192 Ind. 565 | Ind. | 1922
Appellee sued on a policy of insurance '
The basis of appellee’s demand consists of the following facts, alleged in the complaint and answer:
In 1893, the Masons’ Union Life Association, an Indiana corporation, issued to appellee’s decedent a policy of insurance on his life, payable to appellee, by which it promised to pay $2,000 to her upon satisfactory proof ■of his death, in consideration of the payment of $5.30 per month for fifteen years, and dues in the association of fifty cents per month, and after fifteen years the payment of such an amount as should enable the reserve of the policy and its income to carry the . policy. It stipulated that after three years from its date it should “be incontestable,” but should become null and void “if the insured shall not pay the instalments and dues as herein set forth, on or before the time mentioned for
On July 16,1904, the appellant, an insurance company . organized under the laws of Illinois, entered into a contract with the Union Life Insurance Company, which provided that the latter company thereby transferred all its risks to and reinsured them in the appellant company, and should transfer, convey and deliver to appellant all its property, papers and assets, in consideration of which appellant accepted the same and agreed to re-insure (subject to all the terms and conditions and to the extent as expressed in said contract) all the living members and policy holders of the Union Life Insurance Company then in good standing, which description included appellee’s decedent; and that the insured should pay to appellant, instead of said Union Life, “the premiums or assessments, required by and in accordance with the terms of” his policy, as they became due and payable under its provisions. All the assets of the Union Life Insurance Company were thereupon taken over by appellant, and it issued to appellee’s decedent a certificate, reciting that it was a “policy of reinsurance” to be attached to his policy, designated by number, and that appellant guaranteed any liability which might be established on account of said policy, but subject in each instance to the provisions of the reinsurance contract, and (also subject thereto) that “no change of policy * * * further than the attachment of this reinsurance policy to said policy * * * is necessary in order to bind the said Federal Life Insurance Company to the payment of the same,” the reinsurance contract being four times referred to therein as containing conditions to which its provisions were subject.
In October, 1911, appellant again notified the insured in writing that it had charged said liens against his policy, and also that it had charged him with $230.56 as a difference in premiums, and with $51.61 as interest thereon, and from that time until his death he paid the increased premium. But at no time did the insured object to said liens, or to appellant charging them against his policy, or assert a claim that any of them were not valid and binding liens against his policy contract.
The reinsurance contract, as executed by appellant, was filed with the insurance department of the State of Indiana, in 1904, where the insured could have examined it or obtained a copy, and the insured never asked appellant for any information as to its terms and conditions or for a copy, but appellant would have furnished him such information if he had asked. At the end of each calendar year the insurance departments of each of the. States of Illinois and Indiana valued the outstanding policies of appellant to determine whether or not appellant was solvent and had the required reserve, and they computed the reserve on this policy in accordance with the terms of the reinsurance contract, and each year recognized the liens charged • thereon as valid. The reinsurance contract, set out as an exhibit, contained certain clauses which appellant insists expressly provided that appellant might charge the liens against this policy and make the deductions from it, as
The Union Life Insurance Company having been organized under the provisions of Acts 1897 p. 318, supra, the reinsurance of its risks- by appellant was made under authority and- subject to the provisions of §15 of that act (§4753 Burns 1914), which has been repeatedly construed to require that where the reinsuring company took over all the assets and liabilities of another company and reinsured its risks, the risks were taken as they existed at the time of the transfer, and could not be modified by stipulations in a contract of reinsurance between the two companies. Therefore, an incontestable policy for $2,000 could not be changed into a reinsured policy for only one-third of that amount by what was written into such a contract. Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Petty (1912), 177 Ind. 256, 97 N. E. 1011; Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Kerr (1909) , 173 Ind. 613, 89 N. E. 398, 91 N. E. 230; Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Weedon, Admr. (1918), 68 Ind. App. 529, 118 N. E. 842; Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Maxam (1917), 70 Ind. App. 266, 117 N. E. 801, 118 N. E. 839; Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Lillibridge (1912), 51 Ind. App. 704, 98 N. E. 1015; Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Risinger (1910) , 46 Ind. App. 146, 91 N. E. 533.
But it is insisted by appellant that the facts of the case at bar present certain new questions not before the courts in any of the cases cited. The first of these questions discussed in appellant’s briefs is as to the effect upon the rights of appellee under the reinsured policy, which may have resulted from the failure of the insured to offer any objection when notified by appellant that liens in the amounts as stated, for the causes named, were “charged and then existing
The judgment is affirmed as of the date of submission of this cause, with five per cent, damages and costs.