We would think that after countless decisions of this court, such as
Murphy v. Lawrence,
The Court of Appeals ruled that “the condition stated in the receipt is construed to be a condition subsequent rather than a condition precedent.”
We are fully aware of the rule of construction that requires ambiguities in an insurance policy to be construed in favor of the insured and against the insurer who wrote the policy. This position is fully covered in
Davis v. United &c. Life Ins. Co.,
There can be found no conflict in the application and the receipt. The receipt would be meaningless without the application. The amount and plan of insurance is found only in the application. It takes both to give meaning to the receipt, and since the receipt expressly states that part of its consideration is statements in the application they are in full accord. Can a court of justice therefore eliminate and ignore statements in the application that there is no liability unless the application shall have been approved by the medical director? The receipt by reference adopts this statement in the application. It is a statement by the applicant made in the application, for it is preceded by these words: “I agree as follows.”
The two papers amount only to insurance between acceptance of the risk and issuance of the policy, when and if the application is completed by the approval of the medical director and the applicant is found to be insurable for the amount and plan applied for as a standard risk. The effective date of the insurance is when these conditions have been met, thus covering a period not embraced in the policy if dated sometime after full acceptance of the risk. This might not be of great value but the parties agreed upon it, and hence it is no legitimate concern of the courts.
For the foregoing reasons the trial court did not err in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition, and the Court of Appeals erred in reversing that judgment.
Judgment reversed.
