13 S.E.2d 32 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
1. Where a fraternal benefit association, for a single premium, issues a certificate to an insured providing for the payment of an endowment in cash to the insured upon certain contingencies, or for the payment of such sum to the insured's beneficiary upon his death, the contract is an entire one, and where the association breaches the contract with reference to the endowment provision of the certificate, the insured may accept the breach and recover the premiums paid, with interest.
2. The fact that the breach of the contract was authorized by a subsequently enacted by-law, by which the insured agreed to be bound at the time of the original contract, would be immaterial, as the violation of substantial rights of members of such associations is not authorized under the Code, § 56-1610.
The defendant filed a demurrer, the grounds of which were that the petition set forth no cause of action and that it did not set forth the proper measure of damages. These grounds were overruled and exceptions pendente lite were filed. The answer denied the material allegations of the petition and by amendment alleged that the policy issued to the plaintiff contained the following provision: "The contract: This certificate is issued to and accepted by the insured subject to the constitution and laws of this company now in force and effect or which hereafter may be enacted, adopted or promulgated, and it is understood and agreed that the constitution and laws of this company, the application for membership, the *279 medical examination and all amendments to each thereof, which are hereby referred to, are all made a part of this certificate the same as though set out in full;" that the defendant company is a fraternal benefit society organized and existing under the laws of South Carolina, duly qualified to do business in Georgia, subject to the limitations and conditions and with the rights and privileges provided by Code, § 56-1601 et seq., to which Code section reference is specifically made; that after its discontinuance of this type of policy the defendant offered to the policyholders owning contingent endowment policies the right and option to exchange their policies for other forms of policy regularly issued; that this offer and change were effected by a regularly adopted amendment to the constitution and laws of the company, and said amendment is on file with the Insurance Commissioner of Georgia; that the plaintiff did not avail himself of this privilege; that another amendment was regularly adopted which provided that after a certain date upon the death of any owner of a contingent endowment certificate where such owner was the only member of the division in which his policy had been placed, his beneficiary would be paid twice the face amount of the policy; that this amendment is on file with the Insurance Commissioner of Georgia.
The case was tried by a judge of the civil court of Fulton County, without the intervention of a jury, who rendered judgment against the company for $335.94 principal and $45 interest. The exceptions are to the overruling of the demurrers and to the overruling of the motion for new trial. 1. The court did not err in overruling the demurrers to the petition.
2. The certificate provided on its face: "Unity Life Insurance Company . . will pay to Dr. Benjamin Taylor Beasley, the insured, one thousand dollars upon the maturity of this certificate as a contingent endowment as defined under `Contingent Endowment' on the second page hereof and subject to the provisions therein set forth, or to the insured's wife . . , the beneficiary, one thousand dollars upon receipt of due proof of death of the insured before the maturity of a contingent endowment hereunder. This contract *280
is made in consideration of . . the payment in advance of the sum of $7.71 . . and . . of the payment of a like sum . . on or before the first day of each month and . . until this certificate shall mature as a contingent endowment or until the prior death of the insured." (Italics ours.) This contract was an entire contract, written and continued in consideration of the payment of a single premium. Upon its face the endowment feature is the primary feature, but whether it is primary or equally as important and vital as the life-insurance feature, it is a vital part of the contract. The right of an insured to have the opportunity, for which he has paid, of receiving $1000 during his lifetime is quite as valuable, if not more so, as to have that amount paid to a beneficiary at his death. The repudiation of one of two vital obligations in an entire contract is a repudiation of all of it. Code, § 20-112. The insured in this case elected to rescind, accepting the company's anticipatory breach, which he had a right to do. Royal Arcanum v. Lester,
Judgment affirmed. Stephens, P. J., and Sutton, J., concur. *281