29 S.E.2d 482 | S.C. | 1944
March 15, 1944. The policy in this suit was issued on January 26, 1931, upon the life of Ernest Colvin, and designated the plaintiff, Barney J. Young, as beneficiary. The insured was enrolled in the Army of the United States in 1942, when this country was actively engaged in war. He died on December 24, 1942, shortly after his induction into the military forces. His death resulted from an automobile accident while he was visiting relatives at Hartsville, South Carolina. It is admitted that his accidental death had no causal connection with his military service, and that it occurred at a time when he was on furlough from the Army.
The policy provides that upon receipt of due proof that the death of the insured resulted directly from bodily injury, independently of all other causes, and that such bodily injury was effected solely through external, violent, and accidental means, and that death occurred within ninety days thereafter, the company would pay to the beneficiary double indemnity.
By stipulation, the case was tried before the Judge of the County Court of Richland County without a jury, and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the accidental death benefit. *389
The defense relied upon by the appellant arises under the following provisions of the policy:
"No Accidental Death Benefit will be paid if the death of the Insured is the result of self-destruction, whether sane or insane, nor if death is caused or contributed to, directly or indirectly, or wholly or partially by disease, or by bodily or mental infirmity, nor if death results from bodily injuries sustained while participating in aviation or aeronautics as a passenger or otherwise, or while the insured is in military or naval service in time of war."
"Military and Naval Service — The insured may serve in the Navy or Army of the United States or in the National Guard in time of peace or for the purpose of maintaining order in case of riot; in time of actual war, however, a written permit must be obtained from the Company for such service and an extra premium paid. Should the insured die while enrolled in such service in war time without such permit, the Company's liability will be restricted to the net reserve on this policy."
It is admitted that prior to entering the military service, the insured did not obtain a written permit from the company for such service, nor did he pay an extra premium. The appellant contends that by virtue of the second clause above quoted, in order to keep the insurance in full force, the insured was required, in case he entered the military service in time of war, to obtain written consent from the company and pay an extra premium. The further position is taken that the insured's mere status by enrolment as a member of the military organization would be sufficient to make operative the first clause of the policy hereinabove quoted, and would bar recovery; and that causation between the participation of the insured in military service and his subsequent death need not be established.
The respondent takes the contrary view, and maintains that the parties did not intend that the reduction in liability *390 should be operative merely because of the status of the insured as a soldier, but was conditioned upon the insured's death resulting from his participation in military service; that consequently the double indemnity could be recovered when it appeared that the insured was killed in an automobile accident while on furlough from his military unit. It is argued that it was not incumbent upon the insured to apply for a written permit or to pay an extra premium since his death was in no way related to or caused by military activities connected with his service in the Army.
The decisions in the various state courts are not in accord as to whether a provision excepting or limiting the liability of the insurer while the insured is engaged in military or naval service applies to death from any cause while in such service in point of time, or applies merely to death caused by such military or naval service. An examination of the cases shows that this apparent conflict is due in some measure to the difference in the phraseology in the policies. In some cases, the view has been taken that a provision excepting or limiting the liability of the insurer while the insured is "engaged" in military or naval service, means death while doing or taking part in some military activity, and that the parties intended that the liability should relate to a death resulting from some act connected with the service in contradistinction to a period of time when the insured was in such service.
Other cases, however, have held that an exception or limitation of liability in the event of death while engaged in military or naval service means the status of the insured, and not the causation of his death, where there is no provision indicating a contrary intention. See Note, 137 A.L. R., P. 1263 et seq.
In the case at bar, the word "engage" is not found in either of the clauses of the policy issued to the insured. By the second clause it is provided that "should the insured die *391 while enrolled in such military service in war time without such permit, the Company's liability will be restricted to the net reserve on this policy." The first clause quoted, after exempting the company if the death of the insured results from or is caused by various contingencies, provides, "or while the insured is in military or naval service in time of war."
There is no question but that when the insured became enrolled and took the prescribed oath, he entered the military service of the United States Government, and thereafter became subject to the orders and discipline provided for that branch of the service. The sole issue here is whether the parties intended status or causation to govern liability.
The Supreme Court of Oklahoma, in a soundly reasoned case (Barnett v. Merchants' Life Ins. Co.,
"But, under the admitted facts in this case, we prefer to follow the other rule (causation and not status) supported by well-reasoned cases hereafter mentioned. There can be no serious contention but that the intention of the parties to the contract of insurance by inserting a military clause was to restrict and limit the liability of the company in the event of increased hazard to the insured by engaging in military service. Now, if such service did not increase the hazard, the clause has served its purpose. * * *
"The phrase `engaged in military service in time of war', in order to have a consistent and harmonious construction in connection with the general terms and scope of the insurance contract, must denote such service as would increase the hazard or risk of the insurer. Where the insured died many miles away from actual military engagements, with an ordinary disease, common alike to civil and military life, there is no just reason to permit the insurer from escaping liability such as was assumed by it under its primary obligation as shown by the stipulation herein." *392
In Illinois Bankers' Life Ass'n v. Davaney, 1924,
In the case before us, we think it clear that although the policy contains the word "enroll" and not "engage", it was intended by the parties, insured and insurer, that the failure of the insured to obtain the permit and pay the extra premium would reduce the company's liability only in case his death should result from a risk peculiar to the military service. This view is strengthened by the requirement that an extra premium be paid in the event of military service in time of war. It is evident that an extra hazard was in contemplation of the parties as a possible cause of death, and that for this added risk the Company should be compensated. This added risk, in our view, cannot reasonably be referred to status; it relates to the death of the insured caused by or connected with his military duties as a member of the nation's armed forces. This seems to us to be the natural and obvious reading of the clauses quoted. *393
A policy may be so worded that it is clear that the parties intended that the mere status of the insured as a member of the armed forces should be sufficient to make the provision relating to military service operative, and that the assured's death while such a member should be enough to relieve the insurer, irrespective of whether or not it was attributable to his military activities. But we do not consider that the policy before us is so worded. It would have been an easy matter for the company to have used words clearly exempting it from liability in the event the insured should die from any cause while enrolled in the armed forces in war time. However, this was not done.
In the recent case of Smith v. Sovereign Camp of TheWoodmen of the World,
We have denied the status theory in previous cases involving insurance clauses. In McGee v. Globe Indemnity Co.,
In the McGee case, supra, the insurer specifically raised the question of status or condition. The Court stated with reference to this contention: "We are of the opinion that the distinction advanced between the excluded act and condition is without any logical basis. * * * The rule established by the Reynolds case [Reynolds v. Life CasualtyIns. Co.,
The decision in the McGee case was deemed conclusive in the later case of Bailey v. United States Fidelity GuarantyCo., 1937,
Judgment affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BAKER and MESSRS. ASSOCIATE JUSTICES STUKES, TAYLOR and OXNER concur.