Jefferson Standard Life Ins. v. Adams

129 F.2d 431, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3392
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1942
DocketNo. 9024
StatusPublished

This text of 129 F.2d 431 (Jefferson Standard Life Ins. v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson Standard Life Ins. v. Adams, 129 F.2d 431, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3392 (6th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

McAllister, circuit judge.

From a judgment against the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company, for life insurance, the company appeals, claiming lapse of policy for nonpayment of premium, and that it was not in effect at the time of the death of the insured, on July 15, 1936. The trial court held that at the -time of default in the payment of the last premium, the policy had a reserve of $55.-.64; that according to the law of Kentucky [432]*432and the provisions of the contract of insurance, the company was obliged to use such reserve, until exhausted, to carry a policy of extended life insurance; and that if such reserve had been so used, a policy of extended insurance would have been in force beyond the date of death of the insured.

Appellant contends that, upon défault in payment of premium, the insured was only entitled to a continuance of the policy in force until its cash value had been used up; and that the cash value, in this case, was not sufficient to carry the policy for a period up to the date of the death of the insured.

Appellee claims that, upon default in premium payment, the insurance company was obliged to carry a policy of extended insurance until the reserve of the original policy had been exhausted; and that such reserve was sufficient to carry such a policy beyond the date of insured’s death.

One important difference in these contentions is between the original policy in force, and a policy of extended insurance; and between the cash value of the policy at the time of default, and the reserve. The policy in force was for life and disability insurance. The policy of extended insurance would be, apparently, only for life insurance. The original policy was for $5,000; a policy of extended insurance would have been for $4,462.06 — computed by subtracting outstanding indebtedness from the face amount of the original policy. Obviously, the premium necessary to carry a policy of $4,462.06, for extended insurance, would be considerably less than the premium required to carry a policy of life and disability insurance in the face amount of $5,000.

Appellee contends that the reserve on the policy in force at the date of default, amounted to $55.64. This sum would have carried a policy of $4,462.06 for extended insurance to October 9, 193'6 — beyond the death of insured, which occurred July 15, 1936. But appellant argues that the cash value, and not the reserve, is the amount to be used to continue the policy in force; that the cash value of the policy in force, at the time of default, was only $7.06; that this sum would have carried such policy— in the face amount of $5,000 — only to October 3, 1935; and that it would, therefore, have expired long before insured’s death. Moreover, appellant shows that, even if thé reserve of $55.64, as claimed by appellee, should be used to continue the policy in force, such sum would have continued such a policy of $5,000 for life and disability insurance, only until January 2, 1936.

Without deductions for outstanding indebtedness, the reserve on the life and disability insurance policy of $5,000, at the time of the insured’s default "in the payment of the last premium, was $586.75. This sum is based on the American Experience Table of Mortality, with interest computed at 3% on the select and ultimate basis; and it was set forth in the policy that the reserve, under the contract of insurance, was based on such table, and at such interest rate. From this reserve of $586.75, in order to arrive at the net reserve on the policy, the trial court deducted outstanding loan indebtedness against the policy, aggregating $537.94, leaving $48.81, which sum the court adopted as the reserve on the policy, itself, as of September 22, 1935— the date of default in premium payment. Both parties agree that the reserve computed on the specified mortality tables and at the specified rate of interest, amounts to $48.81.

Appellee contends that, to this reserve, must be added a dividend of $6.83, declared before the default in premium payment, and that the reserve for extended life insurance, therefore, amounts to $55.64. As previously mentioned, this sum would have carried a policy of extended insurance through the date of insured’s death.

Appellant denies that such dividend should be credited, inasmuch as it was provided in the policy that dividends would be due and payable only upon payment of the premium next succeeding the declaration of such dividend, which, in this case, was not paid. Appellant, therefore, computes the sum available for payment of extended insurance as the above-mentioned reserve of. $48.81, less a reduction therefrom of a surrender charge of $41.75 — or a sum for payment of insurance after lapse of the original policy, in the amount of $7.06. This claimed surrender charge is in accordance with the table of guaranteed cash or loan values set forth in the policy; and such a surrender or loan charge was contemplated by the parties to the contract of insurance, inasmuch as it was therein stated that no surrender charge exceeding 2%% of the face amount of the policy, had [433]*433been deducted from the reserve in computing surrender or loan values, and that “extended insurance shall be for the face amount of this policy less the indebtedness, and for such period as the reduced cash surrender value will purchase.” In answer to this contention, appellee replies that the surrender charge provided in the policy is void, as illegal and against public policy.

Unless appellee is credited with the dividend, and unless the surrender charge is denied, she cannot recover in this case, as, otherwise,- there would not be a value remaining, after lapse of the policy, sufficient to pay the premium for a continuation of the original policy, or for extended insurance, up to and including the date of death of the insured.

If the insured was not entitled to a policy of extended insurance on default of premium payment, but was limited to a continuation in force of the original policy, appellee would be unable to recover in this case, inasmuch as the reserve, as found by the trial court, would be insufficient to continue such policy in effect through the date of insured’s death.

If it be assumed that the insured, or his beneficiary, was entitled, upon default of premium payment, to extended insurance, rather than a continuation in force of the original policy, the decisive questions then arising are whether the reserve of $55.64 should be adopted as the sum to be used for payment of a policy of extended insurance, or whether a cash value, — consisting of the reserve less the surrender charge as computed from the tables in the policy —amounting to $7.06, should be used for this purpose.

The trial court, in computing the amount available as net reserve for payment of a policy of extended insurance after default in premium payment, adopted the reserve computed on the basis of the specified mortality tables and interest rate; added thereto the amount of' the dividend in question; and held that appellant was not entitled to deduct a surrender charge. Judgment was, accordingly, entered in favor of appellee, in the amount claimed, as representing the amount of the policy of extended insurance.

Counsel have ably presented exhaustive arguments on the validity of the policy provisions limiting payment of dividends to policy holders who pay their premiums; the right of appellee to extended insurance, rather than a continuation in force of the original policy; and the legality of the surrender charge.

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Bluebook (online)
129 F.2d 431, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-standard-life-ins-v-adams-ca6-1942.