77 Iowa 229 | Iowa | 1889
On the twenty-first day of April, 1887, the defendant issued the policy in suit. The portions of that policy important for consideration on this appeal are as follows: “The Travelers’ Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., in consideration of the warranties in the application for this policy, and of an order (for moneys therein specified) on Chicago, Burlington . and Quincy Railroad Company, does hereby insure (subject to conditions on back hereof, not waivable by agents) John McMahon, stone-mason, for the period or periods specified below, beginning at noon of the day this policy is dated, * * * against loss by travel, % -x- * resulting from bodily injuries effected during the term of this insurance, through external, violent and accidental means, which shall, independent of all other causes, immediately or wholly disable him from transacting any and every kind of business pertaining to the occupation under which he is insured; or, if death shall result from such injuries alone, within ninety days, will pay two thousand dollars to Maggie McMahon, wife.
The order referred to in the policy was delivered to defendant, and is as follows :
“April 21, 1887.
“Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company:
“Pay to the Travelers’ Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, or its authorized agent, the following sums out of my wages for the months specified : (1) Five dollars for May, 1887; (2) five dollars for June, 1887 ; (3) five dollars for July, 1887 ; (4) five dollars for August, 1887. These sums are premiums on an accident policy, issued to me by the said company, bearing the same date and number as this order. If the agreements and conditions of said policy are complied with, the first payment makes said policy good for two months, the second for four months, the third for seven months, and the fourth for twelve months, respectively, from said date.
“[Signature] John McMahon.”
The order was sent to the railroad company on the twenty-first day of May, 1887, with a statement called a deduction list, showing the amount owing by McMahon from his wages for May, and also the sums due from other employes of the company to defendant. The first payment of five dollars was received by defendant from the railroad company on the eleventh day of June, 1887. The order was never formally accepted by the last-named company, but was retained by it as a voucher. On or before June 21, 1887, defendant sent to the railroad company a deduction list for that month, which showed the sum of five dollars to be due from the wages of McMahon. This was returned to defendant, with the statement that McMahon was not employed by the railroad company. No further attempt was made by
On the eighteenth day of July following he was run over by the cars of a railway train, and died within a few minutes from the injuries received.' After'his death, the plaintiff drew from the railroad company all wages due him. It is claimed by plaintiff that the policy was in force at the date of McMahon’s death, and that defendant is liable therefor to the amount of the policy. Defendant denies liability, and insists that the policy was not in force by reason of non-payment of the second installment due by the terms of the order. It also contends that certain conditions of the policy were violated by deceased, and that in consequence of such violations he lost his life.
I. It is conceded that the policy in suit was in force from the twenty-first day of April to the twenty-first day of June, 1887, that being the first of the four consecutive periods provided for in the policy. There is little or no controversy as to the facts material to this appeal, but the parties do not agree as to the effect which should be given them. It is insisted by appellee that the order which formed a part of the consideration of the policy was, in effect, both an order and an assignment of parts of the wages of McMahon; that there was an implied undertaking on his part to earn wages in the service of the railroad company to meet the payments when due, and that he performed his obligation fully, and made complete payment when he earned the required amount
II. It is said that it was the • duty of defendant to notify McMahon of the failure of the railroad company to make the second payment. It is not shown when defendant learned of that failure, but it appears that McMahon drew all his wages for the month of June at the time the railroad company usually paid such wages. He therefore had actual notice that the second payment was not made, and could not have been prejudiced by the failure of defendant to give him notice of the fact. It further appears that he had directed the cancellation of the policy less than three weeks before, and his acceptance of all his earnings for June-was evidence that he intended to terminate it, and considered it of no further force.
III. Appellee insists that, if defendant might at any time have claimed a forfeiture, the right to do so was waived by its failure to cancel the policy, and by its failure to return the order. Neither of these things was required of defendant in order to preserve its right to insist that it is not liable in this action. The policy provides that it may be in force during some of the insurance periods, and not during others. Had McMahon lived, and had his cancellation been waived, and
IV. Violations of conditions of the policy in regard to intoxication, violating law, and the rules of a corporation operating the road on which McMahon met his death, and voluntary exposure- to unnecessary danger, are discussed by counsel; but, since the conclusion we have reached seems to rest upon undisputed facts, and to be decisive of the case on its merits, we find it unnecessary to determine the other questions presented. Reversed.