Malone v. State Life Insurance

213 S.W. 877, 202 Mo. App. 499, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 139
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 213 S.W. 877 (Malone v. State Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malone v. State Life Insurance, 213 S.W. 877, 202 Mo. App. 499, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 139 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

STURGIS, P. J.

This is a suit by the beneficiaries on a policy of life insurance in the sum of $2000 on the life of Robert A. Malone. The policy is dated Aug. 8, 1917, was delivered to the insured on Aug. 17, 1917, and the insured died July 26, 1918. Plaintiffs recovered and defendant appeals.

The first defense is that the policy in suit was forfeited by the insured’s failure to pay when due the note given for the first annual premium, the death of the insured occurring after such alleged forfeiture. This premium was sixty dollars and was paid by the insured’s note for that amount due in sixty days, payable to defendant’s local agent, who on Aug. 17, 1917, delivered the policy and took this note of that date. The policy recites that the contract is made in consideration of the application and of the sum of sixty dollars to be paid in *501 advance to the company on or before the delivery of the policy. The policy further recites:

“If any note or other obligation given for the first year’s premium or any part thereof on this Policy shall not, be paid when due, this Policy contract shall be and become null and void without any notice or action of the company, notwithstanding any receipt which may have been given for such premiums.”

The policy also provides for payment of the premium to the Company’s agent on a proper receipt signed by the officers of the company and countersigned by such agent. The evidence shows that the agent delivering the policy and collecting the - premium was given sixty days within which to make settlement with the company for all such premiums. In view of these provisions and this method of doing business we cannot uphold defendant’s contention that the policy never took effect as a contract because the premium was not paid in advance as required. The note was given in advance and was accepted by the agent as payment and this was clearly within his authority, though the policy forbid and withheld from the agent any power to change or modify the terms of the policy. [Marshall v. Missouri State Life Ins. Co., 148 Mo. App. 669, 676, 129 S. W. 40.]

The policy itself contemplates that notes may be taken in payment of premiums and provides, as we have noted, that if such note be not paid when due the policy shall ipso facto become null and void without notice to the insured or any action by the company. Under these provisions the delivery of the policy and the taking of the note in question by the agent made a valid contract of insurance subject to being, forfeited on failure to pay the premium note when due. The policy took effect and remained in force till the note became due and default was made in its payment. [Marshall v. Missouri State Ins. Co., 148 Mo. App. 669, 676, 129 S. W. 40; Mooney v. Insurance Co., 80 Mo. App. 192, 195.]

*502 It is perfectly competent and valid for an insurance contract to provide that the non-payment of a note given for the premium shall render the policy totally void or suspended during the default and there is then no liability for a loss occurring after the default and before the policy is reinstated by payment, if so provided. [3 Joyce Ins. (2 Ed.), sec. 1299; Barnes v. Continental Ins. Co., 30 Mo. App. 539, 550; Palmer v. Continental Ins. Co., 31 Mo. App. 467, 473; Leeper v. Franklin Life Ins. Co., 93 Mo. App. 602.] In the present case the premium note of sixty dollars given for the first annual premium was not paid by the insured at maturity but four days later the insured paid $15 thereon to the local agent, who credited this amount on the note. Nothing was paid on the note thereafter. The acceptance of this part payment of the premium note after same became due and the policy forfeited thereby is claimed to be a waiver of the forfeiture occasioned by the default in payment when due. We do not think so. Nothing is shown as to the cause or circumstances of this payment other than the mere fact that the insured paid it to' the agent holding the note. Doubtless the insured intended shortly to pay the balance of the note and had he done so the failure to pay promptly when due would have been waived. No extension of the time of payment is shown. Had the insured paid this fifteen dollars in the first instance and given his note for the balance with a forfeiture provisipn in case of default, then the insured would have been in the same condition as here. Or had he paid the fifteen dollars before the note became due and then defaulted for the balance, there would have been a forfeiture. [Marshall v. Missouri State Life Ins. Co., 148 Mo. App. 669, 676, 129 S. W. 40.] A mere part payment of what was due could not prevent a forfeiture unless there was some agreement express or implied to that effect. [3 Joyce Ins. (2 Ed.), see. 1365.] It is held in Pennsylvania Ins. Co. v. Geraldine, 31 Mo. 30, that where a policy provided that a forfeiture might be declared and was de *503 dared for failure to pay a premium note when due and thereby the policy was made null and void from and after the date of default, yet the insurance company could collect the part of the premium earned prior to the default. In the present policy the defendant recognized the insured’s right to pay the premiums quarterly and the amount paid was no more than the first quarter’s premium, most of which was then earned. The amount paid, however, was by no means sufficient to keep the policy in force till the date of the insured’s death. This same fact was noted in Marshall v. Ins. Co., supra, and the court remarked there, as we do here, that such fact is not a decisive fact. The point' is that there is no waiver of the effect of non-payment of a premium noté by thereafter receiving or collecting what the insurer is justly entitled to receive or collect in tUe absence of a waiver. [Insurance Co. v. Divilbiss, 67 Mo. App. 500, 504; American Insurance Co. v. Klink, 65 Mo. 78, 83; Home Ins. Co. v. Hamilton, 143 Mo. App. 237, 243, 128 S. W. 273; Continental Ins. Co. v. Phipps, 190 S. W. 994.]

The above principles of law are based on the theory that the insurer takes and holds the note given for the premium and thereby extends the time for the-payment of the premium to it to the due date of the note and that default in the payment of the note is a failure to pay the premium to the insurer. If such were the facts here we would hold that this policy was forfeited and void prior to any loss thereunder. The facts, however, are that the insured by an arrangement with .the local agent gave his note for the amount of the first year’s premium payable to the agent individually. The agent delivered him the policy, reported the premium paid in full, and, within the sixty days allowed him for doing so, remitted to the defendant the full amount of premium due it. The agent was allowed to retain as his commission, sixty per cent of the first year’s premiums. The local agent never treated this note as belonging in whole or in part to the defendant. It was *504 payable to tbe agent individually; he never turned it over to the company and so far as is shown the defendant never knew that this premium was paid by note instead of cash till after the death of the insured. The note was then delivered to defendant’s attorney by the local agent to be used in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W. 877, 202 Mo. App. 499, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-state-life-insurance-moctapp-1919.