127 Mo. App. 195 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
Plaintiff sues upon a policy of what is commonly called health insurance, the indemnity vouchsafed therein being insurance payable to him in case he should become disabled from sickness within the terms of the policy. It will be more particularly referred to in a subsequent portion of the opinion.
Among other things, the policy required proofs of the sickness to be made in writing in a certain form, “within a month from the date the disability ceases.for which the indemnity is asked.” The answer of the defendant pleaded failure on the part of plaintiff to comply with this condition of the policy and invoked it as a defense to the action. The plaintiff relies upon a waiver of tbe condition because of its having positively denied all liability on the policy within the time allowed him for the furnishing of the proofs required.
The letter introduced, containing a positive denial of all liability on the policy by the defendant association, amounts, of course, under the well-established rule, to a waiver of proofs of loss. [Welsh v. Chicago, etc., Life Society, 81 Mo. App. 30; Cauveren v. Ancient Order
There seems to be tvvo provisions in the policy with respect to the amount of indemnity paid for different degrees of disability. The fourth section or provision of the contract provides: “Should -the member, by reason of sickness or disease—be wholly incapacitated from transacting any and every kind of work or business and as a-result thereof, be entirely and continuously confined to bed and. under the charge and subject to the personal calls of a licensed physician,he shall be entitled to thirty dollars per month for the first two months; forty dollars per month for the next twq months; forty-eight- dollars for the next month; and sixty .dollars for the next month; whereas section eight of the policy provides that only one-fifth of the indemnity above mentioned shall be paid the member while “com fined to the house and under the special calls” of a physician; -and the real controversy in this case arose
The judgment was for the right party and should be affirmed. It is so ordered.