In an action upon a health and accident insurance policy issued by defendant to plaintiff and tried before a jury, the jury found in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $3,730. Plaintiff appealed, on the ground that the amount awarded was less than he was entitled to under the terms of the policy.
*331 Questions Presented
Were the terms of the policy ambiguous and hence extrinsic evidence should have been admitted to interpret them, and if not, was the court’s interpretation correctf
Pacts
The facts are not disputed. On December 2,1941, defendant issued plaintiff, who was then 53 years of age, a “Lifetime Income Protection Policy” which provided “Benefits for Loss of Life, Limb, Sight or Time, by Accidental Means, or Loss of Time by Sickness as Herein Limited and Provided.” Its terms as they affect this litigation will be set forth hereafter. In December, 1942, plaintiff was injured. The jury found that plaintiff “was wholly and continuously disabled by bodily injuries resulting directly and independently of all other causes and through purely accidental means from December 23, 1944, to and including May 22, 1949.” This finding is not challenged. Plaintiff became 56 years of age on September 18, 1944. Defendant paid plaintiff $100 per month from the date of the accident until December, 1944, and then stopped payment. The record is not clear as to whether this was because defendant believed plaintiff had fully recovered, or because plaintiff would not accept payments at a reduced monthly sum. This action was then brought. At the trial defendant took the position, as it does now, that the policy provided that when the insured became 56 years of age the monthly payments were reduced 10 per cent each year until the insured should become 60, and thereafter would be $50 per month. Plaintiff’s position was and is (1) that the policy provides for payment of $100 per month without reduction; (2) that if the policy is construed as contended by defendant, then the policy is repugnant to the California Insurance Code; and (3) that at worst, the policy is ambiguous and therefore the court erred in refusing to permit plaintiff to introduce parol evidence to explain the ambiguity. The trial court took the position that the policy was not ambiguous, construed it in accordance with defendant’s contention, and so instructed the jury. The amount awarded by the jury was in accordance with this construction.
Terms of Policy
The terms relevant here follow: The association “Does Hereby Insure Ivan1 B. Hobson . . . against loss of life, limb, sight or time, resulting directly and independently of all *332 other causes, from bodily injuries sustained during any term of this Policy, through purely Accidental Means (Suicide, sane or insane, is not covered), and against loss of time beginning while this Policy is in force and resulting from disease contracted during any term of this Policy, respectively, subject, however, to all the provisions and limitations hereinafter contained.” After the words “Does Hereby Insure,” on either side of the policy appears in large type the following:
“Monthly Benefits $100.00 Death Benefit $2,500
“Maximum Maximum
Monthly Benefits $200.00 Death Benefit $5,000”
On the top of page 2, is part D, a crucial clause in this case. The clause reads:
“Part D. Total Accident Disability Benefits For Life “If such injuries, as described in the Insuring Clause, do not result in any of the above mentioned specific losses but shall wholly and continuously disable the Insured for one day or more, the Association will pay a monthly indemnity at the rate of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars per month so long as the Insured lives and suffers said total loss of time.”
On the third page, under the heading “Additional Provisions” appears the following: “(e) The term of this policy begins at 12 o’clock noon, Standard Time, on date of issue to the Insured against accident and on the thirty-first day thereafter against disease and ends at 12 o’clock noon on date any renewal is due. No reduction in the benefits of this policy shall be made during the lifetime of the Insured on account of age except in Parts D and K which shall be reduced ten per cent when the Insured is or becomes fifty-six years of age, with further reduction of an equal amount effective with each additional attained year of age to and including age sixty.” The italicized portion of this clause is in heavier type than the first sentence.
Interpretation
The basic question is the effect of this last clause (which for convenience will be called “the reduction clause”) on “Part D” which provides for indemnity at $100 per month for life. The trial court was correct in its finding that the policy did not require parol evidence for its interpretation, and therefore, that such evidence was inadmissible. However, the court was in error in its construction of the disputed clause. It held that additional provision (c) modified part D, so that when *333 an insured who had been injured prior to his attaining age 56, reached that age, the $100 monthly payments would be reduced to $90; at age 57 they would be reduced to $80, and so on until from age 60 on they would be $50.
In construing an insurance policy it must be borne in mind that where two constructions are reasonable, that which is more favorable to the insured should be adopted.
(Frenzer
v.
Mutual Ben. H. & A. Assn.,
The policy should be read as a layman would read it and not as an attorney or an insurance expert might read it. From an examination of the policy it is obvious that a layman would reasonably conclude that it provided that were he less than 56 years of age at the time of injury, he would receive $100 per month as long as he lived and was wholly and ■continuously disabled. Were he 56 years of age when injured, he would receive $90 per month as long as the disability continued ; were be 57 years of age when injured he would receive $80 per month for such period, and were he 60 years of age or older at the time of injury, he would receive $50 per month for such period.
A layman reading the policy would first be struck with the statement on the first page of the policy, in bold type and large figures, “Monthly Benefits $100.00 Maximum Monthly Benefits $200.00.” Then in large letters at the top of page 2 he would see “Part D. Total Accident Disability Benefits Fob Life” followed by the paragraph stating that he would be paid 11 a monthly indemnity at the rate of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars per month so long as the Insured lives and suffers said total loss of time. ’ ’ In view of these eye-catching positive statements, his interpretation of the reduction clause would undoubtedly be as we have above set forth.
Cases like
Taff
v.
Atlas Assur. Co.,
If the court’s interpretation of the policy were correct, *334 then additional provision (c) is repugnant to part D, and under well established principles of insurance law must be disregarded. Part D clearly states that the indemnity to be paid is $100 per month as long as the insured lives, and the disability continues. There is nothing in part D or the insuring clause or clauses that modifies this statement in any way.
The language in
Frenzer
v.
Mutual Ben. H. & A. Assn., supra
(
If additional provision (e) attempts to modify this positive statement it is repugnant to it. That the clauses are repugnant to each other is well shown by the case of
Boillot
v.
Income Guaranty Co.,
There are three legal principles which apply to this situation ; (1) Where two clauses of an agreement are repugnant, “the first shall be received and the latter rejected.” (12 Am, Jur. 778, § 243;
Burns
v.
Peters,
Defendant relies on language in
Security T. & S. Bk.
v.
New York Indem. Co.,
In view of our holding that the above is a reasonable interpretation of the provisions of the policy as they appear upon its face, it becomes unnecessary to consider the contentions of plaintiff and of the attorney general raised in the amicus curiae brief, as to whether the form of the policy, that is, the sizes of the type and the physical relationship of the various paragraphs, complies with the Insurance Code and the rules of the Insurance Commissioner. If the insured had been 56 years of age or over when injured, these matters would become important on the question of whether the reduction clause would be illegal, but are not necessary to be determined here.
The judgment is reversed. Inasmuch as defendant has not appealed from the judgment based upon the verdict to the effect that plaintiff was wholly disabled through accidental means for the period from December 23,1944, to May 22,1949, the trial court is instructed to enter judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $100 per month for the said period of disability, together with interest and costs.
Peters, P. J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
