Choate v. Provident Savings Life Assurance Society

216 S.W. 1073, 186 Ky. 288, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 19, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 1073 (Choate v. Provident Savings Life Assurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Choate v. Provident Savings Life Assurance Society, 216 S.W. 1073, 186 Ky. 288, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 213 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle —

Affirming

Bobert S. Cboate died in Franklin county, Kentucky, in the year 1917, survived by bis widow, the appellant, Virginia Cboate, and three children, the appellants, Lula V., Leroy and J. S. Choate, all adults. At the time of his death the decedent held on his life a policy of insurance in the appellee, Provident Savings Life Assurance Society, of the face or paid-up value of $3,000.00, of date June 15, 1891, payable at his death to his widow and children, who, as the beneficiaries named in the policy, brought this action in the court below seeking to recover of the appellee $5,297.10, as the amount of insurance claimed to be due them on the policy, this amount being made up, as alleged in the petition, of the $3,000.00, stated in the face of the policy, $1,767.00 by way of additions accumulated on the policy from its issuance, June 15, 1891, down to June 15, 1911, the date to which the last payment of premium carried it, and the further sum of $530.10 by way of accumulations on the policy after June 15, 1911.

The answer of appellee denied appellants’ right to the accumulations on the policy or any of them, claimed in the petition; alleged that the value of the policy was [290]*290only $3,000.00; set up an indebtedness against the policy due appellee of $2,099.14 the principal and interest of a note for reserve premiums thereon executed by the insured, which deducted from the face value thereof would, as alleged, leave appellee owing only $900.86, and this amount it tendered appellants and 'offered to pay into court.

No proof was taken by the parties, and, following a motion by appellants in the circuit court to strike from the answer the paragraph appearing below in the opinion, the case was submitted in that court on the motion and pleadings. The court sustained the appellee’s several contentions, hence appellants’ motion to strike from the answer the paragraph objected to was overruled, and their recovery on the policy limited to the $3,000.00 named therein, with 6 per cent interest from August 24, 1917, and costs of the action, credited by the insured’s indebtedness to the appellee of $2,089.29, with 5 per cent interest from December 1, 1917, thereby leaving due appellants on the policy the net balance of $900.86, admitted by the answer. From the judgment manifesting the above rulings the latter have appealed.

The only question urged for decision on the appeal must be determined by a construction of certain provisions of the policy before us. The question seems to be presented by the folowing averments of the answer which the circuit court refused to strike out: “By reason of the failure of the insured, Eobert S. Choate, to elect to discontinue the insurance, said insurance was, on June 15, 1911, by virtue of the provisions of said policy above set forth, continued as a paid-up contract during the life of Eobert S. Choate for its full amount, to-wit, $3,000.00, without the payment of further premiums by him, and as there were no profits earned by, or properly belonging to, or apportioned or apportionable to said policy, or other participation policies then existing, said policy was, at the date of the death of Eobert S. Choate, a contract for its full amount, to-wit, $3,000.00, and no more, charged ■with a lien on account of the loan hereinabove mentioned of $935.52 and interest accumulations thereon.”

Choate first obtained of the appellee in 1891 a renews able annual policy for $3,000.00, which he carried on his life until 1901. In that year appellee issued to him in lieu of the first policy, the policy now under considera[291]*291tion, known as a 19 payment whole life policy. In order to give the insured the benefit of a lower rate of premium than would have been chargeable to him at his actual ag’e in 1901, the new policy was dated back to June 15, 1891, and a note given by him to represent the reserve portion of the premiums that would have been paid by him if the policy had in fact been issued on June 15,1891. The note when given amounted to $935.52, but at the institution of this action it amounted, with its accrued interest, to $2,099.14.

The premium on the first policy was payable semiannually, i. e., $74.82, on June 15,1891, the date of issue, and $74.82 on the following December 15, 1891, which would thus carry the policy to June 15, 1892. It was provided in the policy that if the insurance was kept up until June 15, 1892, that •is ■ if the December 15, 1891, half portion of the premium should be paid, the company would renew the policy as a “19 payment, whole life policy” upon the payment of $74.82, on June 15, and December 15, in eách year “until such premiums for 19 years had been fully paid.” Therefore the period between June 15, 1910, and June 15,1911, would be the 19th year after June 15,1892, so upon the payment of tbe semiannual premium due on December 15, 1910, the last installment of the premium for the 19th year would thereby be paid. Hence, under the expressed provisions of the policy, it became a whole life policy immediately upon the payment of the semiannual premium on December 15, 1910. That was the last premium the insured was compelled to pay in order that the policy might become a whole life policy. In other words the premium paying period began on June 15, 1892, and ended on December 15, 1910, after which date no further premiums of any kind were to be paid.

On page three of the policy is the following provision: "Should the death of the assured occur within the premium paying period hereunder and while this assurance is in force, the society then promises to pay to the beneficiaries, in addition to the face value of this policy, as defined above, an amount equal to the loan value of this policy at its last anniversary, as set forth in the table of surrender values below. ’ ’ This is followed by a table allowing certain loan values up to June 15, 1910, and no later. In the absence of this special provision it would [292]*292seem that upon the death of the insured, whenever it occurred, there would have been payable to the beneficiaries only the sum of $3,000.00, principal sum provided for in the policy. It also seems apparent that under that special provision the payment of the additional sum or sums was expressly contingent upon the death of the insured “within the premium paying period.” Apparently, however, to make it doubly clear that the additional sum was to be paid only in the event that the “death of the insured occur within the premium paying period,” the policy contained the following additional special provisions (appearing under the table setting forth the' loan values): “The last premium hereunder falls due upon the 15th day of December, 1910, upon payment of which this policy becomes paid up for life thereafter for its full face value of $3,000.00.”

It is the contention of appellee that as the premium paying period ended at the moment the last premium was paid on December 15, 1910, under the provisions of the policy above quoted the amount to which the beneficiaries were entitled upon the occurrence of the death of the insured after December 15, 1910, was $3,000.00, and no more, and such was the holding of the circuit court.

Under the table of loan values on the third page of the policy it is provided that the accumulation period (as distinguished from the “premium paying period”) should end on June 15, 1911, and that the entire terminal cash value of the policy on that date would be $1,908.00, which was available to the insured after he elected to abandon the polciy and take its equivalent in cash.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 1073, 186 Ky. 288, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/choate-v-provident-savings-life-assurance-society-kyctapp-1919.