98 Kan. 240 | Kan. | 1916
The opinion of the court was delivered by
William H. Strohm obtained a beneficiary certificate in the Modern Woodmen of America. Thereafter he became a lineman for an electric-light company, and met his
In Burnham v. Interstate Casualty Co., 117 Mich 142, 75 N. W. 445, it was held (two justices out of five dissenting) that the supplying to a beneficiary, upon request, of blanks for proofs of death, the preparation of which entailed expense, accompanied by a mere general statement that this should not be deemed a waiver, precluded an insurance company from interposing a defense based on the failure of the insured to give notice of additional insurance. There, however, the company not only failed to indicate a purpose to rely on that particular
“We do not think that the requiring of proofs of loss after the death of Taylor constituted a wavier by the order of any of its rights under the certificate or by-laws.” (p. 375.)
Each of the blanks furnished by the society was headed by a statement, under the caption “Take notice,” to the effect that the supplying or use thereof should waive none of its rights to deny liability. The beneficiary’s personal statement of her claim concluded with the-words, “I further state that . . . when said blanks were executed I understood and now further agree that the execution thereof, or any demand made therefor, . . . shall not be construed or considered as a waiver of any right of said society to deny its liability under the said benefit certificate.”
The situation is not one which gave the society an option to' declare a forfeiture. The provision exempting the society from liability for a death caused by engaging in a prohibited occupation was self-executing. The denial of a right to recover on account of such a death does not result from a forfeiture in such sense as to be the occasion of any especial readiness in granting relief from it. A death resulting from
We conclude that the established facts do not constitute a waiver nor justify the finding of a waiver, and that therefore no recovery can be had on the certificate.
.'The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to render judgment for the defendant.