39 A.2d 154 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1944
Argued April 27, 1944. This is an appeal from a judgment n.o.v. entered for the defendant insurance company in a suit by the beneficiary of a life insurance policy. The question raised involves the construction of a disability benefit provision in a life insurance policy delivered to the deceased husband of the appellant beneficiary. The clause reads as follows: "If, while this Policy is in full force and effect and while there is no default in the payment of premium beyond the four weeks' grace period, the insured shall . . . . . . lose permanently the sight of both eyes, total and permanent disability will be deemed to exist, and one-half of the amount of insurance then payable in the event of death shall be paid immediately upon receipt by the Company of due proof of such loss and surrender of this policy. Thereafter no further premiums will be required and the Company will issue a free or paid-up Policy providing for payment at the death of the Insured, or at maturity as an endowment, of such benefit as would have been payable under the original Policy."
The policy was issued March 2, 1936 and the last premium was paid on October 11, 1937, more than three years before the insured's death on December 2, 1940. Since the policy contained a lapse proviso which terminated the coverage within the grace period after the last premium (unless premiums had been paid for three years or more), appellant must rely upon the disability benefits to sustain her cause of action. She alleges that sometime before the policy lapsed, the insured had totally and permanently lost his sight, and that consequently he was entitled then to a paid-up policy in the face amount of the original. On May 20, 1940, a written demand was made on the insurance company for payment of one-half of the face value of the policy and for the paid-up policy, and the policy was surrendered at or about the date of insured's death. *79 Not until June 2, 1941, were formal proofs of disability filed on behalf of the insured. The present suit was for the face amount of the original policy.
The decisions of this state uniformly held that the furnishing of proof of an existing disability is a condition precedent to the waiver of premiums or the accrual of other benefits when an insurance policy provides that proof of disability must be furnished to the company: Courson v. N YLife Ins. Co.,
"The clause, making the furnishing of due proof of total and permanent disability a condition precedent to liability, is a proper, reasonable and salutary one to prevent fraud and deception being practiced on the insurer. . . . . . Without it the company might be called on to pay claims four years old as in the Lucas case, or even twenty-five years old, as suggested in Wick v. Western Union Life Ins. Co.,
Appellant argues that the phrase "thereafter no further premiums will be required" refers to the time when total and permanent disability occurred, and since the policy was in force at that time the further payment of premiums was excused regardless of when due proof was given. While ambiguous language should be construed to favor the insured, Brams v.N.Y. Life Ins. Co., supra; Gold v. Commercial Ins. Co.,
A few cases support appellant's contention: Shapiro v.Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
Undoubtedly we are placing on the insured the burden of paying the premiums and keeping the policy in full force until due proof has been furnished that the loss of eyesight was permanent. A contrary result would either require the insurance company to continuously watch the physical condition of thousands of policy holders, or subject it to the contingency of becoming liable to a person whose policy it has long considered terminated. With the facts peculiarly within the knowledge of the insured, he should be the party to ascertain the existence of total and permanent disability.
Since the appellant claims as the beneficiary of her husband her case is no better than his, and the judgment must be affirmed. *82