delivered the .opinion of the court:
This was an action of assumpsit commenced by the appellee against the appellant in the superior court of Cook county upon an insurance policy for $3000 issued by the appellant upon the life of Patrick H. Fay, who died on October 19, 1905. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $3275, upon which verdict the court rendered judgment, and the defendant prosecuted an appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District, where the judgment of the trial court was affirmed, and a fur-' ther appeal has been prosecuted to this court.
The suit was originally commenced in covenant, and after the insured had been dead more than one year (the period fixed by the policy within which suit should be brought being one year) the form of the action, by leave of court, was changed from covenant to assumpsit and the- pleadings were accordingly amended. The appellant urges that the present suit was not commenced within one year from the date of the death of the insured and that it cannot be maintained. The amendment changing the cause of action from covenant to assumpsit and amending the pleadings to make them conform to the latter action was properly allowed under section 39 of the Practice act. (Hurd’s Stat. 1908, p. 1624; Thomas v. Fame. Ins. Co.
The defense sought to be made to a recovery on the policy was that the insured, in the application for the insurance, had made certain false statements, which amounted to warranties, relative to his health and medical treatment which he had received prior to the date of the application. The policy contained the following incontestable clause: “If this policy shall have been in continuous force after two years from the date hereof, it shall, in the event of the death of the insured, be incontestable for the sum payable hereunder except for non-payment of premium.” The policy bore date September 30, 1903, and the insured died on October 19, 1905. The policy was therefore incontestable, unless the fact that the policy was not delivered until October 30, 1903, under the clause found in the policy which provided that the policy “shall not be operative or binding until the actual payment of the initial premium and delivery of the policy during the lifetime and good health of the insured,” and the further fact that the second premium, which fell due September 30, 1904, was not paid until October 1, 1904, showed the policy had not been “in continuous force” for two years from its date. The insured paid the appellant for carrying the said insurance from September 30, 1903, and the policy provided if the policy should remain in continuous force “two years from the date hereof,”-—that is, from September 30, 1903,—it should be incontestable except for non-payment of premium. We do not see, therefore, why the date from which the two years should commence to run should not be held to be September 30, 1903. If, however, the two clauses found in the policy,—that is, the clause which provided if the policy should remain in force “two years from the date hereof,” and the clause which provided the policy should not become binding on the company until the first payment should have been made and the policy delivered,—are in conflict with each other and render the time uncertain from which the two years in which the policy might be contested should commence to run, we think the first clause,—that- is, that the policy should be incontestable if it remained in continuous force after two years from the date thereof,—should be held to control, as that construction would be favorable to the insured, as the rule is that the language of an insurance policy, when uncertain or ambiguous, is always to be construed in favor of the insured and more strongly against the insurance company. (Union Mutual Accident Ass. v. Frohard,
It is further urged that the policy did not remain continuously in force for two years, as it is said the policy was forfeited on September 30, 1904, by reason of the failure of the insured to pay the premium due on that day, and that when the policy was re-instated by the payment of the premium on the next day, to-wit, October 1, 1904, a new contract of insurance was made between the insurance company and the insured, and that the two years in which the policy" might be contested commenced to run from that day,—that is, from October 1, 1904,—instead of from September 30, 1903. We cannot accede to this proposition. While the payment was due on September 30, 1904, the company could waive payment of a premium on that day and accept the premium on the next day if it saw fit, and if it did waive the payment on the 30th day of September and accepted it on October i, 1904, there was no forfeiture and there was no new contract made between the parties but the old policy remained in force, and whatever provisions were found in the policy, including the incontestable clause, would control in determining the legal effect of the policy. “If payment was actually made, even though not according to the terms of the policy, the company could certainly not thereafter insist upon a forfeiture for a failure to pay promptly.” Illinois Life Ass. v. Wells,
In Lindsey v. Western Mutual Aid Society,
In Goodwin v. Provident Savings Life Assurance Ass.
The cases of Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Galbraith,
Finding no reversible error in this record the judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
