10 P.2d 1084 | Kan. | 1932
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by plaintiffs, the children of Laura E. Moore, to recover upon a certificate of insurance issued by the American Insurance Union, a' fraternal insurance society. They were defeated and have appealed.
Laura E. Moore became a member of the society on December 19, 1917, and there was then issued to her a certificate of insurance for $1,000 in which her husband, Levi L. Moore, was named as beneficiary. She paid all dues and demands made upon her by the society and complied with all the provisions of her contract until her death on March 22, 1929. She was shot and killed by her husband, the beneficiary in the insurance contract. He pleaded guilty to a charge of murder in the first degree and was sentenced to incarceration in the penitentiary. It is agreed by the parties that he killed his wife intentionally and feloniously, but not with the intention of obtaining insurance or pecuniary profit thereby. It is conceded that he could not inherit from the wife he murdered and therefore the plaintiffs, the children of Laura E. Moore, are her only surviving heirs. When Laura E. Moore became a member of the society and
“After two years from the date hereof, this certificate shall be paid in full and be incontestable except for felony or breach of warranty.”
The case was submitted upon agreed statements of fact from which the foregoing is derived, and on the agreed facts it was adjudged that there'was no liability of defendant to plaintiffs under the insurance contract. The effect of what is spoken of as the incontestable clause of the contract is the principal subject of controversy between the parties, and the plaintiffs urge that this is a case of defendant contesting that which is incontestable.
Defendant on its part is insisting that the killing of a member by the hands of a beneficiary was a risk not assumed by it and was expressly excluded from the conditions and coverage of the insurance contract. The provision as to the risks assumed and in force when the insured became a member of the union was:
“Death by hands of beneficiary. The death of a member by the hands of the beneficiary is a risk not assumed by this association, and no benefits shall be paid under any certificates in the life or health and accident departments to any such beneficiary, unless said beneficiary proves to the satisfaction of the board of directors that the deed was not committed intentionally and with the desire to profit thereby.”
“Death by hands of beneficiary. The death of a member by the hands of the beneficiary is a risk not assumed by the society, and no benefits shall be paid under any certificate in the life or health and accident divisions to any such beneficiary, or to any other person or persons. Should there be more than one beneficiary, the death of the member at the hands of one beneficiary shall not deprive the other beneficiaries of their rights to their respective shares designated in the certificates.”
It will be observed that in both the original and amended provisions it is recited that the death of a member at the hands of a beneficiary is a risk not assumed by the association. The exclusion of this risk from the contract was a matter which the member and the association had a right to make. It involved not only the protection, stability and life of the association, but also the protection of the life of the member, and was manifestly in furtherance of a good public policy. In the original provision making the exclusion they added a clause to explain that a death caused accidentally and innocently would not deprive the beneficiary of benefits under the contract, if he could prove to the satisfaction of the directors that it was not intentionally done and also that it was not done for pecuniary profit. In the amendatory provision the privilege of appealing to and satisfying the directors that the killing was innocently done was omitted, and in its place the clause was inserted that if there were two or more beneficiaries, one of whom killed the member, the other innocent beneficiaries would not be deprived of their share of the benefits.
It was competent for the association to make the amendment, and the insured in her application, which was a part of the contract, had covenanted and warranted that she would conform with the laws of the association then in force or which might thereafter be in force. This agreement was binding on her alike with other members, and the obligations under the contract must be determined by the amended law in force when the death occurred. It has been decided and is not now open to contention that such an amendment is reasonable and valid and therefore binding upon members. (Dey v. Knights & Ladies of Security, 113 Kan. 86, 213 Pac. 1066; Roper v. Columbian Circle, 113 Kan. 280, 214 Pac. 421; Guy v. Modern Woodmen, 128 Kan. 745, 280 Pac. 756.)
It is contended and ingeniously argued that the incontestable
“What the company was trying to guard against was insurance taken out by a person who intended to resort to suicide as a means of recouping or swelling his estate, or. of providing for or enriching some beneficiary or beneficiaries. Experience shows that this is done often enough to warrant declination of the risk. Such being the purpose of the suicide provision, there is no necessary conflict between it and the incontestable provision. In strictness they relate to different subjects. One relates to engaging quality of the contract, and the other to definition of risk. Observing the distinction, at the*315 end of a year the company was bound to the full extent of the risk it assumed, but it was not liable on a risk which it stipulated it would not assume, and the defense that the assured committed suicide no more contested the policy than a defense that he is still alive.” (p. 196.)
The Myers decision is controlling in the instant case and also finds support in other jurisdictions.
In Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Conway, 252 N. Y. 449, 452, there was a provision that death resulting from flight in aircraft was a risk not assumed by the insurance company, and it was contended that the provision conflicted with the incontestable provision of the policy, but the court held that the provision was not inconsistent with other conditions in the policy but was a restriction as to coverage, and that where there had been no assumption of the risk there can be no liability. In the opinion rendered by Judge Cardozo, then chief justice of .the court of appeals, he said:
“The provision that a policy shall be incontestable after it has been in force during the lifetime of the insured for a period of two years is not a mandate as to coverage, a definition of the hazards to be borne by the insurer. It means only this, that within the limits of the coverage, the policy shall stand, unaffected by any defense that it was invalid in its inception, or thereafter became invalid by reason of a condition broken. Like questions have arisen in other jurisdictions and in other courts of this state. There has been general concurrence with reference to the answer.” (Citing a number of cases.)
Of the principles involved it has been said:
“By the use of the term ‘incontestable’ the parties must necessarily mean that the provisions of the policy will not be contested, and not that the insurance company agrees to waive the right to defend itself against a risk which it never contracted to assume.” (Scarborough v. Insurance Co., 171 N. C. 353, 355.)
See, also, Jolley v. Insurance Co., 199 N. C. 269; Woodbery v. New York Life Ins. Co., 221 N. Y. S. 357; Wright v. Philadelphia Ins. Co., 25 F. 2d 514; Hearin v. Standard Life Ins. Co., 8 F. 2d 202, and other authorities referred to in the cases we have cited.
We have examined the contentions of plaintiffs and the authorities they have presented, but find no error in the judgment, and it is therefore affirmed.