This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court rendered upon a jury verdict in favor of the beneficiary under a life insurance policy issued by defendant, 1 a fraternal beneficiary society incorporated under the laws of Ohio. The life insurance certificate issued to the insured, a resident of Michigan, within the state of Michigan, provided that the constitution, bylaws, articles of incorporation and insurance application, together with the certificate, should constitute the contract. The claim of the beneficiary was disallowed December 14, 1951, and suit was brought November 12,1952. Under defendant’s constitution no suit to recover benefits could be brought after six months from the date of disallowance of the claim.
Under Ohio law a fraternal benefit society may contract for a limitation upon the time for suit, but the limitation must be reasonable. 22 Ohio Jurisprudence 764. This is the general rule. 14 R.C.L. §§ 580, 1417;
The rule of Ohio is stated as early as 1858. In William C. Fellowes v. The Madison Insurance Company, 2 Cincinnati Superior Court Reports, 128, 135, the court declared: “What shall be regarded as a reasonable time in any particular case, or class of cases, will depend upon circumstances. It should in any event allow sufficient opportunity to a party to investigate his claim, and prepare for the controversy.” See also Appel v. Cooper Insurance Company,
The instant case arose in the State of Michigan, in which defendant had been authorized to do business. A condition of its being admitted to the state to carry on its business was that it should abide by the law of the state. M.S.A. § 21.95, Comp.Laws 1948, § 450.-94. The effect of the statutes regulating the transaction of local business in Michigan by foreign corporations is to make such corporations, as to such business, domestic corporations entitled to and subject to the same remedies as such corporations in the courts of Michigan. Showen v. J. L. Owens Company,
Under Michigan law it is a question of fact for the jury whether the bylaws and regulations of a mutual benefit association are reasonable or unreasonable. Allen v. Gleaner Life Insurance Society, supra,
Defendant relies upon Order of United Commercial Travelers of America v. Wolfe,
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
On Petition for Rehearing
Defendant has filed a petition for rehearing, contending that - the judgment herein was erroneous under the doctrine of Order of United Commercial Travelers of America v. Wolfe,
The principal question discussed in the Wolfe case was the effect of the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution upon recovery in an action brought in South Dakota upon an insurance certificate issued by a fraternal benefit society organized in the State of Ohio. The facts of the Wolfe case are dissimilar to those here presented, where recovery on the certificate has been awarded in accordance with the law of Ohio, as well as with the law of Michigan. It is the law of Ohio that a limitation of the time to file suit on a fraternal benefit insurance certificate is valid if reasonable. This is the law of Michigan. The question whether such a limitation is reasonable is a question of fact for the jury under Michigan law. Allen v. Gleaner Life Ins. Co.,
In the instant case plaintiff claimed that the limitation was unreasonable and also claimed in effect that the beneficiary, acting “in good faith, and with proper diligence,” Appel v. Cooper Ins. Co., supra,
Moreover, the instant case is differentiated from the Wolfe case by the fact that there the provision as to the six-month limitation was stamped upon the face of the insurance certificate originally issued to the decedent. It is also differentiated by the fact that in the Wolfe case it was not claimed that the beneficiary had no notice of the limitation, while here it was shown by the uncontra-dicted evidence that notice did not exist. The beneficiary searched through her husband’s effects and papers. She said she went “through everything”; that she located the policy but did not find any copy of the bylaws or constitution. No proof was presented to the effect that
*708
such a cony had been sent either to the assured or to her. We cannot agree with defendant's view that the Supreme Court’s statement in the Wolfe case, supra,
Defendant also contends that if the six-montii' limitation in a fire insurance policy is valid such a limitation in a life insurance policy is equally valid. We disagree with this conclusion. In William C. Fellowes v. The Madison Insurance Co., 2 Cincinnati Superior Court Reports, 128, 135, the court declared, “What shall be regarded as a reasonable time in any particular case, or class of cases, will depend upon circumstances. It should in any event allow sufficient opportunity to a party to investigate his claim, aid prepare for the controversy.” This was reasserted by the Supreme Court of Ohio in Appel v. Cooper Ins. Co., supra, which declared that a limitation provision' “which does not leave to the’ assured a reasonable time in which to bring suit after his cause of action accrues is void and of no effect * When a fire occurs which is covered by a fire insurance contract the assured, who knows the provisions of the contract, is alive. In an action on a life insurance .policy the assured, who executed aid is presumed to have known the terms’ cf the insurance contract, is dead. It is obvious that in ordinary cases the time for the beneficiary to have sufficient opportunity to investigate his or her claim and prepare for the controversy should be longer in a death case than in a fire insurance case. Moreover, the beneficiary herein not only did not make the contract but never knew its terms. Defendant relies on decisions in Prudential Insurance Co. v. Howle, 19 Ohio Cir.Ct.R. 621, and Meyer v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
The petition for rehearing is denied.
Notes
. The parties will be denominated as in the court below.
