Kansas City Life Ins. Co. v. Leedy

1917 OK 88, 162 P. 760, 62 Okla. 131, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 16, 1917
Docket7740
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1917 OK 88 (Kansas City Life Ins. Co. v. Leedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas City Life Ins. Co. v. Leedy, 1917 OK 88, 162 P. 760, 62 Okla. 131, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 261 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

HOOKER, C.

In consideration of an annual premium of $118.44 payable on the 8th day of March of each year the Kansas City Life Insurance Company on the 8th day of March, 1909, issued to Clarence B. Leedy a twenty-pay life participating policy, and the said Clarence B. Leedy on the 8th day of March, 1914, and for every year thereafter until 1914, paid the annual premium provided by said policy.

It appears from an examination of the record here that when the premium upon this policy matured on March 8, 1914, the same was not paid when due, but a note was executed by the said Clarence B. Leedy to the company therefor due on September S, 1914. When said note matured the same was not paid, but on or about the 28th day of September, 1914, the said Clarence B. Leedy tendered to the company the full amount of said note and interest, and demanded that the company accept said money and cancel said note and apply the same as the premium upon said policy. This the company refused to do, unless the defendant in error would make a written application accompanying the same - with evidence of insurability satisfactory to the company, together with the payment of the premium, with interest thereon, as provided by the policy. This the said Leedy refused to do, and he thereupon instituted suit to compel it to comply with his demands as stated above, contending that by a clause of the policy which is as follows:

“Grace in Payment of Premiums.- — A grace ol thirty days, during which the insurance will remain in full force, will be allowed in tlie payment of all premiums except the first.” —he was entitled to 30 days of grace after the maturity of the. note given by him in satisfaction of the premium in which to pay the same, while the company asserted that under section 2 of the policy, which is as follows:

“Upon failure to pay a premium on or before the date when due, or upon failure to pay premium note when due, this policy will become null and v-oid wUho"t actvu) or a no tice by the company, and all rights shall be forfeited to the company, except as to the options herein stated”

—when said note matured and was not paid, by the provision of the policy it became null and void without action or notice by the company, and all rights thereunder were forfeited to the company, and that this provision of the policy providing for 30 days of grace applied only to the premium, and not to any note executed by the insured in satisfaction of the premium. The premium upon this policy became due March 8th cf each year, and it is evident by the terms of the policy that the insured had 30 days of grace in which to pay this premium, and it is asserted here by the company that when the insured obtained an extension in the time of the payment of this premium by executing his note to September 8th thereafter he obtained not only 30 days of grace provided by the policy, but a longer time than the policy itself contemplates, and that to extend to him now an additional 30 days of grace after the maturity of the note would be giving to *132 him more days of grace than the policy or the contract of the parties contemplated.

It will be observed that section 2 of the policy, in dealing with the question of forfeiture, designates the times when the forfeiture will take place: Hirst, upon a failure to pay a premium on or before the date when due; second, upon failure to pay any premium note when due. In other words, this provision of the -contract of insurance recognizes a distinction between the premium and the premium note, and this provision of the contract deals with these two item's as separate and distinct obligations. With this apparent distinction confronting us, are we justified in saying that the subsequent provision of the policy whereby a grant of 30 days during which the insurance remained in full force was allowed in the payment of the notes executed in lieu of the premium? We are aware of that rule of law that, where any ambiguity exists in an insurance contract, the construction most favorable to the insured should be adopted. With this wise and salutary principle of the law we have no quarrel, but we do not think it applicable here. As we view the provision of this policy providing for grace in payment of premium, the same is applicable only to the premiums, and not to any note executed by the insured where by the terms the day of payment of the premium was extended for a longer time than the 30 days of grace provided for in the policy.

There is no question here as to the right of an insurance company under á given state of facts to forfeit a policy for a failure to pay the premium. The courts uniformly uphold this provision of the law, and this court, in the case of the Travelers’ Insurance Company v. Mercer, 32 Okla. 503, 122 Pac. 134, said:

“A provision in a contract of insurance that provides that where a note given for a premium is not paid when due, the failure to pay shall work a forfeiture of the contract is a valid one, and will be enforced:”

It must be admitted here that, unless the provision of the policy allowing grace in payment of premiums may be extended so as to apply to premium notes, the company had the right to forfeit the policy in question. This question has been before the courts, and has been decided as follows:

The Supreme Court of Georgia in Bank of Commerce v. New York Life Insurance Company, 125 Ga. 552, 54 S. E. 643, said:

“The policy of insurance provides that one month’s grace shall be allowed for the myment of premiums after the date of their maturity. When the second annual premium became due, the insured, being unable to pay the full amount, paid $21 in cash and gave his note for the balance, due five months after date. * * * The note was not paid when due, but a tender of the amount was made within thirty days after the maturity of the note. It is the contention of che plaintiff that the stipulation for one month’s grace in the payment of premiums, contained in the policy, applied to the payment of this note. We think this contention is clearly contrary to the intent of the policy of the note. The insured was not only given his one month’s grace, but really an extension of five months for a portion of his premium, and there was no stipulation that he should be entitled to any further extension of time. The note specifically provided that it shall be paid on the date of maturity, without grace, and the clause ‘except as otherwise provided in the policy itself’ does not relieve it of this condition. The policy and the note should be construed together, and it would be a violent construction which would hold that when the company, in lieu of the one month’s grace, accepted the note without other consideration and extended the grace to five months, it further bound itself to an additional month’s grace, in plain contradiction to the very terms of the note itself.”

Also in Sexton v. Greensboro Life Insurance Company, 157 N. C. 142, 72 S. E. 863, the Supreme Court of North Carolina held that:

“Where a note for a part of an annual premium for a policy stipulated that, should the note not be paid at maturity, the policy should become void without notice, a failure to pay at maturity worked a forfeiture of the policy; the note being merely an extension of the time of payment.”

In Reed v. Bankers’ Reserve Life Insurance Company (C. C.) 192 Fed.

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Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 88, 162 P. 760, 62 Okla. 131, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-life-ins-co-v-leedy-okla-1917.