The plaintiff in error contends that the court was without authority to require her to attach a copy of the .application to the petition. Her contention is that the requirement was not made under penalty of having the action dismissed, but was an exercise of judicial power for disobedience to which she would have been subject to a citation for contеmpt of court. Assuming for the sake of argument that this contention is correct, the judgment of the court was not harmful to the plaintiff for the reason that the court properly required the attaching of the application insofar as such action was necessary in order for the
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court to determine whether the plaintiff had a cause of action, and the question of contempt was eliminated by the submission to the order. The trial judge’s order covers fully the reasons for his action and cites the authority for it, and it is needless for us to repeat the reasons or authority which are set forth in full in the statement of the case. If the judgment requiring the amendment was simply rendered under the implied penalty of a dismissal of the action, the ruling became the law оf the case when the plaintiff acquiesced in the ruling, and it is immaterial that the judgment did not include an express provision for the dismissal of the action if the amendment was not filed. The case of
Luke
v. Ellis, 201
Ga.
482 (
Counsel for the plaintiff in error insists that the action is upon the so-called “binder receipt” alone. The ruling of the trial judge shown above completely answers this contention. It is only necessary to call attention again to the facts that in the receipt the plaintiff is not named as beneficiary, nor is any amount of insurance provided for. If there was a cause of action on the receipt, it was not in the plaintiff. It is plain that the plaintiff had no cause of action without consideration of the application, and that examination of the application was necessary to determine whether she had one or not.
The triаl court rendered a most thorough and exhaustive opinion, which we shall take the liberty of adopting and setting forth in full, and merely make a few comments in addition thereto. • ' I
“The instant suit is based on an application made by Jack F. Maddox to Life & Casualty Insurance Company of Tennessee, dated May 20, 1947, for a policy of life insurance in the sum of *170 $5,000, in which Mary C. Maddox, applicаnt’s wife, is designated as beneficiary, and upon a conditional receipt issued to the applicant by an agent of the company, dated May 19, 1947. It further appears that the applicant died on May 22, 1947. The defendant demurred generally to the petition, as amended, and the issues made by the several counts of the petition may be generally stated as: (1) Was the аpplication approved by the company, or was further approval necessary? (2) The effect of the limitation on the agents’ authority contained in the application. (3) Are the provisions of the application and the conditional receipt ambiguous? (4) Whether the payment of an advance premium made the insurance applied for immediately effective? (5) Whether statements by the company’s agent that the insurance was immediately effective were binding on the company, notwithstanding the limitation of authority placed on the agent in the application? And (6) whether custom might serve to modify or change the terms of the application and conditional receipt?
“1. Approval of application by Company. ‘Insurance is a matter of contract.’
North British & Mercantile Ins. Co.
v.
Tye,
1
Ga. App.
380 (
“In
Hill
v.
Life & Casualty Ins. Co.,
51
Ga. App.
578 (1) (
“Nor do the application and conditional receipt constitute a temporary policy. The distinction is pointed out in
Fort Valley Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
v.
Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Company,
69
Ga. App.
120 (
“In Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York
v.
Young,
“As in
Smith
v.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
76
Ga. App.
229, 230 (supra), where the -court said: ‘The whole contention of the plaintiff seems to be that the so-called contract of temporary insurance is ambiguous and is capable оf being construed in more than one way, and should be construed in a manner most favorable to the insured and so as to uphold and sustain the receipt as a contract of temporary insurance’—similar contentions are pressed in the instant case. In the
Smith
case the court also observed: ‘We recognize the rule that, if a policy of insurance is capable of being construed in two ways, that interpretation must be placed upon it which is most favorable to the insured. See
Mass. Benefit Life Assn.
v.
Robinson,
104
Ga.
256 (2) (
' “2. Right of Company to limit agent’s authority by provisions in application. ‘It was within the power of the insurance company, as between itself and its agent, to define and limit the powers of the latter. Limitations upon the power of an agent affect all third persons dealing with him, who have knowledge or notice thereof; and any notice of limitations upon the agent’s power, which a prudent man is bound to regard, is the equivalent of knowledge to the insured.’
Reliance Life Ins. Co.
v.
High-tower,
148
Ga.
843, 845 (
“3. Ambiguity. ‘A contract may be so clear as not to require interpretation, but a mere laсk of clarity on casual reading is not the criterion for determining whether a contract is afflicted with ambiguity within the rule as to the admission of parol evidence to explain its meaning. Nor is a contract ambiguous within that sense merely because it may be even difficult to construe. The construction of a contract, if needed, being a question of law for the court, as well as a duty that rests upon the court, there can be no ambiguity within the rule to which we have referred, unless and until an application of the pertinent rules of interpretation leaves it really uncertain which of two or more possible meanings represents the true in
*174
tention of the parties. Code §§ 20-701, 20-702.’
McCann
v.
Glynn Lumber Co.,
199
Ga.
669, 679 (
“Rule of construction and duty of court to construe. ‘Courts are not called upon, because of the rule that contracts of insurance are to be strictly construed against the insurer and because the contract itself is one of insurance, to call forth doubt, through construction of plain and unambiguous provisions of such a contract. They should not make hypercritical construction of such contracts. “The language of the contract should be construed in its entirety, and should receive a reasonable construction and not be extended beyond what is fairly within its terms.” ’
New York Life Ins. Co.
v.
Thompson,
45
Ga. App.
638 (
“A reasonable construction of the application and conditional, receipt is that the company, by an officer of the company, as distinguished from an agent or employee, must determine the insurability of the applicant, and whether or not he was a risk acceptable to the company under its rules. As was held in
Vardeman
v.
Penn. Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
125
Ga.
117, 119 (
“The report of the home officе inspector (Application, Part F) does not purport to be an acceptance of the application for insurance. There is no contention in the several counts of the petition that the home office inspector is an officer of the company.
The district office report (Application, Part E), signed by a clerk, after the death of the applicant, could, in no event, be construed as an acceptance by the company.
“4. Acceptance of premium in advance. ‘Where pending
*176
mere negotiations for a policy of insurance, the person on whose life it might or might not have been written dies, the company is not liable on the proposed policy simply because it accepted premiums in advance on the supposition that the policy would be issued.’
McGlothin
v.
United States National Life & Casualty Co.,
36
Ga. App.
325 (3) (
“5. Statement by agent contrary to provisions of application and receipt. ‘While we recognize the rule that a policy of insurance must be construed most strongly against the insurer, still the words of the policy must be given the meaning which they ordinarily bear; and where it is manifest that it was the intention of the insurer that liability should attach only in given circumstanсes, the law will uphold the contract according to its true intent and import. . . The writing being unambiguous, parol evidence as to what was said by the parties at the time it was executed will not be admitted to vary or alter the terms of the writing. The petition set forth no cause of action, and was properly dismissed on demurrer.’
Wheeler
v.
Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York,
129
Ga.
237, 240 (
"6. Custom in insurance cases. ‘When parties make an express contract which is plain, evidence of usage and custom is inadmissible to control, vary or contradict it.’ Custom or usage can not be ‘repugnant to, or inconsistent with, the contract.’
Park & Iverson
v.
Piedmont &c. Ins. Co.,
48
Ga.
601. See also
Merchants Nat. Bank of Savannah
v.
Demere,
92
Ga.
735 (
“7. Accordingly, applying the principle's above stated, it is ordered that the defendant’s general demurrer, renewed to the petition as amended, be, and the same is sustained, and the petition is dismised, at plaintiff’s costs.”
It might be well for us to state one or two more reasons why the trial court’s judgment was correct. The plaintiff in error insists that rules of the insurance company not shown in the application and receipt are not binding on the insured. The rules referred to in Code § 56-904 are rules which form a part of the contract of insurance. This principle of law does not apply to the rules by which the insurance company determines the insurability of an applicant and the desirability of the risk.
The plaintiff in error contends that “completion of Part B” of the application means completion by the soliciting agent and home office inspector. Aside from the general practice that such agents do not and cannot issue contracts of insurance, the application shows that the soliciting agent makes a report to someone of his opinion as to whether a policy should be issued. The same is true of the home office inspector. Question 12 in the application signed by the soliciting agent is: “If question 10 shows any policies lapsed, would you, in view of the applicant’s lapse record, advise the issuance of this policy?” Question 7, signed by the home office inspector is: “Do you recommend issuancе of policy?” Answer: “Yes.” These questions alone show that the application must go higher up for approval and the application so specifically states. The fact that no medical examination was required does not mean that the soliciting agent or the home office inspector could bind the company by a final contract of insurance. Thе officials still have the right to investigate the condition of the applicant’s health, his character, and his desirability as an insurance risk. The completion of section or part B of the application means the final decision on the part of the officers of the company to issue a policy, after it has made whatever investigation it sees fit to make. The application and receipt provide that insurance is to become *178 effective after such a completion of part B of the application— not from the date of the application. If the plaintiff in error’s contention is correct, the company might as well turn their non-medical examination policies over to the soliciting agents and home office inspectors and permit them to issue policies directly.
The court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer to each count and in dismissing the action.
Judgment affirmed.
