Burchfield v. &198tna Life Ins. Co.

159 So. 233, 230 Ala. 49, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 17, 1935
Docket6 Div. 671.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 159 So. 233 (Burchfield v. &198tna Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burchfield v. &198tna Life Ins. Co., 159 So. 233, 230 Ala. 49, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 55 (Ala. 1935).

Opinion

KNIGHT, Justice.

Joseph P. Burchfield filed this suit in the circuit court against the Ætna Life Insurance Company, to recover the sum of $2,500, the amount claimed to be due him under a certain group policy of insurance, a certificate thereunder having been issued to him as one of the *51 insured under the policy, while the master policy was delivered to the partnership of Burch-field Brothers.

After the trial of the cause, and judgment rendered therein in favor of the defendant, the Ætna life Insurance Company, Mr. Burch-field died, and Alta Lee Burchfield was duly appointed as executrix of his last will and testament. The appeal in the case is taken by the executrix.

The policy contract sued on is what is commonly called a “Term Policy,” and provides for disability benefits to be paid to the insured in case of total and permanent disability upon certain conditions, and also provides for the waiver by the company of further payment of premium for the insurance upon conditions set out in the policy.

Both the life or major policy and the certificate contained a health and accident provision, as follows:

“If total disability of the insured begin after the date of this policy and before age sixty, and if due proof be furnished the company after such disability has existed for a period of six months and if such disability presumably will during lifetime prevent the insured from pursuing any occupation for wages or profit, or if the insured shall suffer the entire and irrecoverable loss of the sight of both eyes or of the use of both hands or both feet or of the use of one hand and one foot, and if proof of such loss be furnished to the company before the insured attains the age of sixty years, the insured shall be deemed to be totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of this policy.

“Upon surrender of this policy and upon receipt of the home office of the company, during the continuance of this policy, of due proof of such total and permanent disability, the company will waive further payment of premium for the insurance and will pay to the insured, in lieu of all other benefits, the sum then insui-ed.”

So far as this case is concerned, the following portion of the above provision may be disregarded, as no such claim is presented by this suit: “or if the insured shall suffer the entire and irrecoverable loss of the sight of both eyes or of the use of both hands or both feet or of the use of one hand and one foot, and if proof of such loss be furnished to the company,before the insured attains the age of sixty years.”

It will, therefore, be seen that the only provision of the policy which required proof of disability should be given the company before the insured attained the age of sixty years, relates solely to disability resulting from the loss of sight of both eyes, or of the use of both hands, or both feet, or of the use of one hand and one foot. Those pleas of the defendant — pleas 6 and 7 — which attempted to plead this provision of the policy which required the furnishing of proof of such disability before the insured attained the age of sixty years tendered an immaterial issue, and the plaintiff’s demurrer addressed to these pleas should have been sustained. However, in the view we take of the case, this ruling involved no injury to appellant, and we will not reverse the case on account of this erroneous, but not injurious, ruling of the court. S. C. Rule 45.

The defendant also filed, in addition to the general issue, a number of other special pleas, bringing forward in defense of the action the provision of the contract, which required that due proof of the insured’s total and permanent disability should be given during the continuation of the policy, and averred in substance, in each of the pleas, that this provision of the policy had not been complied with, in that no proof of disability was furnished the defendant until after the policy had lapsed for nonpayment of premiums.

The plaintiff filed thirty-four grounds of demurrer to these pleas. One of the plaintiff’s contentions is that the provision relating to the furnishing of proof of disability was a condition subsequent, which could properly be raised only by plea in abatement, and consequently compliance with said provision was not a condition precedent to plaintiff’s right to the benefits, but served only to defer action to recover the same until the required proof was given. Such would be the ease if the giving of such proof was in fact a condition subsequent and not precedent. Westchester Fire Ins. Co. V. Green, 223 Ala. 121, 134 So; 881; National Surety Co. v. Julian, 227 Ala. 472, 150 So. 474.

The first paragraph of the certificate sued on is composed of two independent clauses. The first deals with disability in general, of a total and permanent character. The second clause deals with disability resulting from certain designated infirmities, suffered before the insured attained the age of sixty years. Each clause is independent of the other, and in no true or just sense do they constitute constituent elements of an indivisible whole.

In the first clause, there is this provision: “and if due proof be furnished the company after such disability has existed for a period of six months * * While in the second clause, the provision as tomotice reads: “And if proof of such loss be furnished to the com *52 pany before the insured attains the age of sixty years.” These two clauses simply define the disability, and fix the status of the insured as being totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of the policy contract'. Standing alone, they do- not undertake to obligate the insurer to either waive further payment of premiums for the insurance, nor do they obligate the insurer to pay the insured anything. If the contract had stopped at the end of this first paragraph, the plaintiff, under neither of the clauses, would have any claim to the $2,500 sued for in this action. There would simply be no liability on the defendant under the policy, except the obligation to pay the named beneficiary the face of the policy upon the death of the insured.

It is in the second paragraph of the certificate that the insurer agrees to waive premiums, and to pay, in lieu of all other benefits, the sum then insured. This second paragraph must, perforce, be read into each of the disjunctive clauses of the first paragraph, or they become meaningless.

Deleting the provision as to specific disability set forth in the second clause of the first paragraph of the certificate, as it is not involved in this suit, the provision as to payment of disability benefits will read:

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Bluebook (online)
159 So. 233, 230 Ala. 49, 1935 Ala. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burchfield-v-198tna-life-ins-co-ala-1935.