190 Ky. 134 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
The agent of the Commonwealth Life Insurance Company took from Lawrence McGuire of Owensboro, on August 11, 1917, a written application for a policy of life insurance for $500.00 on the life of McGuire and McGuire at that time paid him one dollar, which was to be' applied on the first premium installment if the application was accepted and the policy issued, and gave to McGuire a receipt which reads as follows:
“August 11, 1917. ■
“Received from Lawrence McGuire $1.00, being a deposit on account of application for insurance in the ¡Commonwealth Life-Insurance Co., made on the life of self for $500.00, which said deposit is to be paid to the company if the application be accepted and returned to the applicant if the application be rejected. No obligation is incurred by said company by reason of this deposit unless and until a policy is issued upon said application, and unless at the date and delivery of said policy the life proposed is alive and in sound health.
“C.W. Poole.
“Signature of agent receiving deposit.”
By the terms of the application signed by McGuire and the receipt signed by Poole as agent of the insurance company, it was agreed that the company was not to incur liability on account of the deposit of one dollar
In the case of Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York v. Thomson, &c., 94 Ky. 257, where the facts were very similar to those of this case, we said: “It seems to us the contract of insurance must, under such circumstances, be regarded as completed and binding on the parties before death of the assured, and that it was both the right and duty of Cochran to deliver the policy as was done. For not only was it placed in his hands by Buckley for that purpose, but the latter received and appropriated to use of the company amount of the premiums that had been placed to credit of Cochran. The lower court did not, therefore, err in assuming and instructing the jury that the policy had been delivered.”
The text in Cyc. on this subject is, “"Where nothing remains to be done but to "issue a policy in accordance with the terms of the application by way of acceptance of such application, the contract becomes complete when the policy is placed in the mail, postage prepaid, for delivery in due course to the insured. Likewise the placing of the completed policy in the hands of the agent for delivery without condition to the insured completes the contract, although the actual delivery by the agent to the insured is not made before the death of the insured.” 25 Cyc. 718.
One of the best statements of the law applicable to the facts of this case is found in 14 R. C. L. 898, where it is said, “Where an application is made for a life policy and a sum of money paid to the agent of the insurer to be applied on the first premium if the insurer decides to issue a policy, the contract is complete on the issuance of the policy, and no delivery is essential.”
The same text on page 899 says: ‘ ‘ The deposit of an insurance policy in the mails, addressed to the insured, is a delivery to him, and the same is true of the mailing, or otherwise delivering the policy to the agent of the .insurer with unconditional instructions to deliver the same to the insured, though it is otherwise where the instructions to the agent are conditional. Where
■ As said in New York Life Insurance Company v. Babcock, 101 Ga. 67, “The controlling question, then, on this subject of delivery is, not who has actual possession, but who has the right of possession.” McGuire undoubtedly was entitled to the possession of the policy which had been issued upon his life and in which his wife,was named as beneficiary and on which a part of the premium had been paid and which he had demanded, and payment of the balance of the premium offered. The agent had no right to retain possession against him; in fact the agept was holding the contract for the use and benefit of McGuire.
Joyce on Insurance, secs. 97b, 100, 102 and 103.
Whether the possession followed the right of possession and the policy was, in legal contemplation, in possession of the insured at the time of the accident to and death of the insured, McGuire, or the company had by its conduct waived actual delivery of the policy, the plaintiff Mrs. McGuire was entitled to recover on it and’ the trial court did not err in so holding.
Judgment affirmed.