193 Mo. App. 443 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1916
Lead Opinion
This suit is on a benefit certificate for $2,000 in a fraternal life insurance society on the life of Mary J. Crawford. The certificate makes the application and by-laws a part of the contract, which provide for the payment of monthly dues of $3.78, to become due on the first of each month, but allows payments to be made at any time during such month. The payments are to be made monthly without notice and it is made the duty of each member to pay the secretary of the local council or send same to the secretary of the society at its home office in Monmouth, Illinois, during each month the amount due for that month. It is stipulated that a failure to so make monthly payments if so facto suspends the nonpaying member without any action of the defendant or any of its officers.
The plaintiffs claim that the defendant, by a course of dealing with the insured with reference to the payment of her dues, had waived the strict compliance with the time of payment and led the insured to believe that her dues would be accepted if paid as late as the 9th of the following month. This is the important question in the case. It should he said, however, that defendant received this check on the 12th or 13th of March, and, without any knowledge of the insured’s sickness or death, at once returned the same as being paid too late, with notice that same would not he accepted without a certificate of the insured’s good health as provided by the by-laws.
Plaintiffs concede that, as defendant is a fraternal society having no or only a small reserve and collecting from month to month from its members only sufficient funds to pay its average losses and to carry the insurance of such member for that month only, the collection of monthly dues within the stipulated time is vital and that a provision for forfeiture in case of
The defendant, on the other hand, concedes that if the defendant, by its course of dealing with the insured, led her to believe that it would not insist on her paying same within the stipulated month but would grant still further time, then it could not without notice to her of intention to require strict compliance, forfeit for such delay in making payment. Such waiver may arise from repeatedly receiving overdue premiums without objection. There is abundance ofl authority for this also, but we cite only McMahon v. Maccabees, 151 Mo. 522, 537, 52 S. W. 384; James v. Life Ass’n., 148 Mo. 1, 12, 49 S. W. 978 and the authorities there cited.
The trial court hold plaintiff’s evidence as to waiver insufficient and directed a verdict for defendant, it having introduced no evidence. Later, the court granted a motion for new trial and defendant has appealed.
We have carefully read the evidence and are constrained to hold that the trial court was correct in its first ruling that there is no evidence in the case justifying a finding that defendant waived the sending of a check for the monthly dues at a date later that the end of the month for which the same was sent. It is true that several times defendant accepted payment by check mailed to it as late as the last day of the month, though such check was not in and of itself payment (Carrol Bank v. Bank, 58 Mo. App. 17, 26 and Barton Bros. v. Hunter, 59 Mo. App. 610, 618), and
As to actually receiving the check after the stipulated time, though deposited in the mail within the time, the evidence shows that defendant’s method of business contemplated that the monthly dues be paid to local collectors and that the members have the entire month in which to make payment. Where a member, as in this case, had removed to a locality where there was no local collector, such member might well contend and defendant concede that the post office be the local collector and that such member be given the whole month within which to deposit the payment in the post office. Indeed it has been held by the courts of high authority, and we would so hold if necessary to a decision of the case, that “Where an insurance company authorized payment of premiums by mail, the payment is made when the letter containing the remittance is deposited in the post office.” [Primeau v. National Life Ass'n., 28 N. Y. Suppl. 794, affirmed in 144 N. Y. Ct. App. 731; 39 N. E. 858.] In McCluskey v. National Life Ass’n., 28 N. Y. Suppl. 931, the court held that where payment could be made to a local agent within a stipulated time, then by directing or permitting such payment to be made by mail, the post office authorities became the agents of the, insurer to receive such payment and that depositing the same in the mail within the stipulated time was sufficient though not receiv
Plaintiffs are placed in the position of being compelled to admit that depositing the check in the post office is payment as of that date or else the February dues were not paid until the check was received on March 12th or 13th, and the insured was then dead. While defendant might, by a course of dealing in receiving past due payments from á living insured person, waive prompt payment of such dues, it Would be a long call on the doctrine of waiver to permit past due premiums to be paid as a matter of right after the insured’s death. [Schmidt v. Modern Woodmen (Wis.), 54 N. W. 264; Conway v. Insurance Co., 140 N. Y. 79, 35 N. E. 20; Thompson v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S. Sup. 422, 26 L. Ed. 765.] Plaintiffs do not claim ■a right to pay past due .premiums after the insured’s death.
In one or two instances the insured becáme delinquent and was thereafter permitted to pay back •dues and be reinstated on furnishing a health certificate. The by-laws gave the insured this right and such reinstatement on payment of back dues and furnishing a health certificate was not a waiver of any provision of the contract, but a compliance therewith. Such actions do not tend to show any waiver. [Smith v. Woodman of the World, 179 Mo. 119, 135, 77 S. W. 862; Richards v. Ins. Co., 68 Mo. App. 585, 590; French v. Hartford Life & Annuity Ins. Co. (Mass.), 48 N. E. 268; Parker v. Knights Templar (Neb.), 97 N. W. 281.] One payment of dues is shown to have been
We think it not very material and have not mentioned that the benefit certificate in suit was issued by a fraternal society other than defendant, and that defendant took over its business and continued to carry its risk under a contract to that effect made abont a year prior to the default in question. Where we have used the word “defendant” we have included its predecessor. The evidence shows that the most serious ground for establishing a waiver arose from acts of the first company in accepting by cheeks mailed the last day of the month, etc. Defendant insists that it is not responsible for nor bound by any act of waiver by its predecessor; that by the terms of the agreement by which it took over this business, the assured was bound, on accepting the transfer, to make payment of dues, though the same in amount as before, in accordance with defendant’s rules and regulations regardless of what might have been permitted by the old company. The defendant’s by-laws strictly require payment to be made during the month. Notice to this effect was frequently sent to this insured. The by-laws of the old company required payment to be made on or before the first day of the next month. The plaintiffs, by insisting that the by-laws of defendant govern in order to show a waiver by accepting over due premiums mailed on the last day of the month, makes the defendant independent of the old company in enforcing its by-laws, and when the insured accepted insur
It may also be well said that the insured, or her son, in omitting to make payment in February, did not rely on any supposed right to make payment later induced by past conduct of defendant or its predecessor; In transmitting the check on March 9 the son wrote: “Please find check enclosed for $3.78 to pay Mary J. Crawford’s premium for March. (Meaning February.) There was a misunderstanding. I thought my mother had paid this.” If the defendant had induced the insured to believe that dues for February could be paid in March as well as February, why mention a misunderstanding as to same being paid in proper time. Waiver in a case of this kind contains the element of estoppel, and estoppel is based on inducing a party to act to his injury different than he would have done otherwise. The premium was not paid during February because of a misunderstanding, not because of a belief that same could be paid during March.
In any view of the case plaintiffs are not entitled to recover under the facts disclosed by their own evidence, and the case is reversed and remanded with directions to set aside the order granting a new trial and to enter judgment for defendant in accordance with the verdict.
Rehearing
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
Our attention is called by the motion for rehearing and to modify the opinion to the fact that no verdict was rendered in the trial court for the'reason that when the court gave for defendant the instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence- and directing the jury to find for defendant, the. plaintiffs at once, as was their right, took an involuntary
In the case of Cohn v. Railroad, 182 Mo. 577, 81 S. W. 846, relied on by plaintiffs for an affirmance oi the judgment, the nonsuit was not based'Solely on the giving a demurrer to the evidence, but also on the ground that the court had refused to allow plaintiff tc amend the petition and, as the nonsuit was properly set aside.on this latter ground, the court held that il would not consider the question of the demurrer tc the evidence. Here, however, the setting aside of the nonsuit involved only the correctness of the court’i ruling in giving the demurrer, and having held tha the demurrer was properly given, we shall do here what was done in the case of Coatney v. Railroad, 151 Mo. 35, 51 S. W. 1036, reverse the order of the tria court setting aside the nonsuit and remand the casi with directions to overrule such motion.
It is so ordered.