318 Mass. 175 | Mass. | 1945
This action of contract by the beneficiary of a life insurance policy is reported without decision upon a case stated. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 111. On December 26, 1940, Irving Hyfer, a resident of Chelsea, applied to the defendant in New York for “a $10,000 Whole Life” policy of insurance, the beneficiary of which was his mother, with whom he lived. The application contained the following: “The Company shall incur no liability under this application until it has been received, approved, and a policy issued and delivered, and the full first premium specified in the policy has actually been paid to and accepted by the Company.”
There was no clause in the policy excluding death due to war risks, but there was a “special provision as to aeronautics”: “Death as a result, directly or indirectly, of travel or flight in any species of air craft, except as a fare-paying passenger on a licensed air craft piloted by a licensed
The insured enlisted in the army, and was assigned to the air corps, in which he held the rank of private. His principal duty, ordered by competent authority, was as radio operator on an official army transport plane, which did not carry an “NC license,” but bore an army serial number. The pilot was licensed for both army and civilian aircraft. On October 1, 1942, while “on a scheduled flight” in Porto Rico, where he apparently was stationed, the insured and the entire crew were killed by crashing into a hilltop obscured by clouds.
The main question is the effect of the aeronautical clause. "If it applies, there can be no recovery of the face amount of the policy, as the insured was not “a fare-paying passenger on a licensed air craft ... on a scheduled passenger air service regularly offered between specified airports.” One reason urged by the plaintiff why it should not apply is that, since there was no general provision excluding an obligation, to pay for death due to war risks, the aeronautical clause must be interpreted as not precluding payment for death occasioned by aircraft flight in the armed services. This, however, is in direct conflict with its express language. The absence of a provision excluding death due to war risks did not operate to engraft an implied exception upon the unambiguous aeronautical clause, which relates to the risk itself and not to the reason for the exposure. See Green v. Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co. 144 Fed. (2d) 55, 57. It is fallacious reasoning to say that, because the policy failed to exclude liability for war losses in general, the scope of the undertaking, which clearly did exclude .'certain, aviation deaths, is through such failure to be construed to comprehend all war losses and so to cover war aviation deaths of the excluded kind. The plaintiff also argues that the insured’s presence in the plane was not
We have been referred to but three decisions of courts of last resort dealing with analogous situations. The reasoning and result in Green v. Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co. 144 Fed. (2d) 55, are in accord with the conclusion here reached. The case of Bull v. Sun Life Assurance Co. 141 Fed. (2d) 456, is distinguishable. We do not regard Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World v. Compton, 140 Ark. 313, as an authority to the contrary.
The plaintiff under the case stated is entitled to the reserve value of $181.90 upon surrender of the policy.
Judgment for the plaintiff for $181.90.
The full provision was: “The Company shall incur no liability under this application until it has been received, approved, and a policy issued and delivered, and the full first premium specified in the policy has actually been paid tó and accepted by the Company during the lifetime and continued insurability of the applicant, in which case such policy shall be deemed to have taken effect as of the date of issue as recited on the first page thereof, except that if the applicant pays in cash to the Company, on the date this application is signed, an amount equal to the full firstpremium on the policy applied for and if this application is approved at the Company’s Home Office for the class, plan and amount of insurance herein applied for, then the policy applied for shall be in force from the date of the application.” The policy provided: