62 P. 48 | Cal. | 1900
This is an appeal from the judgment. The action was to recover upon an insurance policy, and this appeal involves its construction and interpretation. On December 15, 1891, the defendant herein issued a twenty payment life rate endowment policy for five thousand dollars on the life of George W. Rife, the annual premium upon which policy was one hundred and thirty-six dollars and ninety-five cents. Lillie Rife, wife of the insured and plaintiff herein, was named as beneficiary in the policy. The insured, prior to his death, paid four annual premiums upon the policy, being the premiums due in advance on December 15, 1891, 1892, 1893, and 1894, respectively. No annual premium was paid on December 15, 1895. At the date of this default the reserve value of the policy was two hundred and seventy-seven dollars and twenty-six cents. Under its provisions this reserve value, applied as a single premium, would have purchased term insurance for the period of two years and twenty-eight days — a time which would have carried the risk beyond the death of the insured. But on the tenth day of November, 1894, Rife, the insured, together with his wife, the beneficiary, applied to *458 the defendant for a cash loan upon the policy, such privilege being one, among others, accorded the insured under its terms. The provision of the policy in this regard is as follows: "The company will loan on this policy as collateral security any amount not exceeding that named in the table below and corresponding to the number of annual cash premiums paid." Pursuant to this provision Rife and his wife secured a loan of two hundred and forty dollars upon the security of the policy, and executed their joint and several note to the company. The note contained this clause: "If said policy shall at any time lapse for nonpayment of premium, all provisions in said policy providing for the issue of a paid-up or a term policy shall thereupon and by reason thereof forthwith become null and void." The policy itself contained the following conditions and covenants: "After three years' premiums have been paid, except in case of failure to pay at maturity a premium note, the company will, upon legal surrender of this contract while in force, and the payment of all outstanding premium notes, issue a paid-up, nonparticipating life policy for the amount named in table `A' on the following page. In case of default for nonpayment of premium after three years, and no legal surrender having been made, the insured having paid at maturity all notes given for premium, then this policy shall, without surrender, but upon the payment of all outstanding premium notes, become a paid-up term policy, without change of terms or conditions, except as to the payment of premiums and participation in profits, and continue in force for such time as one annual premium on this policy is contained in its reserved value according to the American four per cent table of mortality, at the end of which time this contract shall cease."
The covenants of the policy above quoted are in conformity with section 450 of the Civil Code. In Straube v. Pacific Mut. LifeIns. Co.,
Rife, the insured, died while in default for nonpayment of premium upon his policy, but his death occurred at a time within which term insurance for the full amount of the policy (if he was entitled to term insurance) would have been in force. Plaintiff's action is founded upon a construction of the policy which entitles her to avail herself of such term insurance, and in this view she prevailed in the trial court. Upon the part of appellants it is insisted that the right to term insurance was lost under the terms of the written contract expressed in the note, when the Rifes made default in the payment of premium. Admittedly, they were in such default at the time of the death of Rife, and at the time of the commencement of this action.
Even were we not relieved from a consideration of the meaning of section 450 of the Civil Code, as applied to a contract such as this, it would be plainly inequitable to contend, as here respondents contend, that by virtue of that section, and of the provision in the policy relative to loans, one might borrow from the insurance company, upon the security of the policy alone, practically its full value, and at the same time by defaulting in the payment of premiums compel the company to destroy its security by converting the policy into one of term insurance. So manifestly unjust would be such a construction of the law that only upon compulsion would a court adopt it. But section 450 of the Civil Code provides that from the amount to be applied upon such term insurance is to be deducted "any indebtedness to the company on such policy." By the very terms of the policy itself the loan was to be made upon the collateral security afforded by it. The reserve upon this policy was two hundred and seventy-seven dollars and twenty-six cents. The note and interest amounted to two hundred and sixty-one dollars and seven cents, and if term insurance was to be permitted at all, it could only be for the time which would be covered by the difference between the reserve of two hundred and seventy-seven dollars and the indebtedness of two hundred and sixty-one dollars, or sixteen *460 dollars and nineteen cents. As is said in Omaha Nat. Bank v.Mutual Ben. Life Ins. Co., 81 Fed. Rep. 935: "It is the net reserve less all indebtedness on the policy, including the outstanding premium loan, that is to be invested in the new form of insurance, whether under the first or second alternative clause. This does exact justice to both parties to the contract. But if, in case of the purchase of term insurance, the premium loan is not deducted, and the insured should outlive the purchased term, then the company's lien would be gone and the premium loan left unpaid. A construction of the contract which might lead to such a result is not to be accepted. I am of the opinion that the premium loan on each of the policies in suit outstanding at the time of the lapse was an indebtedness to the company on the policy within the meaning of the nonforfeiture provisions."
But as the provisions of section 450 of the Civil Code did not become an essential and nonwaivable part of the contract by operation of law, it became competent for the parties to contract as they saw fit, and in the note given to secure the loan made upon the security of the policy is found the condition above quoted. The parties who executed the note to the corporation were all the parties in interest under the insurance policy. It was competent for them to waive or modify, with the assent of the insurer, any of its terms and conditions, and they bound themselves by the distinct condition that the provisions in the policy providing for the issue of a paid-up or term policy should become null and void if the premiums were not paid as they became due. There was nothing harsh or inequitable in this condition. It was but a reasonable protection to the insurance company in preserving its security. Nor do we perceive anything in the laws of the state relative to forfeitures which makes against the enforcement of such a condition. (See Douglas v. KnickerbockerLife Ins. Co.,
The judgment appealed from is therefore reversed.
McFarland, J., and Temple, J., concurred.
*461Hearing in Bank denied.