Opinion by
Coster Thompson, Sr., contracted pulmonary tuberculosis some time in December of 1945. Although he *273 continued working at the Clairton Works of the United States Steel Corporation until April 26, 1946, his condition deteriorated rapidly from the inception of the disease. Because of the contagious nature of his illness, his wife, Lenora Thompson, appellant, was advised to live separately from her husband, which she did, although she visited him regularly until his death on January 16, 1947. Unbeknownst to Mrs. Thompson, at the time of her husband’s death, she was the named beneficiary of two group insurance certificates, one for $2,000, which had been increased on March 1, 1946, to $3,000, and one for $1,000, issued by the Equitable Life Assurance Society, one of appellees, to her husband as an employee of the United States Steel Corporation, successor to Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation, another of the appellees.
In November of 1965, Mrs. Thompson, while going through her recently deceased mother’s papers, discovered the two insurance certificates. She made inquiry at the steel company’s mill office to determine whether the insurance policies were still in effect and was informed that they had expired. Shortly thereafter Mrs. Thompson brought suit on the policies.
At the nonjury trial of the case on October 2, 1969, there was no evidence produced to prove that the deceased was ever advised by appellees of the actual termination of his employment and his right to convert his group policies to individual policies of life insurance. Thus, the policies were in effect at the death of Mrs. Thompson’s husband. Nevertheless, the trial court found that Mrs. Thompson’s right to recover on the policies was barred by the six-year statute of limitations on contract actions in Pennsylvania, 12 P.S. §31, since she did not notify the insurance company until more than six years had elapsed after her husband’s death. On appeal to the Superior Court, the decision *274 of the trial court was affirmed with Judge Montgomery filing a dissenting opinion in which Judges Hoffman and Cercone joined. We granted allocatur, and now we reverse.
As the dissenters pointed out in the Superior Court, most jurisdictions follow the general rule that failure to bring suit within the time limit stated in the policy is excused where the beneficiary does not know of the existence of the policy until after the alleged time has expired; provided (1) he notifies the company at once after acquiring that knowledge, and (2) the lack of knowledge was without negligence or fault of the party seeking to be excused. 44 Am. Jur. 2d, §1915. Any other rule, which would forfeit a life insurance policy because the beneficiary had not given notice or brought suit within a certain period of time after the death of the insured, when the beneficiary did not know of the existence of the policy until after the prescribed period had expired and the beneficiary’s ignorance was without negligence or fault would be unduly harsh. See the recent exhaustive annotation to
Clinard, v. Security Life & Trust Co.,
Although this rule was applied by the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, in
Maize v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.,
35 Pa. D. & C. 2d 576 (1964), there is language in the case of
Selden v. Met. Life Ins. Co.,
The language to the contrary in the majority opinion in
Selden
is not an accurate statement of the law in Pennsylvania. See also
Unverzagt v. Prestera,
The real issue in this ease, as it was in Selden, is whether the beneficiary’s failure to discover the policies in her favor until after the statute of limitations had elapsed was excusable.
The dissenters in the Superior Court believed that this case should be remanded to the trial court for a determination of this issue. However, they reached this decision because the transcript of the trial court’s proceedings was not filed with the Superior Court when this case was before that court. We are not faced with that situation. We have the transcript. In an appeal from a trial without a jury, we may consider
*276
elements not passed upon below and make our own findings tbereon.
Innes v. Nanticoke City Sch. Dist.,
Here, the record is clear. Because of Ms tubercular condition, the insured, appellant’s late husband, was not living with appellant and their family during his final illness. According to appellant, Mr. Thompson never discussed any insurance policies with her. The appellant further testified that between the date of her husband’s death on January 16, 1947, and her discovery of the old group certificates in the fall of 1965, she did not know of the existence of any insurance. Under such circumstances, her failure to discover the policies at an earlier time was excusable and her claim should not have been barred by the statute of limitations.
The orders of the Superior Court and judgments of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County are reversed and judgments are here entered for appellant.
