Kramer v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York

196 A. 614, 130 Pa. Super. 85, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 89
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 19, 1937
DocketAppeal, 166
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 A. 614 (Kramer v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kramer v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York, 196 A. 614, 130 Pa. Super. 85, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 89 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Baldrige, J.,

The plaintiff, as beneficiary in a life insurance policy issued by the defendant company, March 24, 1925, on the life of her husband, brought this suit to recover the sum of $2,000, the face amount of the policy, and interest. The case was previously in this court (see 116 Pa. Superior Ot. 572, 176 A. 744). We there sustained an appeal from a judgment entered for the defendant for want of a sufficient reply by plaintiff to new matter set up in the affidavit of defense.

The question now involved is whether this policy of insurance was in force at the date the insured died. The trial was had before Judge (now Justice) Steen, who held that it was not. We are all of the opinion that his conclusion was right.

The annual premium of $96 included the sum of $8.42, separately mentioned as an additional premium, payable for thirteen years, for total and permanent disability benefits. The company’s actuary testified that also $2 of the total premium was applied towards a double indemnity accident provision, leaving the sum of $85.58 as the actual premium for the life insurance feature of the policy.

On January 19, 1933, after the policy had been in effect nearly eight years, the insured borrowed the sum of $345 from the appellee upon the security of the policy. As the insured failed to pay the annual premium due March 24, 1933, or within the period of grace, the policy lapsed. In the event of a surrender or lapse of the policy, the insured had three options after three full premiums had been paid, viz:

“(a) to surrender this Policy for its cash value less any indebtedness to the Company hereon (this balance is hereinafter referred to as the net cash value); or,

*87 “(b) to have the insurance continued in force from the date of such default as paid-up non-participating term insurance without Disability or Double Indemnity Benefits, for an amount equal to the face amount of this Policy and any outstanding dividend additions less any indebtedness to the Company hereon; or,

“(c) to surrender this Policy for paid-up non-participating life insurance without Disability or Double Indemnity Benefits, payable at the same time and on the same conditions as this Policy.”

The Insured died March 12, 1984, three and a half months after the policy had lapsed, without having exercised any of the three options.

The policy further provided:

“The cash value under option (a) will be the reserve for the face amount of this Policy and for any dividend additions hereto together with any dividend deposits to the credit hereof, less a surrender charge which, in no case, shall be more than one and one-half per centum of the face amount of this Policy; after premiums have been paid for ten full years or more, there shall be no surrender charge.

“The term for which the insurance will be continued under option (b) ......will be such as the net cash value obtainable under option (a) will purchase at the attained age of the Insured at date of default when applied as a net single premium.

“In the event of default in payment of premium, if this Policy shall not, within three months after such default, have been surrendered to the Company at its Home Office for its cash value as provided in option (a) ......the insurance will be automatically continued as provided in option (b).”

There was also this further provision:

“The reserve held for the fa,ce amount of this Policy and for any dividend additions hereto and the reserves and the net single premiums mentioned herein shall be *88 computed in accordance with the American Experience Table of Mortality assuming interest at the rate of three per centum per annum.”

This was in accordance with section 410 (i) of the Act of May 17,1921, P. L. 682, art. IV (40 PS §510), which provides that every life insurance policy must specify the mortality table adopted for computing reserves.

In accordance with these provisions, the company continued the policy in force as a paid-up non-participating term policy for the sum of $1,684 for 258 days, or until December 2, 1933, determined in the following manner: There was added to the $2,000, the face amount of the policy, a dividend of $19.40 declared on March 24, 1933, which the insured had failed to claim or apply under any of the options respecting dividends. The dividend was, therefore, applied to the purchase of paid-up insurance, amounting to $32, which, added to the face of the policy, made a total insurance of $2,032. The loan of $345, plus $3.63 interest, making a total of $348.63, was deducted, leaving a balance of $1,683.87.

The period of 253 days was determined by ascertaining the net cash valué obtainable under option (a). Under the “Table of Surrender and Loan Values,” set forth in the contract, the policy, when eight years old, had a cash value of $175.11 for each $1,000 of insurance. It had, therefore, a cash value of twice that amount, viz: $350.22. That figure coincided with actuarial calculations. A mathematical computation based upon the stipulated table produced a reserve of $360.22. Under our insurance laws, the company could have provided in the contract for a deduction of a surrender charge of 2% per cent of the face amount of the policy. In this case, although the contract stipulated 1% per cent, only y2 per cent, or $10, was deducted, leaving a balance of $350.22. Adding thereto a dividend of $19.40 produced a total sum of $369.62 as the cash value of the policy before deduction of the loan and interest, which, *89 as we have seen, amounted to $348.63, leaving a net cash value of $20.99, which purchased non-participating term insurance in the sum of $1,683.37 for 253 days. The amount of the policy and the period it was continued in force were the same to which any holder of a $2,000 life policy, without disability benefits, was entitled.

The appellant does not question the accuracy of the above figures, but contended in the court below, as she does here, that in calculating the reserve and net cash value there was excluded from the reserve part of the premium of $8.42 charged for the disability provisions, properly applicable thereto. If that amount should have been included in the reserve, concededly, the insurance was extended 353 days, or beyond the death of the insured.

The sole question of fact submitted to the jury was whether the insured failed to pay the premium due March 24,1933. The jury found that he had, and a verdict was rendered for defendant. We find no error in thus limiting the factual issues.

The only witness called by the plaintiff was an accountant, who testified that the reserve arising from the disability features, calculated upon an actuarial table, designated as Hunter’s table, would amount to such a sum at the end of the eighth year, which, if included in the reserve applicable to life insurance, would have extended the insurance beyond the insured’s death. An objection to his testimony was sustained by the trial judge, as the table to which he was testifying had not been properly proven. The witness conceded that he did not know, and it was not otherwise shown, that this table had any applicability to this policy.

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Related

Braun v. New York Life Insurance
115 P.2d 880 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)
Ruhlin v. New York Life Ins. Co.
106 F.2d 921 (Third Circuit, 1939)
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Ruhlin
25 F. Supp. 65 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 A. 614, 130 Pa. Super. 85, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramer-v-mutual-life-insurance-co-of-new-york-pasuperct-1937.