14 Ga. App. 202 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
Lead Opinion
The Boyal Benefit Society, a fraternal benefit association having its home office in Washington, D. C., on May 25, 1912, issued a policy on the íife of Mrs. F. A. Naylor, of Savannah, Georgia, through one of its agents located in Savannah, the beneficiary under the policy being Andrew Naylor, her husband'. As part of the contract of insurance the following stipulations, in substance, appear: A payment is due on this certificate for 'each month, payable on or before the last day of the month. If the payments shall not have been made within the stipulated time as provided, this certificate shall thereupon become lapsed and forfeited. When lapsed this certificate can be reinstated with the consent of the society, and provided that at the time such payments are received at the home office of the society, and at the expiration of fifteen days thereafter, the member is in good health and free ■from disease or disability. If at the expiration of fifteen days after the receipt of said payments at the home office, the member should not be in good health and free from disease or disability, or should the member’s physical condition have become impaired
There was no evidence that the amount of the arrearages or overdue payments had reached the home office of the defendant before the death of the assured; and as the contract provided that no agent had a right to waive any part of the contract, and as no payment, evidenced by a receipt on one of the society’s regular printed forms, as provided for, was made on the part of the assured until August 6, 1912, at which time the policy had lapsed, and as the payment then made could in no event, under the contract, restore life to the policy sooner than fifteen days after payment was made, and as the ’assured died before the expiration of the fifteen days, it follows that when she died she had no insurance in the society, and the husband had no legal claim for
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I think that the learned trial judge correctly'overruled the certiorari. There are two principles that should not be lost sight of in determining whether the judgment should be affirmed or reversed. In the first place, the verdict, which is supported by some evidence, has the approval of the trial judge; and the evidence should be viewed most favorably to the prevailing party. In the next place, as remarked by Justice Bradley in Insurance Company v. Norton, 96 U. S. 242 (24 L. ed. 689), and again in Insurance Company v. Eggleston, 96 U. S. 577 (24 L. ed. 841), “Forfeitures are not favored in the law;” and “courts are always prompt to seize hold of any circumstances that indicate an election to waive a forfeiture, or an agreement to do so on which the party has relied and acted. Any agreement, declaration, ■or course of action, on the part of an insurance company, which
It is insisted that there is no evidence that the benefit society received the money. The fact that the society itself, and not the agent, after the death of the insured, tendered repayment of this money, certainly, in my judgment, was a sufficient circumstance to authorize the conclusion ’that the money was forwarded to the society by the agent, and that the society received it. The agent had no right to waive anything, but, under the authorities cited above, the society knew that the plaintiff’s wife was sick; and with this knowledge it accepted the money, and kept the money until after it was informed of the death of the insured.- There was ample time after the payment of the $2.70 on August 6 for the company to have returned the money before the death of the insured. The payment of the $1.35 on August 8 is of no consequence, because, as already stated, it was not due until the last day of August. If,