— On the 3d day of July, 1896, Bankers’ Guarantee & Life Association of Atlanta, Ga., hereinafter referred to as “Bankers’ Company,” issued to William T. Biley, of Montgomery, Ala., a policy of insurance on his life in the sum of $2,000; Mollie A. W. Biley, wife of the insured, being named in the policy as the beneficiary. After the insurance of the policy Security • Mutual Life Insurance Company of Binghamton, N. Y., hereinafter called “Security Company,” assumed Biley’s policy, the precise date of such assumption being December 6, 1899, and agreed to pay every valid claim that might arise thereunder after said date, subject, however, to all the terms and conditions of the contract of insurance with the Bankers’ company. William T. Biley died on the 19th day of May, 1906, and Security Company refused on proof of death made to pay the policy. Hence this action to recover the amount alleged to be due thereby.
There is no conflict in the evidence, and at its conclusion, in the course of the trial in the court below, that court at the written request of the plaintiff gave the general affirmative charge, with proper hypothesis, in favor of the plaintiff, and refused a similar charge requested by the defendant. The question presented by this appeal for decision is whether or not the clause in the policy which provides for a forfeiture on the failure of the insured to pay a premium by a given day was waived by the acceptance of payment from him two or three days after the due day, and the retention of the same by the company. The policy provides for the payment of $2,000 within 90 days of the receipt of satisfactory evidence to the insurer of the death of the insur
The Bankers’ Company, from the beginning, adopted the method of collecting premiums from policy holders in the city of Montgomery, Ala., of forwarding to the Merchants’ & Planters’-Farley National Bank, of said city, and to its successors, duly signed quarterly premium receipts, to be delivered to the policy holders severally by the collecting bank, when and as the requisite premiums were paid in, the bank remitting in exchange or by its check. ■ This course was pursued by the defendant from and after the time it assumed the liabilities of the Bankers’ Company; and all its receipts were so sent from its Atlanta Office, the office at which, as policy holders Avere notified, all .premiums were due and payable. All the premiums during the life of the policy sued on, covering a period of some 10 years, were regularly paid by the insured. Just prior to the maturity of the last quarterly premium — the one now involved — -the Southern department of the defendant company, as was its custom, transmitted to its collecting bank in Montgomery premium receipts for collections as folIoavs : To J. B. Nicrosi, $24.13; to W. T. Biley, $8.13; and to G. F. Emerson, $8.55. This batch of receipts was accompanied by a printed form of letter, addressed to the bank as “Collecting Agency at Montgomery, Alabama,” specifying the inclosures, and signed, “F. W. Coleman, Cashier, Southern Department.” At the hot-
On the reverse of this receipt, in small type, under the heading “Notice to the Policy Holders,” were printed various stipulations, of which only those material here need be repeated, viz.:
“This premium is due and payable at the office Southern department, 3rd Floor English-American Building, Atlanta, Georgia.”
“Collecting agents, to whom the proper renewal receipts, signed by the cashier Southern department, have been forwarded, are authorized to receive premiums, not overdue, on countersigning and delivering said renewal receipts, as evidence of payment, but not otherwise.” “The agreement is mutual (see policy) that unless the premium is paid on or before the day it becomes due it is forfeited and void.”
“No agent, collector, or other person, except the president, vice president, comptroller, or register has authority to receive payment of a premium after it becomes due, or to extend the time for the payment of a premium, or to grant permits, or to make, alter, or discharge policy contracts, or to waive any condition thereof.”
It was shown that it was, and had been, the custom of the collecting bank ever since it begin to make these collections to make remittances of collections on the day of collection from the policy holders, unless collection was made after business hours, when remittance would be made the following day. It was also shown that the bank did make remittance of collection for the Nicrosi receipt on the 1st day of May, 1906, and for the Emerson receipt on- the 3d day of May, 1906, retaining the receipt for Riley until the 7th day of May, 1906, when Riley’s son-in-law, Osborn, paid the premium and received' the receipt from the bank. The bank remitted for this receipt on May 7, 1906, by New York draft, which remittance was accompanied by a letter addressed to “Craig Cofield, Manager, Atlanta, Ga.,” showing when collection' Avas made. The draft thus remitted for the premium paid by Riley was made payable to “Craig Cofield, Manager,” as had been the custom. It was received at the defendant’s office in Atlanta, May 8, 1906, and on that day Avas indorsed, “Pay to the order of Maddox-Rucker Banking Company,” over the signature, “Security Mutual Life Insurance Company, Craig Cofield, Manager, So. Dept., by P. W. Coleman, Cashier So. Dept.,” and Avas deposited by its cashier, to the credit of the defendant company with the Maddox-Rucker Banking Company, in Atlanta, Ga., where the defendant had a general account — all collections for the Southern department being deposited there. This draft went
The defendant offered in evidence two contracts made between it and Cofield relating to the employment of the latter. These contracts Avere entered into in the
The law is well established that, under policies conditioned as is the present one, nonpayment of premiums at maturity will work a forfeiture. W!e understand, that this principle is not controverted in this cause; hut, as has been already stated, in another form, the plaintiff insists that her case is saved from the effect of the conceded principle by waiver of the condition as to forfeiture, on the part of the defendant, in the acceptance and retention of the overdue premium. Another well-settled principle is that the receipt and retention of an overdue premium by an insurance company will constitute a waiver of the forfeiture. —United States Insurance Company v. Lesser, 126 Ala. 568, 28 South. 646.
The first insistence of the appellant touching the question of waiver is that inasmuch as it is provided that forfeiture cannot he waived save in writing by cei-' tain officers of the company, together with the fact that no such waiver was made, the doctrine of waiver has here no foundation upon which to rest. A provision in
Did Cofield have lmOAvledge, or were the circumstances such as made knoAvledge chargeable upon him, that the premium was paid after the due day had expired? He testified that on the 8th day of May he received from the Montgomery bank a check for $8.83, which Avas the amount of the premium on the policy less ten cents exchange, and that the check was drawn on Chase National Bank, New York, and dated May 7, 1906. On these facts he Avas bound to inform himself as to the time the 'premium had been paid into the bank in Montgomery; and by receiving it and retaining it, without making the inquiry, the right to insist on the delay in payment, as a ground upon which to rest a forfeiture of the policy,
There is no merit in the objections to the admissibility of the policy as evidence.
It follows that the judgment of the city court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.