88 W. Va. 563 | W. Va. | 1921
On tbe 29th day of January, 1917, William Raymond Nowlan made application to tbe defendant for insurance on his life in" the sum of two thousand dollars, designating therein his mother, the plaintiff, as his beneficiary. Upon this application thef defendant, on February 2, 1917, issued its policy for said amount. On the 8th day of May, 1917, the •insured, contemplating entering the officers’ reserve training camp at Fort Benjamin Harrison, made application to the insurance company for a permit to engage in the military service, and in response to his letter the defendant company wrote him on May 10th enclosing him a form which he was requested to fill up and return to the company, by the terms of which, if the privilege had been granted, he would have been allowed to enter the military service outside of the United States on the payment of an additional premium of fifty' dollars a year for each thousand dollars of insurance. He was not accepted, however, for the officers’ reserve training camp, and did not fill up this application, for which reason the, insurance company never issued to him any authorization to enter the military service. He was within the age prescribed by the Selective Service Act, and on the 10th of May, .1918, he was drawn for military service, and was ordered to entrain on the 25th day of that month. On the 14th of May, however, he enlisted in the Auto Mechanical Department of the ariny in "preference to waiting and leaving with the contingent drawn for the 25th. He remained in the military service until the 28th of October, 1919, when he died in France as the result of wounds received in action while engaged as a .private in Battery B, 10 Field Artillery, A.-B.;F.
The sole contention of the plaintiff is that she is not barred from recovering the full amount of the policy sued on by reason of the stipulations above recited. She says that that condition only operated to reduce the indemnity in case the insured voluntarily entered the military service, and that inasmuch as his service in the army was involuntary the
Our conclusion is that the beneficiary in this policy was entitled to receive only one fifth of the full indemnity provided therein, and this amount having been paid to her by the insurer it follows that she is entitled to no recovery in this ease.
. We will, therefore, reverse the judgment of the circuit court; set aside its findings upon the agreed statement of
Reversed and rendered.