Life Casualty Ins. Co. of Tenn. v. Wheeler

96 S.W.2d 753, 265 Ky. 269, 106 A.L.R. 1270, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 469
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 5, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 96 S.W.2d 753 (Life Casualty Ins. Co. of Tenn. v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Life Casualty Ins. Co. of Tenn. v. Wheeler, 96 S.W.2d 753, 265 Ky. 269, 106 A.L.R. 1270, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 469 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Reversing-

On October 15, 1929, the appellant and defendant below, Life & Casualty Insurance Company of Tennessee, issued and delivered to James T. Wheeler an insurance policy on his life in which it agreed, upon conditions therein specified, to pay to the beneficiary therein named, who was insured’s wife and the appellee and .plaintiff below, Maggie Wheeler, the sum of $5,000. The premiums were agreed to be paid quarterly in advance, the first one -being paid at the time of the delivery of the policy. The others were due each three months thereafter, which made them payable on the 15th of January, April, July, and October of each year in installments of $11.87 for the first five years of the life of the policy, and lihie installments of $23.74 thereafter. All quarterly payments were made by the insured up to and including October 15, 1932, and the one made on that day carried the insurance until January 15, Í933; but the one due on the latter date was never *271 paid. The policy provided for a grace period within which any premium might be paid after default “of not less than 30 days * # * during which time the insurance shall continue in force,” but if the premium was not paid during that time, “then this policy shall immediately cease and become void.”

The policy also contained these nonforfeiture provisions: “After three full annual premiums shall have been paid, if default be made of any payment of any subsequent premium, this Policy shall automatically at time of lapse be unconditionally commuted to nonforfeitable paid-up insurance as provided below, payable at the same time, and on the same terms, save as to amount, as this Policy. Within ninety days after the said commutation, the Insured, in lieu of this automatic unconditional nonforfeitable paid-up insurance, may upon written demand addressed to the Home Office of the Company receive either of the following options: 1. Receive the cash surrender value of this Policy, less any indebtedness to the Company hereon. The pash surrender value shall be the reserve on this Policy at the date of default, less a surrender charge, which in no case shall be more than two and one-half per cent., of the sum insured; or 2. Receive extended insurance from date of default for an amount equal to the face of this Policy, for such term in years and days from the date of default as is provided below, but without the right to loans and cash surrender value.”

The automatic commuted benefit therein provided for, following default in the payment of the quarterly premium due January 15, 1933, was of no valué, since the age of the policy had not accumulated sufficient reserve, after stipulated deductions, to pay for nonforfeiture paid-up insurance, and it was so stipulated in the table of valuations made a part of the policy “as provided below.” It was also shown in that table of benefits and values that (referred to as “provided below”') the policy at the time of the insured’s death had no cash or loan value. But in the third column of the table, under the heading of “Extended Insurance,” a period of sixty days was inserted.

The insured died on March 19, 1933, but he at no time following the default in payment of the premium due January 15, 1933 (which was the commencement of the commutation period provided for), attempted to *272 exercise the option therein given him to take the cash surrender value of the policy in lieu of the automatic commuted insurance, or to receive extended insurance for the sixty days following default in the payment of his premium. After his death, plaintiff, his beneficiary, attempted to exercise the option for extended insurance, within the ninety-day provision that the insuréd could have done, but which he did not do. Defendant, under the stated facts, denied liability and this action against it by plaintiff in the Boyd circuit court to recover the face value of the policy followed.

The answer as amended relied on two defenses: (1) That the provided for option to take and receive extended insurance for the sixty days, following default in payment of the premium, was personal to the insured and, if not exercised by him within the stipulated period (ninety days, after automatic commutation), it could'not be exercised by his beneficiary after his death, since, as contended, the right to do so did not survive to her; and (2) that if mistaken in defense (1) and if the extended insurance automatically attached, then the sixty-day period of extended insurance began upon the default in the payment of the quarterly due premium on Januarv 15, 1933, and that the extended period expired on March 15, of the same year, the insured dying four days thereafter. The answer as amended — rather in fortification of the specified defenses than as an independent one— also averred that -it was the uniform rule of all insurance companies in the United States under' standard tables of insurance, in policies containing similar provisions as the instant one, to “calculate the extended insurance from the due date of the premium and not from the end of the grace period,” and that its “policv terms and valuations are made solely upon the basis that such extended insurance will run from the due date of the premium — in this case January 15, 1933 — and not from the end of the grace period.” It was further averred that such alleged universal rule was actuario lly correct, and is the one approved and followed by the “Insurance Department of Kentucky.” The court sustained plaintiff’s demurrer filed to the answer as amended, and defendant declining to plead further, judgment was rendered against it in favor of plaintiff for the amount of the policy, and, seeking a reversal of 'that-judgment, it prosecutes this appeal.

*273 The contentions of plaintiff in avoidance of the two interposed defenses were and are: (a) (Responding to defense 1), that there was no paid-up benefit due the insured whereby he was entitled to any paid-up insurance ; nor did it have any cash surrender value, and the only actual benefit to which he was entitled was the sixty days extended insurance; hence, there was no alternative for him to choose between in order to exercise the option, and, consequently no necessity that it be done by him; and (b) (in response to defense 2) that the extended insurance for the stipulated period of sixty days commenced, not immediately following the default in payment on January 15, 1933, but following the expiration of the thirty-day period of grace given by the policy, which would make the extended period begin on February 15 of that year, before the expiration of which the insured died. It will, therefore, be seen that the issues are chiefly if not exclusively legal ones and are sharply drawn.

Avoidance (a) impliedly admits that the option for extended insurance, in the circumstances of this case, was personal to the insured, and, unless exercised by him before his death, it could not thereafter be exercised by plaintiff as his beneficiary. If, however, no such admission could be implied, then we are convinced that the law on that question is as contended for by counsel for defendant, and which was so held by us in the case of Michigan Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Mayfield’s Adm’r, 121 Ky. 839, 90 S. W. 607, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 825.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 S.W.2d 753, 265 Ky. 269, 106 A.L.R. 1270, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/life-casualty-ins-co-of-tenn-v-wheeler-kyctapphigh-1936.