Cooper v. Belt Automobile Indemnity Ass'n

79 Pa. Super. 479 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1922

Opinion by

Gawthrop, J.?

This is a suit on a policy of insurance covering collision damage to an automobile. Tbe facts are not in dispute. Plaintiff was insured in appellant company under a contract in force from May 10, 1920, to May 10, 1923, unless sooner terminated by plaintiff’s forfeiting bis rights by failure to make bis deposits. On June 10, 1920, plaintiff received notice from tbe company that tbe semiannual deposit would be due on or before July 10, 1920. He sent tbe deposit on July 19, 1920. It was received and credited to plaintiff’s account by tbe company on July 22, 1920. On July 21, 1920, plaintiff bad an accident to bis automobile and suffered a loss. Tbe company, without notice of tbe loss, reinstated plaintiff under tbe policy on July 22, 1920, as of July 10, 1920. On July 20,1920, tbe company wrote to plaintiff, urging bim to pay bis overdue deposit, saying: “Tbe return of tbe attached card together with your semiannual pre*481mium as stated thereon will reinstate your protection. and place it fully in force for the following six months’ period.” The card referred to contained an application for reinstatement and a statement of the amount of the deposit which was due. At the bottom of the card was the following: “If you have already forwarded this deposit, kindly disregard this notice.” This appeal is from the judgment of the common pleas entering judgment on the verdict of the county court.

One of the provisions of the contract of insurance is: “Any subscriber failing to deposit the amount called for by the attorneys, within thirty days from the date such call is mailed, directed to him at his last known address as shown by the records of the association, shall forfeit all his rights as a subscriber of said association so far as losses subsequently incurred' by him are concerned; provided, he may be reinstated within such time and for such period and on such terms as may be stipulated by the attorneys-in-fact; and, provided, further that all losses and claims arising or occurring, or all accidents happening after such forfeiture of subscriber’s rights and prior to date of reinstatement shall not be covered or allowed by said association.” Defendant asserts a forfeiture under this clause of the policy. On the other hand, plaintiff contends that defendant, by its conduct, waived its right to enforce a forfeiture. Conceding that by acceptance of the deposit on July 22,1920, the policy was restored to life as of that date, it does not follow that plaintiff was protected against a loss happening prior to that date but after July 10, 1920. The consequence of the default of the insured in not paying the deposit when due was that the policy thereupon ceased to bind the company and protect the insured, and this without any act or declaration on the part of the company: Lantz v. Insurance Company, 139 Pa. 546. The payment of the deposit was not made until after the loss, and the policyholder has no right to maintain this action without showing that the default in the payment *482of the deposit was either waived or excused by the company. Defendant does not allege an express waiver, and the only act which the company did prior to the loss, to which the insured points as evidence of waiver, is the letter sent to plaintiff the day before the accident, urging him to pay his overdue deposit and reinstate himself and stating: “If you have already forwarded this deposit, kindly disregard this notice.” This does not even tend to establish a waiver, but called upon the insured to reinstate himself by payment of the deposit which was due. It was express notice of the suspension of the policy and taken as strongly as possible against the company, was a promise to reinstate the insured under the policy at once when the deposit arrived. But the deposit was received after the loss, and the acceptance of it merely reinstated the policy as of the date of its receipt. It would serve no useful purpose to review the law upon the subject of implied waiver of conditions in an insurance policy. Adopting the language of Judge Orlady, in Shay v. Phænix Benefit Assn., 28 Pa. Superior Ct. 527, “Waiver is essentially a matter of intention, and to establish it there must be some declaration or act, from which the insured might reasonably infer that the insurer did not mean to insist upon a right which because of a change of position induced thereby it would be inequitable to enforce.”

In the present case, there is not only an absence of any acts or declarations tending to induce a reasonable belief that the company had waived a forfeiture under the contract, but the acts and declarations were notice to plaintiff that the policy had lapsed and could be reinstated only when the overdue deposit was received by the company. The court below fell into error in holding that there was evidence in the case to support a finding by jury that defendant had waived its right to enforce the forfeiture clause in the policy.

The assignments of error are sustained, judgment is reversed and the record remitted to the court below with direction to enter judgment in favor of the defendant. .

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