16 S.E. 427 | N.C. | 1892
MacRAE, J., dissents. Duval French was insured in the defendant company for the benefit of his sister, the plaintiff. He had permitted his policy to lapse for nonpayment of dues, but subsequently he had paid them and had been reinstated by the defendant company, and at the time of his death he owed the defendant nothing. When reinstated by the company it gave him a receipt for the back dues, upon which was printed the following: "The conditions upon which the within payment (for which this receipt is given), is accepted are as follows: First. That said member is now living and of temperate habits, and is now, and has been during the past twelve months, in continuous good health and free from all disease, infirmity or weakness; otherwise said payment, and this receipt and said policy, shall be and is null and void, and the sum paid hereon shall be subject to the order of the within-named person. Second. The receipt and acceptance of the within sum by the association *246 shall not be held to waive forfeiture or expiration of membership, or to reinstate membership, or to create any liability on the part of the association under said policy, except upon fulfillment of the first condition of this receipt."
There was evidence tending to show that while the policy was (392) lapsed, and before this reinstatement receipt was given, the assured had been unwell. There was conflicting evidence as to the nature of this illness, the plaintiff contending that it was slight, temporary, and in no wise affected the permanent health of the assured. The defendant contended otherwise, that the illness was of a serious nature, and furthermore, that if this was not so, by the terms of the receipt, if the insured had been sick at all within the twelve months prior to the receipt, he had not been "in continuous good health," and the reinstatement was void. The assured was in good health when the receipt was given on 30 January, 1891, and died of typhoid fever on 13 July, 1891.
The court instructed the jury that "if within the time specified in the conditional receipt the only illness from which Duval French suffered was of a temporary nature, and not severe in its character, which did not render him uninsurable, and which indicated no vice in his constitution, and from which he had entirely recovered at the time of making the payments in January, 1891, then they should answer the second issue, Yes." To this the defendant excepted. There were several other exceptions, but they are all substantially embraced in this.
The second issue referred to was as follows: "Was Duval French in continuous good health and free from all disease, infirmity or weakness for twelve months prior to 30 January, 1891 ?"
The defendant appealed from the judgment rendered. We think the instruction of his Honor was correct. The reasonable construction to be put upon the agreement of the parties, as expressed in the conditions printed upon the reinstatement (393) receipt, was not that any illness, however slight or insignificant, within the preceding twelve months, should vitiate the reinstatement. It could mean no more than that, if there had been such illness or impairment of health that the insured would not have been received if he had been an original applicant for insurance, the reinstatement was void. The company could not have intended to put itself in a better condition, or the defendant in a worse one, than that. Had the policy been maintained in force, impairment of health would *247 not give the company a right to cancel it; as it had lapsed, the company, in effect, says to the assured that it will reinstate him upon payment of unpaid dues, provided he is in unimpaired health and would be insurable as a new risk. The language of the condition is, if the assured is of temperate habits, and is now and "has been during the past twelve months in continuous good health and free from all disease, infirmity or weakness." The issue presents the question if there had been a compliance with that condition. The court below told the jury that if the assured, during the twelve months prior to the reinstatement had suffered no illness, "except of a temporary nature and not severe in its characacter [character], which did not render him uninsurable, which indicated no vice in his constitution, and from which he had entirely recovered at the time of making the payment," this was a compliance with the condition of the receipt. The jury found the fact so to be. Upon such finding the plaintiff should be entitled to recover the amount due by the terms of the policy of insurance. The simple question is as to the construction to be placed upon the condition. No aid can be drawn from decisions in cases more or less similar in other states. Certainly a slight illness did not come within the terms quoted. The line must be drawn somewhere. We think that indicated in the charge a just one.
NO ERROR.
(394)