Hart v. MFA Insurance

597 S.W.2d 105, 268 Ark. 857, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1231
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 19, 1980
DocketCA 79-11
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 597 S.W.2d 105 (Hart v. MFA Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. MFA Insurance, 597 S.W.2d 105, 268 Ark. 857, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1231 (Ark. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

M. Steele Hays, Judge.

This case presents a question of insurance coverage in connection with a fire loss. On July 11, 1975 MFA Insurance Co. issued a policy of fire insurance covering the home and contents of Gilbert and Mary Hart. The policy provided coverage of $8,000.00 on the dwelling and $4,000.00 on the contents for a period of three years. The total premium was $300.00 and was payable in semi-annual installments of $50.00 each. One installment, apparently the fifth, became due on July 11, 1977, and a premium statement was mailed to the Harts by MFA approximately twenty days earlier and received by them ten days prior to July 11. On the reverse side of the notice the following sentence was printed:

1. FIRE, HOMEOWNERS AND INLAND MARINE POLICIES UNDER DPP PLAN
“If the premium due is an installment under Deferred Premium Payment Plan, and payment is not received by due date, notice is hereby given that such policy is cancelled on due date.”

The premium was not paid on or before the due date and six days thereafter, on July 17, the Hart dwelling and contents were heavily damaged by fire. The damage to the dwelling was stipulated to be $7,606.29 and to the contents, $4,-000.00. MFA refused the claim, contending that the policy lapsed on July 11, for non-payment of the premium due on that date. The Harts contend, rather, that under the terms of the policy they were entitled to ten days notice of cancellation and, therefore, the insurance was still in force. The cause was submitted to the trial court sitting as a jury and judgment was rendered for the company.

The Harts argue three points for reversal: that the trial court erred in ruling that MFA was not required to give ten days notice of cancellation after the Harts failed to pay the premium; that the Court erred in ruling that the cancellation notice was conspicuous; and that the Court erred in ruling that the notice of cancellation was not a conditional notice.

We need not consider whether the notice in the premium statement was sufficiently conspicuous or whether it was unconditional, as we find the clear import of the language in the policy gave the Harts the right to assume that a notice of cancellation for failure to pay the premium when due was required. Indeed, that is precisely what the policy states. The appropriate section reads as follows:

1. CANCELLATION FOR NON PAYMENT OF PREMIUM.
“This policy may be cancelled by this company at any time during the policy period for failure to pay any premium when due whether such premium is payable directly or indirectly under any premium finance plan or extension of credit by mailing or delivering to the insured written notice stating when not less than ten days thereafter such cancellation shall be effective.” (emphasis supplied)

MFA argues that the notice by cancellation need not wait until the premium is past due and unpaid, but may be sent at any time during the policy period. Thus, appellee argues the notice sent out approximately twenty days before July 11 notifying the Harts that the premium was due operated as the cancellation notice in the event the insured failed to send in the premium by the due date. But we cannot arrive at the same interpretation MFA does of this provision, because if we gave literal effect to the language, as MFA urges us to do, it would mean that the company could issue a policy under a deferred payment plan, as here, and immediately send out a notice that if any subsequent installment of premium was not paid on the due date the insurance would be cancelled on the date the premium was due. Of course, there is nothing improper about such a procedure provided it does not circumvent a provision in the policy which gives the policy holder the right to assume that he will receive a notice of cancellation after he has failed to pay one of the premiums on the due date. That is exactly what we believe occurred in the instant case. The Harts believed, and so testified, that if the July 11 premium was not paid promptly then the policy was not automatically cancelled on the 11th, but was subject to cancellation if the company so elected. We think that assumption was not inconsistent with the clear inference of the provision.

While we are required under settled law to give a reasonable interpretation to the clear meaning of words used in a policy, we are not required to do so when such interpretation leads to an improbable end, as would the literal interpretation urged by MFA.

Appellee’s interpretation is founded on the words “at any time during the policy period”, and if these words were eliminated from the sentence, it is clear that MFA’s interpretation would not be possible, as the pertinent provision would then read:

This policy may be cancelled by this company . . . for failure to pay any premium when due... by mailing ... to the insured written notice stating when not less than 10 days thereafter such cancellation should be effective.

Thus, appellee interprets the words “at any time during the policy period” as relating to notice, that is to say that the words are intended to relate to or modify, when notice may be sent out, i.e., at any time during the policy period. As we have said, if this were so, then the company in 1975 (or at any time) could send a notice that if the premium due on December 11, 1978, nearly three years later, were not paid on the due date, the policy was immediately cancelled. We are unwilling to reach so contrived a conclusion. What we do conclude seems far more plausible and that is that the words “at any time during the policy period” are intended to differentiate between cancellation because of failure to pay premiums and cancellation upon other grounds. When the section of the policy in which the above quoted provision appears is examined in full (it is too lengthy to be set out herein), it readily appears that there are 3, perhaps 4, separate conditions under which the company reserves the right to cancel, which vary depending on the grounds for cancellation and on the length of time the policy has been in force. Thus, under paragraph 2, if the policy has been in force for 60 days or more, the company reserves the right of cancellation for the reasons listed therein, by giving thirty days notice. Similarly, paragraph 3 deals with cancellation procedures in cases where the policy is for a term of more than one year. Thus, the right of cancellation and the method of cancellation vary depending upon the ground on which cancellation is based and whether the policy has been force a certain period of time. The right of cancellation which is derived from failure to pay any premium installment is reserved to the company at any time during the policy period and we think it clear that it was to distinguish between cancellation for failure to pay premiums and cancellation for other reasons, that the words “at any time during the policy period” appear. The words, we hold, are intended to modify cancellation and not notice.

Appellee relies upon cases cited in Appleman, Law of Insurance, § 4185, Vol. 6-A, p. 543, for the following statement of the law with respect to notice:

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Bluebook (online)
597 S.W.2d 105, 268 Ark. 857, 1980 Ark. App. LEXIS 1231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-mfa-insurance-arkctapp-1980.