The sole question for decision is whether the court below properly interpreted the applicable provision of the insurance policy.
The “Supplement” to the insurance policy provides: “It is agreed . . . that if the Insured . . . shall sustain PERSONAL Bodily INjuky which is effected solely through external, violent and accidental means . . . , and which directly and independently of all other causes results in any of the losses enumerated in the schedule of losses and indemnities, which appears below, within 90 days thereafter, the company will pay ... to the Insured ... (according to the schedule) $2500 for loss of one foot.
Plaintiff contends that there is ambiguity in the language employed, and one of the interpretations of which the supplement is reasonably susceptible is that insurer agrees to pay insured $2500 within 90 days after loss of a foot. On the other hand, defendant contends that the meaning is clear and unambiguous, and insurer- agrees to pay insured $2500 if the loss of a foot results within 90 days after the injury.
The judge adopted plaintiff’s interpretation and applied the rule that if the terms of an insurance policy “are susceptible of two interpretations, the one imposing liability, the other excluding it, the former is to be adopted and the latter rejected, because the policies having been prepared by the insurer, or by persons skilled in insurance law and acting in the exclusive interest of the insurance company, it is but meet that such policies should be construed liberally in respect of the persons injured and strictly against the insurance company.”
Electric Co. v. Insurance Co.,
But “policies of . . . insurance, like all other written contracts, are to be construed according to their terms. If plain and unambiguous, the meaning thus expressed must be ascribed to them.”
Electric Co. v. Insurance Co., supra.
Policies of insurance must be given a reasonable interpretation consonant with the apparent object and plain intent of the policies.
Parker v. Insurance Co.,
We are confirmed in our opinion by the sentence structure and punctuation employed. It is true that punctuation or the absence of punctuation in a contract is ineffectual to control its construction as against
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the plain meaning of the language.
Stanback v. Insurance Co.,
Time limitations in insurance policies, of less than 90 days, within which indemnifiable loss must occur from the date of an accident or injury, have been approved as to reasonableness by this Court.
Parker v. Insurance Co., supra; Clark v. Insurance Co.,
The court below erred in construing the meaning of the contract. The cause is remanded to .superior court for a determination whether the loss complained of occurred within 90 days after personal bodily injury, and, if so, whether such injury, directly and independently of all other causes, produced the loss.
Error and remanded.
