12 So. 2d 261 | La. | 1942
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *529 The Great Southern Life Insurance Company is appealing from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Mrs. Alpha R. Pruitt, the named beneficiary in a policy issued by it on the life of plaintiff's husband, wherein she was awarded $4,000, the $2,000 face value of the policy and the additional $2,000 *530 claimed under the double indemnity clause because of the accidental death of the insured.
The sole issue presented for our decision in this case is whether or not the policy was actually delivered to and accepted by the insured within the intendment of the contract of insurance.
An application for a policy of insurance with the Great Southern Life Insurance Company was made and signed by Omar D. Pruitt on December 14, 1939. At the time he made this application, Pruitt paid a premium of $13 to the soliciting agent. The application, made a part of the contract under the terms of the application and of the policy, contained the stipulation "That the insurance hereby applied for shall not take effect until a written or printed policy shall have been actually delivered to and accepted by me, while I am in good health * * *." The application was mailed to the home office of the company in Houston, Texas, and was received there on December 16, 1939. In the due course of business the policy was issued and mailed to the soliciting agent for delivery. It was received by him on December 30. He did not go to the home of the insured to make delivery of the policy until January 4, 1940. Then finding that Pruitt had died on January 1, 1940, as the result of a gunshot injury accidentally sustained while out hunting on that day, the agent retained the policy and returned it to the defendant company for the reason that the letter in which it had been transmitted to him for delivery contained the instruction that he was not to make delivery of the "policy *531 unless applicant is in good health," and, further, that he "Make a personal investigation and return policy to company at once if applicant is found to be ill or has been since date of application." On January 15, the amount of the premium paid by the deceased at the time he made application for the insurance was returned to the widow.
It is the contention of the defendant that there was no actual delivery to and acceptance of the policy by the insured within the intendment of the contract between them.
The plaintiff, on the other hand, contends the delivery of the policy was completed when the same reached the agent of the defendant company while the insured was in good health, and that if she is in error in this contention, then, since it was the duty of the agent to deliver the policy promptly upon its receipt, the delivery must be considered as having been accomplished, for the agent failed to make a prompt delivery.
"A delivery of an insurance policy may be actual or constructive. Actual delivery is not essential, unless expresslymade so by the terms of the agreement. Whether an insurance policy has or has not been delivered after its issuance so as to complete the contract and give it binding effect does not depend upon its manual delivery to, or possession by, insured, but rather upon the intention of the parties as manifested by their acts or words. The test of a sufficient delivery is whether the company or its agent intentionally parts with control or dominion of the policy and places it in the control or *532 dominion of insured or some person acting for him with the purpose of thereby making a valid and binding contract of insurance. The controlling question is not who has the actual possession of the policy, but who has the right of possession. * * *" 32 C.J. 1125, § 228. (Italics ours.) "A delivery is not effected, however, by a transmission of the policy to the agent of the insurer under instructions to turn over the policy to the insured only after the compliance with certain conditions, such as that the applicant shall be in good health at the time, or that the premium shall be paid." 29 Am.Jur. 166, Section 152. For other authorities on this subject, see, 14 R.C.L. 898, Section 76; 53 A.L.R. 495, etc.; Vol. 1 of Couch's Cyclopedia of Insurance Law 225, etc., particularly Sections 118 and 125.
It is the statutory law of this state that every policy of insurance issued by a life insurance company doing business in Louisiana "shall contain the entire contract between the parties." Act No. 52 of 1906, as amended by Act No. 227 of 1916. See, also, Shuff v. Life Casualty Ins. Co.,
The application in the instant case was made a part of the contract by the express terms of the policy and the application itself. Consequently, it is just as binding on the insured as the provisions requiring the insurer to pay the face value of the policy in the event of the death of the insured, provided the insured has complied with the obligations assumed by him in the contract. There is nothing ambiguous about the stipulation contained in the *533 application in this case. In signing it the insured set forth in very clear language the terms and conditions under which the policy would become effective when he stipulated "That the insurance hereby applied for shall not take effect until awritten or printed policy shall have been actually delivered toand accepted by me, while I am in good health * * *," and since there is nothing in this stipulation contrary to the law or against public policy, it must be enforced. (Italics ours.)
There can be no doubt that the insurance company understood the policy applied for was not to become effective unless and until it was actually delivered to the insured while he was in good health, as well as that it must be accepted by him, for when it transmitted the policy to its soliciting agent for delivery, it specifically instructed him to ascertain the condition of the health of the insured and not to deliver the policy to him if he was or had been in ill health since the date of his application. If such was found to be the case, the agent was instructed to return the policy to the company.
It seems obvious to us that it was the intention of the parties to reserve unto themselves the right to repudiate the contract up until the moment of its consummation. The insured could repudiate the contract even after the policy was physically placed in his hands by merely refusing to accept it. The insurer could repudiate the contract at any time up until it was delivered to the insured, and even then if he was found to be in ill health or if he had been in ill health at any time since he made his application for the insurance. *534 As a matter of fact, when the soliciting agent went to the home of the insured, it was impossible for him to make delivery of the policy, for the insured was then dead.
The authorities cited by counsel for plaintiff to sustain his argument that the court must consider the policy was actually delivered to the plaintiff because of its receipt by the soliciting agent at a time when the insured was in good health, are not analogous to the case at bar.
For example, it is true that in the case of the Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Otto,
This principle of law cannot be applied in the instant case for two very good reasons. First, Pruitt and the insurance company did not intend for the contract between them to become a completed and binding one from the date of its issue, for they expressly provided this would be the case only when the policy was delivered to and accepted by the insured while he was in good health. Second, the policy was not transmitted to the defendant's soliciting agent for unconditional delivery to the insured. Delivery to the insured was specifically restricted and limited by the conditions laid down in the instructions given the agent when the policy was transmitted to him for delivery to the insured.
In the case of Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company v. Lyons,
Counsel for plaintiff concede that the identical issue raised here has never been passed on by this court, but they do quote excerpts from the case of Coci v. New York Life Insurance Company,
We cannot agree with counsel. The Coci case was analyzed and differentiated from a case similar to the instant case by the Court of Appeal for the Parish of *539 Orleans in Callan v. Mutual Life Insurance Company, 147 So. 110. In that case the court said:
"Plaintiff's case is very largely, if not entirely, pitched upon the authority of Coci v. New York Life Insurance Co.,
"Under the circumstances we hasten to an examination of the Coci case and find it to be an action on a life insurance policy in the sum of $3,000, issued by the New York Life Insurance Company on the life of Sebastian Coci. The policy had been issued following a medical examination of the insured. The application contained the following stipulation:
"`That the insurance hereby applied for shall not take effect unless the first premium is paid and the policy is delivered to and received by me during my lifetime and good health.'
"And in the policy itself we find:
"`This policy takes effect as of the 14th day of November nineteen hundred and eighteen (the policy had been issued on December 10th, 1918), which day is the anniversary of the policy.'
"The policy was mailed in New York December 11, 1918, addressed to its local agent in New Orleans and delivered by the local agent to an agent of the insured on December 16, 1918, on which latter date the insured was dangerously ill with pneumonia from which he died two days later. The question before the court was: When, in view of the stipulation in the application for, and in the policy of insurance, did the *540 policy go into effect? The court held:
"`It was the completion and mailing of the contract that constituted the delivery of the policy within the intendment and meaning of the law. At that time and for nearly a month prior thereto the insured was in good health.
"`* * * The policy in express terms was to take effect, notfrom the date of its issue, but from November 14. That date was made the anniversary of the policy, and it was from that date that the first premium was to maintain the policy in effect for the succeeding 6 months. The insured was entitled to the delivery of the policy on the day the contract was completed and signed. The contract was from that date binding on the assured, and if binding on him it was likewise binding on the company.'
"In discussing the meaning of the phrase `delivered to and received by me during my lifetime and good health,' the court declared that there was nothing in that phrase which `meant orwas intended to mean an actual physical and personal delivery. And there is nothing in the stipulation to warrant the conclusion that the insured was willing to leave the question of his good health, the delivery of the policy, and the binding effect of his contract to the decision and determination of a third party. The most reasonable interpretation of which the agreement is susceptible is that the insured warranted his good health at the time the contract was to become consummated and binding on both parties, and that must be regarded as *541 having taken place when the policy was issued and mailed withoutcondition, limitation, or restriction.'" (Italics ours.)
Thus it will be seen that the delivery by the agent in the Coci case was found by the court to be an unconditional delivery. There the insured had only to "receive" the policy. To the contrary, in the instant case, the insured, even when the policy was delivered, still had the power to exercise his right of rejection. Something yet remained that depended on his own volition — the insured had to "accept" the policy. Further, in the Coci case, the court was confronted with the problem of arriving at the intention of the parties in view of the conflicting and ambiguous provisions found in the application and the policy itself, both of which formed one contract. In the application was the provision that the insurance would not take effect "unless * * * the policy is delivered to and received by me during my lifetime and good health," while in the policy itself was the provision that it would take effect "as of the 14th day of November nineteen hundred and eighteen, which day is the anniversary of the policy." [
In the Callan case, supra, the Court of Appeal for the Parish of Orleans was *542 called upon to interpret the following clause in the policy: "This policy is void until the same is actually delivered to the insured in person while in sound health." (Italics ours.)
The policy had been issued without a physical examination having been undertaken by the insured, as was also the case here. After differentiating the Coci case, as above quoted, the court said:
"There is, therefore, a distinction to be made between policies issued with and without medical examinations. This difference would be a good reason for the requirement of actual, personal delivery of the policy to the insured in good health. An opportunity would thus be afforded the company's agent to determine the apparent state of health of the insured. * * *
"The clause concerning delivery in the Coci case differs from the case at bar in that actual, personal delivery was not required; consequently, as pointed out by the court itself, the intention of the parties to the insurance contract considered in the Coci case was that the contract should be completed when consummated and not, as in this case, suspended until delivered to the insured in good health. We find no objection to a provision of this character upon the ground of public policy and, therefore, see no reason why contracts of insurance with such stipulations should not be enforced. See Cooley, Briefs on Insurance (2d Ed.) vol. 1, p. 669, where we find the following:
"`If the delivery is necessary to complete the contract or if the policy contains the condition that it was not to be effective *543 unless delivered to the insured during his life time in good health, there can be no delivery after the death of the insured.'"
An application was made here for a writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the Court of Appeal and this court refused it, commenting: "Writ refused. Judgment correct."
In the case of American Home Life Insurance Company v. Melton,
This application, under the terms of the policy, was attached to and made a part thereof. When the application was received by the insurance company, the policy was executed, but it was kept in the office of the secretary of the company for several months and, in fact, was never actually delivered to Melton for the reason that he died before such delivery could be made. The administratrix of Melton's estate contended the evidence of Stewart, the president of the insurance company, was sufficient to show it was the president's intention that the policy become effective *544 from the date of its execution. In answering this contention, the court said:
"It is elementary that delivery, either actual or constructive, of an instrument of writing of the character of this policy is essential to give it legal effect, and the stipulation quoted from the application for the policy in express terms was that the policy should not take effect until it should be actually delivered to and accepted by the applicant.
"This was a clear and explicit agreement the effect of which could not be varied by Stewart's [the president of the company's] intention that the policy should be effective as soon as he executed it. If he had actually tendered the policy, yet, under the terms of the agreement, it would not become a completed contract until accepted by Melton, and there was no evidence to show that he even intended to accept it until after he was fatally ill, and which illness precluded his right then to demand its delivery, according to the terms of his agreement with the company." (Brackets ours.)
The Supreme Court of Texas refused to review this judgment.
The conclusion we have reached makes it impossible for us to apply the equitable principles invoked by the plaintiff, for under the express provisions of the Revised Civil Code, it is only where there is no express law that the judge is bound to proceed and decide according to equity. Article 21. As was pointed out in the case of Morford v. California Western States Life Insurance Company,
For the reasons assigned, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the judgment appealed from be annulled and set aside and that plaintiff's suit be dismissed, at her cost.
ROGERS, J., absent.