon an assumed right of forfeiture on the first day of October, if the insured at that time had been in perfect health.
The fact that the note taken for the premium which fell due January 29, 1904, provided for the payment of interest is not without significance. The inclusion of a charge for interest in a note taken for a premium is adverted to by the Supreme Court of Michigan in Ins. Co. v. Bowes, 42 Mich. 19, in which the princi
3. The beneficiary of this policy had a-vested right in the contract, which could not be diminished by any subsequent agreement between the insurer and the insured, not provided for in the contract, and subject to be divested only by a change of the beneficiary. Perry v. Tweedy, 128 Ga. 401. This vested right could not be divested, under the terms of the contract of insurance, except “by filing with the company a written request, duly acknowledged by the company and accompanied by this policy^, such change to take effect upon the endorsement of the same upon the policy by the company.” This is the only method provided by the contract for changing the beneficiary named therein. The plaintiff then had a vested right in the policy, according to its written terms and conditions, without her rights being affected by any subsequent terms agreed to by the insurer and the assured. It was lawful for the insurance company to take the note as payment for the premium, and the note itself says it was given for that purpose. But even if the stipulation in the receipt, that the policy should be void upon the non-payment of the note at maturity, would be binding upon the assured, the rights of the beneficiary could not be changed in this way, and the acceptance of the notes by the company was equivalent to the payment of a premium. Having taken the note without the consent of the beneficiary, the company will
As held by the Supreme Court in Mass. Life Ins. Co. v. Robinson, supra, “the note having been accepted in payment of the premium, it would seem that it became then a separate and independent transaction and had no further relation to the contract of insurance.” Justice Cobb, delivering the opinion in the case last cited, proceeds to say, “especially would this be true in the present case,- where there was no stipulation in the note that the contract should become forfeited upon failure to pay the note at maturity,” and cites May on Insurance, §345 E, and Joyce on Insurance, §1202; but it is plainly to be seen-that it was not held that a stipulation in the note that the contract should become forfeited • upon failure to pay the note at maturity would have that effect •in the absence, of a stipulation to that effect in the policy as in this ease; for that question was not then before the court.
The authorities in this country differ upon the question whether the beneficiary of a policy of life-insurance has or has not a vested interest therein. Some hold that a life policy and the money that may become due on it belongs, the moment it is issued, to the beneficiary, and that his right can not be affected by an act of the assured subsequent to the execution of the policy, except it be a .breach of condition. See Pingrey v. Ins. Co., 144 Mass. 374 (11 N. E. 562); Bayse v. Adams, 81 Kan. 268; Weisert v. Muehl, 81 Kan. 336; Willmasser v. Continental, 36 Iowa, 417; Allis v. Ware, 28 Minn. 166; Savings Bank v. Whittle, 63 N. H. 587; Hooker v. Suggs, 102 N. C. 115, 120; Life Ins. Co. v. Baldwin, 15 R. I. 106; Cline v. National Benefit Association, 111 Ind. 462. In other States, such as Illinois, Michigan, and Indiana, it is held that where the policy provides for a change of beneficiary, without the consent of the former appointee, the person first designated .acquires no vested interest during the life of the insured, but only .an expectancy. The true rule would seem to be that laid down by May on Insurance, §399 O, that “if there is express provision for change, or the original contract is of a character that shows that it was not irrevocable, or subsequent permission is obtained from the beneficiary, or the beneficiary dies before the assured and there is no provision inconsistent with a new appointment, a new desig
We have heretofore alluded to the fact that the policy in this ease provided for- a change of beneficiary, but that the right of the plaintiff in error was not divested by any attempt to comply with this condition of the contract. That the beneficiary of a contract of life-insurance has a vested right in the contract (though it may be divested by the selection under the special provision of the contract of a new beneficiary) admits of no question. In Smith v. Head, 75 Ga. 757, the point was squarely presented and decided. In that ease, Chief Justice Jackson, delivering the opinion, says: "This policy, payable at her husband’s death, is her property. The policy is payable to her then. It is as much hers as any other-property can be, as any note pajnble in the future, or any fee in remainder, or any other property not to be used by her until a certain event transpires.” And it was held that it was immaterial whether a transfer of the policy made by her for the purpose of paying the debt of her husband was made before or after his death, as, in either event, the policy was the property of the wife.
4. We think, too, that under the agreed statement of facts the company was estopped by the taking of the notes, and by the course of dealings between itself and the assured, as disclosed by the record, from denying that the note was taken in payment of the premium for the entire period up to the 29th of January, 1905. The amount for which the note was taken, the fact that allowance was made in -favor of the insured for a dividend, the fact that interest was charged upon the note, and the fact that a note was taken by the company for a second time, after the policy, by the strict letter, of its terms, could have been declared forfeited, as well as the fact that it does not appear that the company has either asked the surrender of the policy or offered to return the notes, all tend to show that the company, after having made a contract which it deemed to be advantageous to its interest, and which it was not
5. The tender to pay notes was obviated by the refusal to accept payment. No formal tender is necessary where express declarations are made by the party to whom money is payable, that he will not accept it if tendered. The law takes one who makes such a statement at his word, and does not thereafter require one who is willing to pay to do a vain thing. Biggers v. Pace, 5 Ga. 172 (4); Baynes v. Bernhard, 12 Ga. 150; Hunt v. Formby, 43 Ga. 79 (7); Ansley v. Hightower, 120 Ga. 719 (48 S. E. 197); 25 A. & E. Ency. L. (2d ed.) 904; Jackson v. Jacob, 3 Bing. N. C. 874. An offer to pay was made in the present case to the secretary of the company, and, after consideration of the same, the company refused to accept payment of the note.
6. One of the demurrers of the defendant company was based upon the proposition that the alleged tender was made by a volunteer, and -therefore was of no effect. The petition alleged that the offer to pay the notes was made by a friend, and at the instance of the beneficiaries. The code expressly declares that a tender may be made by a friend as well as by the party in interest himself, and, for this reason, it was error to sustain this demurrer.
7. We do not think it was error to strike the 13th paragraph of plaintiff’s petition, in which it was alleged that an agent of the company promised Mr. Watterson, a friend of the insured, to telephone him when the note given for the premium was due. It was not alleged that the promise related to a premium. The conversation related to a note. It has been held that an agent may waive the conditions respecting forfeiture for non-payment of an installment, and agree to give notice when each payment is due, and failure of such notice will excuse payment (May on Insurance, §3 GO C; Elliott on Insurance, §168 a; Phœnix Ins. Co. v. Tomlinson, 9 L. R. A. 318, note); but this is not a case of non-forfeiture for default in paying the premium. The premium was paid when the note was taken. Judgment reversed.