DocketNumber: No. 26,213.
Judges: Stone, Holt
Filed Date: 2/17/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The insured suffered accidental injury on January 11, 1923, which proved fatal three days later. An annual premium fell due under the policy on December 1, 1922. It was not paid until December 4, *Page 548 so that in the interim the policy lapsed. The payment of the premium and its acceptance by defendant reinstated the policy subject to the standard policy provision that:
"If default be made in the payment of the agreed premium * * * the subsequent acceptance of a premium by the Company or by any of its duly authorized agents shall reinstate the policy but only to cover accidental injury thereafter sustained and such sickness as may begin more than ten days after the dates of such acceptance."
Payment of a delinquent premium had the effect of "renewing" the policy, subject to all its provisions and conditions, the reinstatement taking effect (subject to the absence of liability for intervening sickness or accident) as of the date when the premium was due rather than on the date of payment.
The accumulation benefit is provided for and conditioned by the following language of the policy:
"For each period of six consecutive months, immediately preceding the date of the accident, that this policy shall have been maintained in continuous force by the payment of the premiums on or before the dates due, five per cent. shall be added to the original specific amount payable for any loss * * * sustained by the insured, but such additions shall never exceed fifty per cent. of such original amount."
The standard provision above quoted, limiting the effect of the reinstatement of a policy by the acceptance of a past due premium, is authorized by statute. G.S. 1923, § 3417 (3) (C); (L. 1913, p. 181, c. 156, § 3). In the absence of such a provision, the acceptance of past due premiums may constitute such a waiver of the conditions of the policy as to avoid a forfeiture of benefits otherwise accrued. Mueller v. Grand Grove,
Defendant answers with Ward v. Merchants Life Cas. Co.
It is with respect to that precise subject matter, that is, injuries or death occurring prior to the acceptance of the delinquent payments, that the next utterance of the court must be read. It is this: "Under the terms of this contract the effect of the acceptance of such payments is the creation of a new contract, obligatory upon the insurer for the future only." To give that dictum a broader scope and one independent of both its subject matter and context is not permissible. As limited by both subject matter and context, it means that, with respect to accident or death occurring during a lapse, a new contract is in effect the result of a subsequent payment and acceptance of the premium. The old contract not having *Page 550 been in force as to such accident or death, there can be no recovery. But it does not follow that when a delinquent premium is paid and accepted, an accident policy cannot be reinstated with respect to benefits other than those for accidents during the period of the lapse. It is only recovery for accident or sickness during the lapse (including sickness beginning within ten days thereafter) that is expressly prevented by the standard policy provision in question.
But even that view cannot control here, for it remains that the accumulation benefit is payable only in the case of the policy's being, for the necessary period, "maintained in continuous force by the payment of the premiums on or before the dates due." The acceptance of the delinquent premium was expressly "subject to all the provisions and conditions of said policy." Moreover, by the insuring clause, all extensions (i.e. renewals) of the policy by the payment of premiums after the first are subject to "all the provisions and conditions hereinafter set forth." So no waiver has yet appeared of the condition that in order to entitle the beneficiary to the accumulation benefit the policy must be maintained, as just stated, "in continuous force by the payment of the premiums on or before the dates due."
It would be easy enough to reason around the requirement that the policy be kept in continuous force, for when the delinquent premium was accepted the resulting reinstatement took effect retroactively as of December 1. If that were all, plaintiff's right to the accumulation benefit would be reasonably clear. But there is no way of escaping the condition that the maintenance of the policy, required to continue the accumulation benefit, had to be by the payment of premiums on or before they became due. Nothing has been done to waive that condition. Defendant is entitled to insist upon it, and so plaintiff cannot recover.
Order reversed.