Bessie Smith,- as administratrix of the estate of Essie Mae Miller, sued Metropolitan Life Insurance Company for $195, and damages and attorney’s fees, the action being based on a receipt which she alleged made a contract of temporary insurance.
Thе plaintiff charged in her petition that on June 12, 1945, Essie Mae Miller applied to the defendant for a policy of industrial life insurance in the sum of $195, at a weekly premium of 25 cents, that the applicant paid two weekly premiums in advance and was issued a recеipt and a temporary contract of insurance, a copy thereof being set out in the petition. The receipt statеd that the premium deposit and the application were “subject to the conditions shown below and on the reverse side of thе receipt.” These conditions were then stated as follows: “If a policy be issued on such application, this deposit will be applied toward payment of the premiums thereon; if such application be rejected, this deposit will be returned to the аpplicant, subject to the conditions stated below. . . If (1) the deposit, receipt of which is acknowledged on the reverse side hereof, equals at least the full first premium on the policy applied for; and (2) if, within two years prior to the date of such apрlication, the person upon whose life the policy is applied for has not received institutional, hospital, medical оr surgical treatment or attention for a serious disease, injury, or physical'or mental condition; and (3) if the application is approved at the *230 home office of the company, in New York, the policy will be delivered if the insured is alive on its date of issue; and subject to the same conditions (Itаlics ours), should the death of the person upon whose life the policy is applied for occur prior to the date of issuе of the policy and within eight weeks from the date of such application, the company will, upon surrender.of this receipt, pay such amount as would have been due under the terms of the policy had it been issued on the date’ of such deposit.”
The plaintiff аlso alleged that the deposit of 50 cents equalled and exceeded the full first premium; that within two years prior to the date of the application Essie Mae Miller had not.received treatments or attention for a serious disease, injury, physical or mental' condition; that she died on June 25, 1945, the victim of a homicide; that her death occurred prior to the date of the issuance of thе policy applied for and within eight weeks from the date of such application; that on August 13, 1945, more than eight weeks after the date of the application, and more than six weeks after the death of the applicant, the defendant insurance company, in an effort to avoid liability upon said contract, marked the application declined; that demand for payment of the claim had been made upon the company, and that its failure to pay was in bad faith.
The defendant demurred generally to thе petition of the plaintiff and specially to certain allegations charging malice and bad faith on the part of the company in refusing to pay the claim. The demurrer was sustained and the case dismissed. The plaintiff excepted.
The whole contentiоn of the plaintiff seems to be that the so-called contract of temporary insurance is ambiguous and is capable of bеing construed in more than one way, and should be construed in a manner most favorable to the insured and so as to uphold and sustain the rеceipt as a contract of temporary insurance. We recognize the rule that if a policy of insurance is caрable of being construed in two ways, that interpretation must be placed upon it which is most favorable to the insured. See
Mass. Benefit Life Assn.
v.
Robinson,
104
Ga.
256 (2) (
“It is a well-settled rule, establishеd by the great weight of authority, that mere delay in passing upon an application for insurance can not be construed as аn acceptance thereof by the insurer which will support an action ex contractu.” 29 Am. Jur. Ins. § 141. The same rule is stated in Couch on Insurаnce, Volume 1, § 86. This general rule has been recognized and applied in Georgia.
New York Life Ins. Co.
v.
Babcock,
104
Ga.
67 (
*232 The court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer and in dismissing the action.
Judgment affirmed.
