82 Ga. App. 626 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1950
It appears from a copy of the certificate attached to the petition, as amended, that the “Extension of Death Benefits” clause, referred to in said petition, provided as follows:
“(1) For the period of 12 months immediately following the date of such termination of employment insurance under said .group policy, without further payment of premium, shall continue in the amount applicable to him in accordance with the plan of insurance under said group policy, but in no event in an amount greater than that for which he was insured on the last day on which he was actively at work; provided, however, that no payment whatever shall be made on account of the death of such employee unless written notice and proof of such death, together with written proof satisfactory to the company that his disability, as aforesaid, continued to the date of his death, and further written proof satisfactory to the company that he had not at any time during such period engaged in any business or occupation or in performance of any work for compensation of monetary value or profit, shall have been received by the company at its home office within one year following the date of such death.
“ (2) If such employee shall survive to the end of the aforesaid period of 12 months following such termination of his employment, and (2) shall continue to be totally and permanently disabled and (b) shall not have entered into any occupation or business for compensation of monetary value or for profit, he may, subject to all the provisions herein specified, obtain a continuance of insurance under said group policy commencing on the first anniversary of his termination of employment under said group policy and extending except as hereinafter provided, for a further period of 12 months. In order to obtain continued insurance under this subdivision (2), however, such employee must,
“ (3) If insurance under said group policy be continued in force, in accordance with the provisions of this section, to the .second anniversary of such employee’s termination of employment, as aforesaid, it may be continued from time to time for further periods of 12 months each, subject to all of the terms, provisions and requirements set forth in subdivision (2) hereof and applicable to the first extension under said subdivision; provided he shall have furnished to the company at its home office within four months prior to the termination of the period of 12 months ending with said anniversary and within four months prior to the termination of each such successive period, proof of continuance of disability in the manner and of the character required by said subdivision (2).”
It, therefore, appears that whether or. not the plaintiffs husband had terminated his employment with the paper company at the time of his death and if he had, that the date of the termination of this employment consisted of facts and information which the company was entitled to know under the certificate of insurance. If the deceased had not terminated his employment at the time of his death, then the policy was not in force under the “Extension of Death Benefits” clause, and would necessarily have to be kept in force by the insured by the payment of premiums as provided therein. However, the allega
The allegation that the insured had not terminated his employment when he died and the allegation that the policy was in force under the “Extension of Death Benefits” clause are wholly inconsistent and both cannot be true nor relied upon by the plaintiff as showing that the certificate of insurance was in force at the time of the death of her husband, the insured. This-rendered the petition, as amended, subject to the demurrers urged.
“The office of a special demurrer to a plaintiff’s petition . .
The plaintiff’s petition, as amended, was subject to the grounds of demurrer urged thereto, and the trial court did not err in sustaining the same and dismissing the petition, as amended.
Judgment affirmed.