(after stating the facts as above). The principal question presented in the ease is upon what date the policy became effective. The appellant says it was August 2, 1924. The appellee says it was August 14, .1,924. The date from whieh a policy becomes effective is not necessarily determined by the date whieh it bears or the date of its execution or the date of its delivery or by the date when the first premium is paid. It is the date from which the risk commenced, and it is determined by the
meaning of the provisions of the insurance contract. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Hurni Packing Co.,
A binding receipt, or binding slip, has a settled meaning in insurance law. It protects the applicant for insurance against the contingency of sickness intervening bеtween its date and the delivery of the policy if the application for insurance is accepted. 1 Joyce on Insurance, p. 253. When it provides by its terms that, subject to approval and acceptance,' the insurance shall be effective from the specified date and the company accepts the application or approves the risk, it becomes operative from the date specified. 32 C. J. 1101; Rushing v. Manhattan Life Ins., Co. of New York (C. C. A.)
From a consideration of all the provisions of the contract here in question, we reach the conclusion that the minds of the contracting parties met in fixing upon August .2, 1924, as the date from which the policy became effective and as the date upon which the risk commenced and the date from which began the yean during which the policy might be contestable for suicide. It was for a year commencing with that date that the insured paid the premium, and August 2 was made the date of the payment of each annual premium thereafter and the date upon which the appellee’s reinsurance in another company took effect.
The appelleе relies upon the clause of the contract which provided that the insurance should not take effect unless a full premium was paid in cash, and points to the fact that the premium was paid by a promissory note. In construing a contract of insurance, it is a fundamental rule that every part of the contract must, if possible, be given effect, and none is to be rejected unless repugnant to the intention of the parties as set forth in the component parts of the agreement. The provision that full premium shall have been made in cash is not necessarily inconsistent with a “settlement for the full premiums” made by giving a promissory note, when recourse is had to the facts and the coursе of dealing which the appellee had. followed in authorizing its agents to receive promissory notes for the premiums and its acceptance of applications, accompanied with payments of premiums thus made. The agent who received the application here was a general agent, and he was so desсribed in his contract with the appellee. In that contract he was made responsible for the acts of his subagents whom he had been given the power to employ. The general instructions which he received from the appellee expressly contemplated that in connection with the application for new policiеs he might take promissory notes, and as a matter of fact the evidence shows that the taking of notes on such applications by agents who thereupon became directly responsible to the company was in the regular course of the company’s business. There can be no question but that the company could waive any prоvision of its policies, Knickerbocker Life Insurance Co. v. Norton,
We cannot sustain the contention that the poliey should be canceled on the grounds alleged in the complaint, that on July 29,1925, in violation of the terms of the poliey “the insured engaged in the manufacture and handling of explosives,” and that on the same day he secretly and mysteriously changed and left his occupation, in which as he stated in his application he was engaged “and engaged in blasting operations.” He had stated that he was employed with the Pacific Cellulose Company, Inc., and that the duties of his present occupation were “general manager, managing and supervision,” in the business or trade of artificial silk manufacturing. The evidence was that on July 29, 1925, a fire occurred at the plant of the Pacific Cellulose Company, and that chemicals used in the manufacture of artificial silk were ignited, and that the gases thereby generated exploded. A letter which the insured had written to his wife contained his admission that he had set the fire to destroy the body of an assailant whom he had killed, he said, in self-defense. The testimony of his stenographer that at times he had requested her to stop him if she saw him going toward the laboratory with a lighted cigarette is not sufficient to show that he made false representations in his application. “An explosive may be defined as any substance by whose decomposition or combustion gas is generated with such rapidity thаt it can be used for blasting or in firearms.” 25 C. J. 181, Century Dictionary. The chemicals used by the Cellulose Company were not explosives in that sense. The expert witness called by the appellee testified that none of them would explode from concussion or by contact with fire; that some of them had explosive vapora and were known as оrganic solvents and volatile combustibles which in the liquid form “may be handled readily but with caution”; that their vapors form with the air explosive mixtures; and that, if each of them were kept properly corked and not exposed to the air, so that no vapor could escape, there would be no danger in handling them. Said he: “You could 'drop them аnd do anything you wanted with them, they will not explode.” There is no question but that they were articles necessarily and customarily used in the business in which the insured was engaged.
There is no evidence that prior to the fire and the explosion the insured himself ever “handled” them. In fire insurance, “according to the weight of authority, if there are printed prohibitions agаinst keeping certain articles on the insured premises, the policy will not be avoided by violation of these prohibitions if the prohibited articles are in customary use in carrying on the trade or business conducted on the premises.” 26 C. J. 223. In 37 C. J. 471, it is said: “A poliey may prohibit a change of occupation without the consent of the company, or рrovide for forfeiture where insured without the consent of" insurer enters into a prohibited occupation, whether death results therefrom or not. But, in the absence of such provision, the poliey will not be forfeited by reason of the fact that insured, subsequent to its issuance, engages in an extrahazardous occupation.” In Stone’s Adm’rs v. United States Cаsualty Co., 34 N. J. Law, 371, it was held that a stipulation that the assured shall not change his occupation applies only to cases in whieh he abandons his then occupation and engages in another employment as his usual business. In that case the insured had stated his occupation to be that of a school teacher. While temporarily out оf employment as a teacher, he let a contract for the construction of a small bam on his premises, and, while overlooking the work, he fell from the building and was killed. The court held he had not changed his occupation for another, but was only engaged in an incidental matter which in no degree suspended his regular occupation.
In оrder to render applicable the provision that the assurer shall not be liable for the death of the insured while engaged in a specified occupation, the “insured must have been engaged in the specified occupation, and furthermore he must have assumed it as a business rather than as a mere temporary or incidental employment.” 32 C. J. 556. In Mortensen v. Central Life Assur. Ass’n,
There is no contention in'the present case that there wаs contained in the laboratory or used therein any chemicals bth,er than those which are necessarily connected with the manufacture of artificial silk, or that the explosion was incidental to or caused by the use of such chemicals in the business in which the insured was engaged. He used those chemicals, and caused the explosion оnly to cover up a crime, and Ms death was not caused thereby. The policy contained the following clause: “No warranty made by the insured shall b.e used in defense against any claim unless contained in a written application, and all warranties made by the insured shall, in the absence of fraud, be considered representations and not wаrranties.” The law is well settled, -as stated-by Judge Wallace in Carrollton Furniture Mfg. Co. v. American Credit Indemnity Co. (C. C. A.)
The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with instruction to dismiss the bill.
