43 Ga. App. 67 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1931
Agnes S. Dean, as beneficiary in a policy of insurance upon the life of her son, Sidney S. Dean, filed suit in tbe municipal court of Atlanta against tlie Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, to recover the amount of the policy, originally $2500, but reduced by two loans secured by and charged against it, to the amount of $2024.30.
It appears from the petition that the policy was dated January 24, 1918; that all premiums were paid up to January 29, 1926; that some time prior to the latter date, and while the policy was in force, the insured became incapacitated by reason of a brain disease, to such an extent that he was wholly and permanently unable to perform any work for money compensation; that his mental condition grew progressively worse until he died completely insane on April 16, 1927, from blood poisoning or septicemia; that during
The agreement for waiver of premiums, or supplementary agreement hereinbefore referred to, omitting portions immaterial to the consideration and decision of the questions raised, is as follows: “In consideration of the payment of an extra premium of seventy-eight cents (first payment hereby acknowledged) with each annual premium required under said policy, it is agreed that if, after payment of premium for one full year and during the continuance of this agreement, the insured shall, prior to his 60th birthday anniversary, furnish proof satisfactory to the company that he has become totally and permanently disabled from any cause, and is physically and mentally incapacitated to such an extent that he is and presumably will be wholly and permanently unable to engage in any gainful occupation or perform any work for money compensation, the company, on receipt of such proof, will by*suitable endorsement of this agreement waive the payment of the premiums thereafter falling due under said policy and this agreement during the continuance of such disability, except as hereinafter stipulated and agreed:” 1. Omitted as immaterial. “2. Notwithstanding the acceptance of proof of disability, the insured, or his legal representatives, shall annually on the anniversary of the
A demurrer to the petition (after several amendments were made to meet some of the grounds of demurrer) was overruled. The controlling question raised by the demurrer, the final determination of which, by stipulation made a part of the record, will terminate the litigation, is simply whether or not, by reason of his alleged insanity, the failure of the insured to furnish' satisfactory proof of
Upon an appeal to the appellate division of the municipal court of Atlanta from the judgment overruling the demurrer, the judgment of the trial court was affirmed; and on certiorari the superior court of Fulton county affirmed the judgment. Error is assigned thereon.
In our examination of the question at issue, this court has the benefit of exhaustive briefs of counsel, wherein the opposing views are clearly and forcefully presented, and the decisions of other courts in kindred cases are skilfully collated. Counsel are in substantial accord in 'their statements of the fundamental rules to be followed by our courts in the construction of insurance contracts. “The cardinal rule of construction is to ascertain the intention of the parties. If that intention be clear, and it contravenes no rule of law, and sufficient words be used to arrive at the intention, it shall be enforced, irrespective of all technical or arbitrary rules of construction.” Civil Code (1910), § 4366. “The contract of insurance should be construed so as to carry out the true intention of the parties;” Civil Code (1910), § 3475. But, in the application of these general rules to an assemblage of specific facts, as in the present case, counsel find themselves diametrically opposed.
The main contention of the plaintiff below is that the requirement that proof of disability be furnished is a condition subsequent, not a condition precedent, in that, by its very terms, the proof is to be furnished subsequent to the occurrence of the disability. In support of this contention it is urged: “1. The insured being insane, it is impossible for him to give the notice, and this impossibility, occurring through no fault of his own, would not produce a forfeiture of the policy, but, to the contrary, would legally excuse the assured from giving the notice. 3. This rule has already been established in Georgia as to accident insurance, but the principle ought to apply with equal force to life insurance. 3. This rule has been applied almost without variation to policies of accident insurance in other states also. 4. It harmonizes with the law applicable to contracts generally. 5. It harmonizes with the general principles of construction of contracts in Georgia. 6. It has been applied in several jurisdictions in cases involving construction of life-insurance policies, where there were similar premi
The contention of the defendant below, on the other hand, is: “1. The requirement as to satisfactory proof of disability before the premium will be waived is a condition precedent. The contract makes no provision that in cases of insanity the company will waive compliance with the conditions of the contract. 3. The contract not requiring the insured to personally make proof,, but permitting others to do so for him, insanity offers no excuse for noncompliance with its express conditions. 4. As assured had theretofore failed to either pay the premiums or to take advantage of the benefits under the fpremium-waiver’ clause, the policy had lapsed at the time of his death.”
At the outset it will be observed that counsel have advanced wholly divergent views upon the question whether the requirement to.furnish satisfactory proof of disability constitutes a condition precedent, or a condition subsequent, to the obligation of the company to waive payment of premiums thereafter falling due. In their efEorts to determine the identical question in other cases, some of them involving similar provisions in insurance contracts, the courts' seem to have indulged in many exceedingly refined distinctions. It is often a question of' much difficulty, as, indeed, in the instant case, depending upon the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the language employed by them, from the agreement as a whole, and from the subject-matter to which it relates. "The rights of the parties are to be determined by the terms of the policy, so far as they are lawful. The language of the contract should be construed as a whole, and should receive a reasonable construction, and not be extended beyond what is fairly within the terms of the policy. Where the language is unambiguous and but one reasonable construction of the contract is possible, the court must expound it as made.” Cato v. Ætna Life Ins. Co., 164 Ga. 392, 398, citing Yancey v. Ætna Life Ins. Co., 108 Ga. 349 (33 S. E. 979); Wheeler v. Fidelity &c. Co., 129 Ga. 237 (58 S. E. 709); 1 C. J. 417, sec. 43.
With the foregoing rules of construction in mind, we are first to examine the nature of the contract between the parties named
We next come to the supplementary agreement under whose provisions the present controversy arises. In the first place, we have decided that the language used is unambiguous'; that only one reasonable construction of the agreement is possible; and that “the court must expound it as made.” The offer on the part of the insurer,—in this instance an offer for an act,—is that, having paid the extra premium provided for, if the insured shall furnish proof satisfactory to the insurer that he has become totally and permanently disabled from any cause and is mentally or physically incapacitated, the insurer, on receipt of such proof, will by suitable endorsement waive the payment of the premiums thereafter falling due. It is evident that failure of the insured to furnish the required proof in no event can work a forfeiture of the policy. The provisions for extended insurance are automatic. At the very most, the insured, in this case, failing to furnish the required proof, would merely be deprived of his right to exemption, during the continuance of such disability, from the payment of premiums.
It would seem that disability by reason of insanity was in the contemplation of the parties when the contract was entered into,— in the legal sense at least,—since the agreement specifically provides that if the insured becomes mentally incapacitated (the premiums having been paid and the proof having been furnished), the exemption from premium payments will be awarded. Indeed, it hardly seems possible that a person may be “mentally incapacitated” without being afflicted with insanity, since the latter term includes in its widest sense all morbid conditions of the mind due to diseased action of the brain or nervous system. In view of these considerations, then, upon what sound theory may this court hold that the insanity of the insured in this case legally excused the failure to furnish the required proof? It is the settled law that insanity of the insured does not excuse failure to pay the premiums, which’ failure, in numerous instances, Avorks a forfeiture of the policy of insurance; and, a fortiori, in our opinion the law does not excuse the failure to furnish a required proof which, in this case, merely affects the right to exemption from premium payments.
Courts can not permit their judgments to be influenced by sentiment in such cases, though they disappoint some cherished hopes and expectations; and the sacred right of contract must not be unnecessarily invaded or impaired by judicial interpretation. To vary the contract of the parties by recourse to fantastic refinements and distinctions is as much an offense against justice as an unjust judgment deliberately pronounced. We are persuaded, not only that
Finally, while we find nc identical case reported among the decisions of either of our appellate courts, the views expressed in this case in no wise conflict with the principles followed in similar cases. Most of the decided cases to which we have looked for precedent and authority deal with the consequences of delay, not of failure, to give required notice or to furnish required proof. In many instances they are to be distinguished in that regard from the case at bar.
Therefore, in our opinion, the judge of the superior court erred in overruling the certiorari.
Judgment reversed.