80 F.2d 499 | 5th Cir. | 1935
The appellant, the substituted beneficiary under two participating policies issued by the appellee, an Indiana corporation, on the life of James E. McKanna, each of those policies being dated January 19, 1926, one of them being No. 325388, and, as it was changed after its issue, for the sum of $16,326, the other, No. 325389, for the sum of $15,000, brought this action against appellee. Appellant’s petition contained two counts. It appeared in this court that appellant does not now assert any claim under the first count. The second count asserts the claim that upon the failure of the insured, or another for him, to pay, within the time allowed, a renewal premium on either of the policies, which premiums became payable on January 19, 1933, it became the duty of the appellee to use part of the aggregate amount of dividends on those policies which accrued on January 19, 1933, the dividend on policy No. 325388 being $45.55, and the dividend on policy No. 325389 being $13.95, making a total of $49.50, neither dividend being sufficient to pay a quarterly dividend on the policy on which the dividend accrued, by applying $32.50 of the last-named amount to pay a quarterly premium on policy No. 325389, which would have kept that policy in force beyond May 19, 1933, the date of the insured’s death, and that that policy was in force at the date o,f the death of the insured.
Undisputed evidence showed the following: Each of the policies stated the respective amounts of the annual, semian
The appellee replied to that communication by a letter showing the amounts necessary to complete payments of the net annual premiums “and advance interest on increased loan,” and inclosed so-called loan agreements, with direction that insured sign those instruments “and return them to us with a total remittance for $277.66.” Thereafter, there was no communication between the appellee and appellant or the insured prior to the latter’s death on May 14, 1933. In accordance with a provision of the policies, when the annual premiums were paid on the policies on January 19, 1932, the appellee made loans to the insured under the usual policy loan agreements, the amount of the loan under the larger policy being $1054.55, and the amount of the loan under the smaller policy being $322.95; the amount of the loan under the larger policy being three cents less than its cash, or loan, value stated therein, and the amount of the loan under the smaller policy being all of its cash, or loan, value. Under the heading "Loans,” the policies provided: “Failure to repay such loan, or to pay interest thereon when due, shall not void the Policy, unless the total indebtedness thereon shall equal or exceed the amount loanable hereunder, at the time of such failure, in which case the Policy shall immediately cease and become void: Provided, that such termination shall not take effect until thirty-one days after notice shall have been mailed by the Company, to the last known address of the insured and the assignee, if any.”
Substantially the just-quoted provision was embodied in the loan agreements signed by the insured. Each of those instruments stated that, in accordance with the named policy, the appellee “has this 9th day of February, 1932, loaned” and the insured has this day received the stated amount upon the pledge of said policy and its accumulations, and each of those instruments provided for the payment of interest in advance at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum to January 19, 1933, and annually in advance thereafter. Under the heading “Participation,” the policies provided: “This Policy shall participate in the surplus of the Company, * * * as apportioned by the Board of Directors of the Company, and at the end of the first year, provided the full annual premium for the second year is paid, and annually thereafter the divisible surplus so ascertained accruing thereon will be credited to this Policy as a dividend. Dividends thus credited, at the option of the owner of this Policy, shall be: First, paid in cash; or, Second, applied toward the payment of any premium; or, Third, applied to the purchase of paid-up participating additional insurance which may be surrendered at any time and the reserve value, not less than the original cash value, applied to pay current premiums; or, Fourth, left to accumulate to the credit of the Policy with interest at not less than three per cent per annum, and payable at the maturity of the Policy, or withdrawable at any time. Unless the owner of this Policy shall elect otherwise, in writing, the apportioned dividends shall be held to the credit of the Pol- > icy, in accordance with the Fourth Option, and if any premium is not paid at the expiration of the days of grace the Company will keep the Policy in force by applying said dividend accumulations to the pay-. ment due on the Policy, provided such accumulations are sufficient to pay a quarterly installment of an annual premium.”
“Said marking was a closing entry on the card. Said marking had no reference to the rights of the parties under the policy as such rights are determined by the policy contract and the defendant at all times considered the policy No. 32a388 lapsed under its terms for failure to pay the premium which fell due January 19, 1933. It is the custom of the company to make its book entries at some convenient date as of the time of the due date of the defaulted premium.”
“The defendant at all times has considered Policy 325389 lapsed under its terms for failure to pay the premium which fell due January 19, 1933.”
Upon the attention of the official of appellant who wrote the above-mentioned letter to appellee on January 14, 1933, being called to á memorandum made by the witness on that letter reading as follows, “McKanna says policy lapsed. W. U. M.,” the witness stated: “That he called Mc-Kanna and asked him whether he had paid the premiums on his policy; that McKanna said he had been unable to get the money and that unless the accumulated dividends had accrued the policies had lapsed, as he, McKanna, found it impossible to get the money to pay the premiums; that the witness then took out the correspondence between himself and the Insurance Company and looked the same over, and he, the witness, noticed that the premiums were to have been paid February 19.”
Upon the conclusion of the evidence the court granted a motion of the defendant (appellee) that verdict in its favor be directed. Following a verdict pursuant to that instruction, judgment for the appellee was rendered.
The above set out provision of the policies under the heading “Participation” gave the insured the option of choosing between four stated dispositions of a dividend. The only right possessed by the insurer with reference to the application of dividends was conferred by the concluding sentence of that provision, which right was restricted by the concluding words of that sentence, “provided such accumulations are sufficient to pay a quarterly installment of an annual premium.” It is quite manifest that the accumulations referred to in the just set out proviso are those accrued on the particular policy of which those words are a part. As there were no dividend accumulations on the policy sued on sufficient to pay a quarterly installment of an 'annual premium, the provision conferring a right, or imposing a duty, on the insurer with reference to the application of dividends is not applicable to ,the facts of the instant case. It may be assumed, with
We are of opinion that the decision under review is supported by the decision in the case of Williams v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 291 U.S. 170, 54 S.Ct. 348, 350, 78 L.Ed. 711, 92 A.L.R. 693, which affirmed a decision of .this court. 65 F.(2d) 240. In that case, in which the court overruled a contention that a current dividend should have been applied in the reduction of an amount advanced against the policy or to the purchase of extended insurance, with the result of extending the insurance beyond the date of the insured’s death, the policy, which lapsed, provided: “Or if the policy shall lapse, the dividend then due shall be paid in cash.” In the instant case, the policy sued on did not provide for the disposition of the 1933 dividend in the circumstances disclosed, but conferred on the insured the right to choose between four stated methods of disposing of that dividend. As to the question of the existence of a right or duty of the insurer to use the current dividend in paying a quarterly premium on the smaller policy, the difference between the facts of the two cases is not material. Under the facts of the instant case, the insured had, and retained, the right to have the 1933 dividends paid in cash. The insurer was not empowered to destroy or impair that right by using the whole or part of the 1933 dividends in paying a quarterly premium on the smaller policy. The insurer’s action' in so using part of the aggregate amount of the 1933 dividends would not have constituted a valid defense to an action by the insured, against the insurer to recover the amounts of those dividends. If the appellee had applied part of the aggregate amount of those dividends to the payment of a quarterly premium on the smaller policy, it would not, in so doing, have exercised the right of a creditor to apply on a debt to himself funds of the debtor in his possession or under his control, or performed the duty of preventing a forfeiture. The policies did not obligate the insured to pay the 1933 premiums. His failure to pay in that year a premium on either of those policies was merely a failure to exercise an option to keep the policy in force for an additional period by paying a premium within the time allowed, and, not having acquired the right to extended insurance, nothing was forfeited by his failure to pay such premium. Elton v. Northwestern Nat. Life Ins. Co., 192 Minn. 116, 255 N.W. 857. Upon the insured’s failure to pay any premium on the policy sued on within the time allowed by the policy for keeping it in force by the payment of a premium, the policy lapsed, without any action whatever on the part of appellee. That policy was not revived or kept alive by appellee’s failure to communicate with the insured after the lapse occurred. Neither of the so-called policy loans made to the insured upon a pledge of the policy and its accumulations created a “personal liability” or a “debt” of the insured, and in substance each of those so-called loans was a payment, not a loan. Williams v. Union Central Life Insurance Co., supra, 291 U.S. 170, at pages 179, 180, 54 S.Ct. 348, 78 L.Ed. 711, 92 A.L.R. 693. The provision of the policies conferring on the appellee the right (which was exercisable in the circumstances of the instant case) to terminate the policies upon the insured’s “failure to repay such loan, or to pay interest thereon when due,” when “the total indebtedness thereon shall equal or exceed the amount loanable hereunder, -at the time of such failure,” is inconsistent with appellee being under a duty to keep the smaller policy in force by applying part of the aggregate amount of the dividends which accrued on the policies in 1933 to the payment of a quarterly premium on the smaller policy.
Counsel for the appellant contended that the claim “asserted in this suit was
Affirmed.