48 N.Y.S. 123 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The action was brought to recover the amount of the insurance upon the life of the plaintiff’s intestate by the policy of the defendant of date August 24, 1891. She was the wife of the plaintiff and died June 18, 1895. The defense is that, by reason of default in
It does not appear that the plaintiff was advised by the policy, or otherwise than by the receipt, that anything to be done by the insured or by him was requisite to the revival of the policy. He knew that the insured was nine weeks in arrears in payment of the premium when he paid the four dollars and forty cents. And by reference to the policy he could have seen the provision to the
The situation was such,- when the plaintiff made the payments in June and July, 1895, as to enable the defendant to qualify the receipt of the money by the conditions expressed in the receipts, one of which conditions was the acceptance by the company of the revival application. The import of this was that some application for the purpose was to be made by or in behalf of the insured. This was not done in behalf of the plaintiff’s intestate. And it may be that if the defendant’s officer or agent, at the time the payment was made, had known her physical condition, he would have declined to receive so much of the amount as covered the weekty premium of ten cents, amounting to ninety cents in arrears on the policy issued to her. She was at that time very ill, not expected by the plaintiff to survive her then existing illness, and she died the next day. Of this condition of the insured the defendant’s agent was not advised. And when the proofs of death were soon after furnished to the company it declined to pay. Up to that time no fair and reasonable interpretation of what had occurred can permit the conclusion of waiver of the default in payment of the premium on the policy taken by the intestate, or estop the defendant from asserting forfeiture. While an insurance company will not be allowed any benefit from the doubtful construction of the terms of its policy, nor will any prejudice to the insured or those who represent him be permitted therefrom, the provisions of a policy of insurance, like those of other contracts, are to be observed, and the legal rights of the parties governed by them. It is essential to the waiver of a forfeiture of a policy that there be a recognition of its validity with knowledge of such forfeiture. (Weed v. L. & L. Fire Ins. Co., 116 N. Y. 106.) And then it can be done only by an agent who is not denied by the policy power to do it. (Marvin v. Universal Life Ins. Co., 85 N. Y. 278.)
A further question arises upon occurrences subsequent to the
We have not failed to observe that six renewal applications were subscribed by Mr. Lamb for himself and five of his children, of date July 19, 1895. The cireumstauces under and the understanding with which that was done are the subject of conflict in the evidence of the defendant’s agent and Lamb, the latter denying that he was advised of or understood the purposes of the papers, or that anything was then said about the application of the money which had before been paid to the company on account of the arrears on the policies. This matter is also the subject for the consideration of the jury, as bearing upon the question of fact before mentioned.
These views lead to the conclusion that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.