Opinion op tpie Court by
Affirming.
On July 24, 1907, thе appellant issued to Mathew B. McClure a policy insuring his life for $3,000, payable at death to his estate. The insured upon receiving the policy paid the first premium, and thereafter with appellant’s consent assigned the policy to his father and brother, the appellees, William B. and Joseph C. McClure. The second premium on the policy became due July 24, 1908, and was then paid by the insured. In October of that year he died, and, appellant having refused to pay the policy, appellees, claiming to be the beneficiaries, brought this action to compel its payment. The answer and counterclaim of appellant charged that the policy had been fraudulently obtainеd by the insured, and for that reason imposed no liability upon it, and should be' adjudged void, the fraud consisting in his having falsely represented in his application for the insurance, in answering certain questions contained therein, that he had never had consumption and had not consulted any physician since 1902; whereas, in fact he did have consumption and had beеn treated for it, and informed by his physician that he had it within the year he made his application; that he further falsely represented in his application that his mother was then in good health, when in fact she was then dying of
The policy which was copied into the petition and filed as an exhibit contained, among other things, the following stipulаtion: “If the premiums are duly paid as required, this policy, after it has been renewed beyond the first year, shall be incontestable.”
The principal question involved on this appeal is: Can the apellant, in view of the above stipulation of the policy, rely upon the defense interposed by its answer? It is insisted for appellant that it had the right to do sо, and that the Legislature of this state has, by the enactment of section 2515, Ky. St. (Russell’s St. sec. 224), prescribed a period of limitation within which relief can be obtained from a contract procured by fraud; that this period is five years, and
In the latter case the court,' in upholding the incontestable clause in the poliсy, in the opinion said: “Tn regard to the incontestable clause, appellants .insist : First, that it should be construed to exclude any defense based upon the personal fraud of ■' the in
In N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Weaver’s Adm’r,
Mathew B. McClure,' the insured, paid two premiums of $95.49 each on the policy issued him by the appellant. A year intervened between these payments, and by the payment of the second premium the policy became incontestable. If time-were an ingredient of appellant’s defense, he had a year to ascertain whether the statements and representations made by the insured in the application for the policy were false. It does not lie in appellant’s mouth to say that the time allowed for the investigation was unrеasonably brief, for it fixed the time and made it a stipulation of the policy, and to the time as thus fixed the insured, by accepting the policy, assented. Proofs of the insured’s death must have been promptly furnished appellant, for suit was brought on the policy less than two months after his death. Within that two months appellant obtained all the' facts with .respect to the alleged fraud pleaded- in its answer and counterclaim, and these facts, so quickly discovered after the death of the insured, could by any sort
We do not agree with counsel for appellant that the opinion in the case of Kansas Mut. Ins. Co. v. Whitehead is in conflict with that of Union Central Life Ins. Co. v. Spinks,
In the Whitehead Case, as in the one at bar, the question involved was as to the validity of the stipulation making the policy incontestable. The question of limitation has no proper place in either case. Indeed, statutes of limitations apply to actions and not defenses; so discussion of the statute of limitations in this case would, thеrefore, be irrelevant. It is not claimed by appellee that appellant’s defense is barred by limitation. The sole question is: Does the stipulation of the policy in question preclude appellant from making the defense set up in the answer? The fact that the effect of holding the policy incontestable would be to exclude a defense that would be good.if the policy were not incontestable is beside the question. It is incontestability of
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.
