Land v. West Coast Life Insurance

270 P.2d 154, 201 Or. 397, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 241
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 270 P.2d 154 (Land v. West Coast Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Land v. West Coast Life Insurance, 270 P.2d 154, 201 Or. 397, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 241 (Or. 1954).

Opinion

WARNER, A. C. J.

This is an action to recover benefits alleged to have accrued under a life insurance policy. From a judgment on the pleadings in favor of the defendant West Coast Life Insurance Company, the plaintiff Marie Elizabeth Land appeals.

Plaintiff is a member of the Oregon State Employees’ Association (hereinafter called the “association”), a nonprofit corporation composed of persons employed by the state of Oregon and who are insured under a group life insurance policy issued by the defendant.

*399 The defendant West Coast Life Insurance Company (hereinafter called the “company”) is a California corporation authorized to do business in the state of Oregon.

A rider attached to the group policy issued by the company authorized the association, in consideration of the payment of certain premiums, to insure the “dependents” of its insured members. This rider defines a “dependent” as “only a Member’s legitimate unmarried child over three months of age but under eighteen years of age, or a Member’s spouse under sixty-five years of age, neither of whom is a Member of the Association eligible for insurance under the Group Policy.”

Plaintiff, as an insured member of the association, exercised the privilege of insuring dependents and applied for coverage on the life of her husband, James Howard Land. Thereafter, through the association she paid the company the monthly premium specified for such insurance.

In October 1949, subsequent to the issuance of the insurance on Mr. Land, plaintiff and her husband were divorced; but notwithstanding the dissolution of that marriage, the association continued to pay to the company from month to month, as the same became due, the premiums payable on the insurance issued on the life of Mr. Land. These premiums were paid regularly to and including the 30th day of March, 1950, when Mr. Land died. The Lands’ divorce did not become known to the company until after Mr. Land’s death, when plaintiff made demand for the sum of $1,000 as the death benefit due under the policy. The company refused to honor the claim and refunded to the association the premiums collected subsequent to the date of the divorce.

*400 The only question presented for our determination is whether plaintiff’s divorce precludes her from collecting on the policy issued on the life of her former husband.

1. Speaking generally, group insurance is the coverage of a number of individuals by means of a single or blanket policy, thereby effecting economies which frequently enable the insurer to sell its services at lower premium rates than are ordinarily obtainable for the same type of insurance protection under life policies sold to individuals. 1 Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, 36, § 41; 1 Couch, Cyclopedia of Insurance Law, 44, § 29; Vance, Insurance 3d ed, 1034, § 203; 44 CJS 479, Insurance § 15.

The respondent company strongly intimates, but does not demonstrate, the existence of a body of law outside the domain of statutory regulation peculiarly applicable to group insurance in contradistinction to the rules generally applied to the construction of ordinary individual life policies. It is not strange that respondent is unable to cite us successfully to law which would support its thesis, for the reason that group insurance policies are relatively new and have not been, to a very wide extent, the subject of judicial consideration. This was recognized in Zeigler v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc., 219 Iowa 872, 259 NW 769, 770 (1935) where the court said:

“ * * * Moreover, the policy contracts are so different in their terms, and the machinery devised and used for the collection of premiums and distribution of benefits are so varied, that only a limited aid can be obtained by an examination of precedents. Such policies are, however, contracts and, like other contracts, must be enforced according to their terms. And being contracts for insur *401 anee, if need for construction arises, they must, in accordance with a well-established rule, be construed liberally in favor of the insured.”

Also see Garnsky v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 232 Wis 474, 287 NW 731, 124 ALR 1489 (1939); 29 Am Jur 186, Insurance § 167.

While new problems necessarily arise because of the group features of this insurance, it is clearly held that the ordinary principles of personal insurance apply to the construction of these contracts. 1 Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, 36, § 41; 29 Am Jur 1027, Insurance § 1370.

The language used in a contract of insurance is entitled to a liberal construction as favorable to the insured as in good conscience will be permitted, and every reasonable intendment will be allowed in support of a view that will protect the insured and defeat a forfeiture. Smith v. Ind. Hosp. Assn., 194 Or 525, 532, 242 P2d 592; Schoeneman v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 125 Or 571, 577, 267 P 815. It is applicable to group insurance contracts. 44 CJS 1183, 1189, Insurance § 297.

Among other rules of law peculiar to insurance contracts, including group insurance, is the fundamental principle that one taking out a policy of insurance on the life of another for his personal benefit must have an insurable interest in the life of the one so insured. 2 Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, 77, §761; 1 Cooley, Briefs on Insurance 2d ed, 330. As a general rule, the insurable interest of a wife in the life of her husband ceases upon a divorce of the parties (175 ALR 1222; 52 ALR 387), but such an event does not necessarily negative her right to recover under a policy issued to her. Tinder the rule prevailing in most *402 jurisdictions, a life policy originally valid does not lose its vitality solely because of the cessation of the insurer’s interest in the life of the insured, unless such be the necessary effect of the provisions of the policy itself. 175 ALR 1224; 52 ALR 389; 2 Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, 91, § 763; 1 Cooley, Briefs on Insurance 2d ed, 414-418; Vance, Insurance 3d ed, 185-187, § 31.

Conn. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Schaefer, 94 U. S. 457, 24 L ed 251, is the leading case in the United States, holding that an insurable interest existent at the inception of the life insurance contract does not have to continue status quo to and until the death of the party insured. In the Schaefer case the surviving wife of the insured had received a divorce prior to the death of her husband. The United States Supreme Court held (94 US 461): “* * * We do not hesitate to say, however, that a policy taken out in good faith, and valid at its inception, is not avoided by the cessation of the insurable interest, unless such be the necessary effect of the provisions of the policy itself. * * *”

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Bluebook (online)
270 P.2d 154, 201 Or. 397, 1954 Ore. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/land-v-west-coast-life-insurance-or-1954.