31 A.2d 364 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued March 1, 1943. Judgment was entered for defendant for want of a sufficient plaintiffs' reply to new matter set up in the *149 affidavit of defense. The single question is whether plaintiffs brought their action in time. It is their contention that a contractual limitation in the policy reducing the time for bringing suit is ineffective and that in any event defendant is estopped from enforcing the provision. The facts are not in dispute.
Defendant on March 21, 1930, issued a policy of insurance for $2,000 on the life of Pauline Tellip in which plaintiffs were named as beneficiaries. On June 14, 1933, she borrowed $168 from defendant on the security of the policy. The quarterly premium due on June 21, 1935 was not paid and there was default in the payment of all subsequent premiums. The insured died on August 27, 1937. Formal proofs of death were waived by the defendant but payment was refused on the ground that after satisfaction of the loan out of the cash value, the policy by its terms continued in force as automatic extended insurance only until November 21, 1936, when the insurance terminated. In the policy there is a provision for automatic extended insurance based upon the table of values contained in it, "less any existing indebtedness to the company on the policy." Limiting the right of action, the policy provides: "No suit or action at law or in equity shall be maintained hereunder unless actually begun within two years after the cause of action shall accrue." This suit was not brought until October 28, 1941, more than four years after the death of insured. It is plaintiffs' contention that the provision requiring suit "within two years" is an attempt to limit the right of action to less than two years and that the limitation violates the Act of May 17, 1921, P.L. 682. That act in § 511(b),
Whatever the construction of similar language elsewhere, it is settled in this State that the provision in the policy is enforceable. "When an Act of Assembly requires a thing to be donewithin a certain time from or after a prior date, and deprives the party of a right for omitting it, the most liberal construction is to be chosen, and the furthest time given from which the reckoning is to be made. In other words, the day from or after which the count is to be made, is to be excluded in computing the time within which the act may be done." Menges v.Frick,
Defendant is not estopped from invoking the provision of the policy as a bar to plaintiffs' right of action. It is a fundamental principle that fraud of an insurer tolls the limitation on a right of action whether statutory or contractual and the limitation becomes effective only from discovery or from the date when, with reasonable diligence there ought to have been discovery. And "If by any act of concealment or deceit . . . . . . the wrongdoer hides from the innocent party the facts which would put him on inquiry, the statute [or contractual limitation] does not begin to run": Deemer v. Weaver,
A difficulty confronting plaintiffs is the fact that defendant did nothing to mislead them or to lull them into inaction until the time for bringing suit had passed. Defendant fulfilled its obligation to the plaintiffs of "the utmost fair dealing": Fedasv. Ins. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.