Cody v. Remington Electric Shavers

427 A.2d 810, 179 Conn. 494, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 29, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 427 A.2d 810 (Cody v. Remington Electric Shavers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cody v. Remington Electric Shavers, 427 A.2d 810, 179 Conn. 494, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 695 (Colo. 1980).

Opinion

Bogdanski, J.

The plaintiff, John P. Cody, Jr., brought an action to recover benefits under a disability plan issued to his employer, the defendant Remington Electric Shavers, Inc., by the defendant Connecticut General Life Insurance Company. The plaintiff subsequently died and his father and administrator, John P. Cody, was substituted as party plaintiff. Thereafter the parties stipulated *495 to the facts and the case was tried to the court. From a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants have appealed.

The stipulation of facts may be summarized as follows: The decedent was employed as a full-time accountant by the defendant Remington from February 7, 1972, to May 12, 1972. Prior to that time, Remington had contracted with the defendant Connecticut General for a long-term disability plan for the benefit of its employees. In March of 1972 the decedent became ill, was hospitalized and lost a total of six and one-half consecutive days of work. From May 12, 1972, until his death in 1977, the decedent was totally disabled within the meaning of the plan. Under the plan an employee does not become eligible for benefits until he has completed three months of continuous active service prior to becoming disabled. The decedent was a full-time employee of the defendant Remington for three months and five days.

The principal dispute between the parties is whether the decedent met the condition for eligibility under the plan by completing three months of continuous active service.

The trial court concluded that the six and one-half days absence during the three month period did not disqualify the decedent from coverage.

The defendants contend that the court erred (1) in failing to incorporate in its finding a paragraph of their draft finding; (2) in concluding that the decedent qualified for coverage under the terms of the plan; and (3) in excluding testimony regarding *496 the underwriting considerations behind the plan’s three months of continuous active service requirement. 1

Since the resolution of the issue as to coverage is dispositive of the appeal, we will address that issue first. The defendants contend that because the active service must be continuous, it must be totally uninterrupted; that perfect attendance for three months is necessary in order to complete the three months continuous active service requirement. We do not agree.

The trial court specifically found that a requirement that a condition be continuous does not necessarily mean it must be literally uninterrupted, but that it means working with reasonable regularity. Work does not cease to be continuous because of interruptions in one’s occupation due to a mere period of temporary illness such as are incident to people of normal health; to interpret the word “continuous” as requiring perfect attendance would make it theoretically possible for long-term employees to be excluded from coverage for missing one day of work during each three month period for personal reasons, religious holidays, illness or the like. The court concluded that in spite of the decedent’s absence of approximately one week in a period of three months and five days, the decedent performed in the customary manner the regular duties of his employment with reasonable continuity, and therefore fulfilled the three month continuous active service requirement.

*497 We do not, however, find it necessary to construe the meaning of the word “continuous,” or in fact even to make the initial determination that the word as used is ambiguous, since we conclude that the phrase “continuous active service” in the context of this case means uninterrupted employment. See Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice §44 (1965). What the provision containing that phrase prohibits is the tacking on of short periods of employment in order to meet the three month requirement for coverage. It is not the meaning of the word “continuous” that is ambiguous but rather the policy provision in which it is contained.

It is a basic principle of insurance law that policy language will be construed as laymen would understand it and not according to the interpretation of sophisticated underwriters, and that ambiguities in contract documents are resolved against the party responsible for its drafting; the policyholder’s expectations should be protected as long as they are objectively reasonable from the layman’s point of view. See, e.g., Roby v. Connecticut General Life Ins. Co., 166 Conn. 395, 349 A.2d 838 (1974); King v. Travelers Ins. Co., 123 Conn. 1, 192 A. 311 (1937).

While it is true the term “active service” is defined in the policy, 2 we find that it is used in dif *498 ferent senses in different parts of the policy. For example, the provision dealing with termination of insurance states that “termination of Active Service will be considered termination of employment.” Clearly, “active service” is used here synonymously with “employment.” While an absence from work for whatever reason would constitute a break in “active service” as it is defined in the policy, it would hardly result in the interruption or termination of employment.

This is not to say that “active service” as defined has no applicability in construing the provisions of the policy. The policy provides that the effective date of insurance is “the date on which the Employee becomes eligible . . . provided the Employee is in Active Service on that date; otherwise the effective date of his insurance will be the date he returns to Active Service.” The only logical construction that can be given to this provision is that on the last day of the waiting period, three months in this case, the employee must meet the definition of “active service” to be covered on that day. If he is absent from work on the last day of the three month period and becomes disabled before returning to active service, he will not be covered. If he returns to work, however, at any time subsequent to the end of the three month period and then becomes disabled he would be covered. To construe the policy as the defendants would have us do, would render the phrase “otherwise the effective date of his insurance will be the date he returns to Active Service” meaningless, since any absence would interrupt the running of the three month waiting period. A “return to active service” according to the defendants’ line of reasoning would simply start the running of a new three month *499 period. Such a construction is clearly contrary to the express language of the policy that an employee will be covered on the day he returns to active service. 3

We conclude, therefore, that the provision for three months of continuous active service should be interpreted so as to refer to three months of uninterrupted employment.

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Bluebook (online)
427 A.2d 810, 179 Conn. 494, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cody-v-remington-electric-shavers-conn-1980.