16 Pa. Super. 111 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1901
Opinion by
On July 14, 1887, Mary R. Snee made a signed application to the defendant company for $500 insurance on her life, which was accepted by an indorsement thereon, and a policy without date was issued and delivered to her. On July 28, 1899, she died intestate and without issue, leaving to survive her a husband, Andrew Snee, who took out letters of administration on her estate.
The company paid the amount of the policy to Andrew Snee, the administrator, upon his making proofs of her death in the form required by the company and surrendering to it the policy and premium receipt book. In the answer to the ninth question in the application for insurance, “ Name, etc., of person to whom benefit is to be paid,” there is written the name, “ Katie R. Dougherty.” In the case stated it is agreed that “ 6. The plaintiff, Kate McNally, was formerly Kate Dougherty and as such is named in the application aforesaid. She was a niece of the said Mary R. Snee, .... 2. The premiums upon the said policy were paid by the said Mary R. Snee and by her husband, Andrew Snee.”
In announcing the death of Mary R. Snee the plaintiff gave notice to the defendant as follows: “ Several years ago she took
The appellee frankly states the case to be as follows : “ The only question for decision, therefore, is as to the company’s right to make choice of a payee when the application names a beneficiary.” The policy provides that, “in consideration of the representations and agreements in the printed and written application for this policy, .... and in consideration of the payment to the company .... doth hereby agree to pay to the person or persons designated in condition fifth herein, . . . . ” which is in the following words, to wit: “ Condition, . . . . Fifth. The production by the company of this policy, and of a receipt'for the sum assured, signed by any person furnishing proof satisfactory to the company that he or she is the beneficiary, or an executor or administrator, husband or wife, or relative by blood, or connection by marriage, of the assured, shall he conclusive evidence that such sum has been paid to and received by the person or persons lawfully entitled to the same, and that all claims and demands upon said company under this policy have been fully satisfied.” The policy, and a receipt signed by Andrew Snee, administrator, were produced by the defendant and are made part of the case stated.
In Pfaff v. Prudential Ins. Co., 141 Pa. 562, the clause determining the authority of the company to make payment was as follows : “ 2. The company may pay the sum of money insured hereby, to any relative by blood, or connection by marriage of the insured, or to any other person appearing to said company to be equitably entitled to the same, by reason of having incurred expense in any way on b§h(ilf of the insured
The fact that part of the premiums were paid by her husband is of no moment, since, if made by him, he acted as a volunteer and not in pursuance of any contract; besides, the case stated does not show whether it was his own money or that of the assured. Nor does the-provision, “the production of the policy,” amount to a condition precedent to authorize payment to a particular person. It would not be held that the company was absolved from payment if the policy had been lost, destroyed or surreptitiously withheld. The undated policy is to be construed with the application made by Mrs. Snee, and by it the plaintiff is the first person designated in condition fifth to receive the money upon satisfactory proof of the death of the insured. The company evidently regarded the claim of Mrs. McNally as of some merit, else it would not have tendered its check in payment of its liability to her order jointly with the administrator. It did not withhold payment or pay the fund into court so that the claimants could have their rights legally determined, but it volunteered to decide the question for them. The appellee states that “ the application nominated a beneficiary, but the policy, instead of undertaking to pay that beneficiary alone in any event, undertook to pay that beneficiary or one of a number of other persons designated,” and argues, “ that the mention of a beneficiary in the application was not meant to be absolutely controlling under all circumstances, and a reasonable discretion — this choice of payee — was given the company.” The plain intention of the assured as expressed in the application cannot be defeated in this manner. The application was the act of Mrs. Snee. She was bound by its statements under penalty of forfeiture of the policy. It is not to be severed from the undated policy, and the company was reciprocally bound by the terms of the application when it marked it “ accepted” and issued a policy which was founded thereon. It is nowhere authorized to make a different contract for the applicant. In the policy the designation is not several persons jointly, but in a named order, and the person specified in the application is given precedence, disjoined from the others, in being first named. If this has any significance, and we think
The doubt in regard to whom the money should be paid is of the company’s creation, and the application, with the policy, is to be construed most stronglyagainst the insurer. Mrs. Snee had the power to name the plaintiff as beneficiary. She did it directly and unequivocally, and the declaration should be construed so as to give effect to this intention: Bond v. Bunting, 78 Pa. 210. The question is, what was the intent of the assured? Thomeuf v. Knights of Birmingham, 12 Pa. Superior Ct. 195. The contract is in writing, and so far as it goes, is the measure of the rights of the parties. By the death of Mrs. Snee the right to the fund vested. Katie R. Dougherty (this plaintiff), having survived the insured, as the first nominated beneficiary, was entitled to this money by the express direction of the application, which was carried forward into the policy. This construction finds support not alone in the language of the contract, but it is also in accordance with the settled policy of the law. A policy of life insurance is in the nature of a testament, and although not a testament, it is, like the provisions of a will, to be liberally construed in favor of the ones who may naturally be presumed to have been special objects of bounty: Bolton v. Bolton, 73 Me. 299; Karch’s Est., 133 Pa. 84; Brace v. Chartrand, 12 L. R. A. 209; Hooker v. Sugg, 102 N. C. 115, 11 Am. St. Rep. 717, and notes. It is to be interpreted as the assured understood it, if all points of the contract taken together will admit of such construction: Eddy v. Phoenix Mut. Life Ins. Co., 65 N. H. 27; 23 Am. St. Rep. 17, and notes, or, according to the fair interpretation of the parties: Peters v. Warren Ins. Co., 14 Peters, 99, 10 Lawyers’ Co-op. ed. 371. “In cases of doubtful construction the law leans in favor of an absolute, rather than a defeasible estate; of a vested, rather than a contingent one ; of the primary, rather than the secondary intent; of the first, rather than the second taker, as the principal object of the testator’s bounty: ” Smith’s Appeal, 23 Pa. 9; Jackson’s Appeal, 179 Pa. 77. The payment to Andrew Snee did not operate as a discharge and reléase of the obligation under this policy.
The assignment of error is sustained, the judgment is reversed, and judgment is directed to be entered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the policy with interest and costs,
Rice, P. J., and W. W, Porter, J., dissent,