Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Jones

44 F.2d 540, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3399
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 1930
Docket3006
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 F.2d 540 (Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Jones, 44 F.2d 540, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3399 (4th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

GRONER, District Judge.

This is an action at law on a policy of insurance for $5,000 issued by the appellant— defendant below — on the life of James L. Jones, the husband of Jean Jones, the appellee — plaintiff below. The District Court, on stipulation waiving a jury, gave judgment, without opinion, against the insurance company. For brevity, we will speak of the parties as the beneficiary, the company, and the insured.

In December, 1923, insured made application to the company for a twenty payment life policy for $5,000, naming his wife as beneficiary. The policy was issued on the 30th of December, 1923, and contained the stand *541 ard options, and also provided two classes of loans; i. e., cash, equal to the amount of the net cash surrender value, and the so-called “automatic premium loan.” Insured, in his written application for the policy, selected the latter, and, under the nonforfeiture provisions of the policy, selected “extended term, insurance.” On the 30th of December, 1923, when the policy was delivered to him, he paid the premium of $168.50, and this was all the out-of-pocket money ho ever paid on account of tho policy. Shortly after the expiration of tho first year, but within the thirty-one days’ grace allowed under the policy, he notified the company of his inability to pay the second premium, but inquired, if he should ever be able to pay it, what steps he should take to that end. The company replied that, the cash value of the policy being sufficient for the purpose, it would lend him the money to pay the second year’s premium, and had him execute a premium loan note for the amount advanced. When the third premium fell due, Jones owed the company the amount of the socond premium, less the dividend declared December 30, 1925, plus interest. He again stated he had no money with which to pay the premium, and the company again informed him there was sufficient value to his policy on which to base an additional loan for enough to pay tho premium for that year, and sent him a premium note and agreement for his signature. Insured did not sign or return the note, and paid nothing either in reduction of his former debt or on account of the premium then due, whereupon the company, on tho last day of the grace period, applied so much of the cash or loan value of the policy as was necessary to tho payment of the third year’s premium, and forwarded to insured its receipt therefor. On December 30, 1926, the fourth annual premium became due, and on January 31, 1927, the last day of grace, remained unpaid. Whereupon tho company, having determined the then precise cash value of the policy, and having ascertained that the net amount available in cash or for loans was less than the annual or semiannual premium, made a further loan of a sufficient amount to continue the policy for a quarter of a year, and again forwarded to insured its receipt, and notified him that the policy would be continued at face, less tho amount of the loans, only to the end of the quarter, viz., to March 30, 1927, and for thirty-one days thereafter. Prior to March 30th, insured was again notified that a second quarterly premium would then he due, but again made no reply, nor did he pay the premium. On the last named date insured’s indebtedness to tho company, principal and interest, amounted to $324.80, and the cash value of the policy to $340.88. The' difference was $16.08, which was not sufficient to pay another quarterly premium, and this amount the company, under the nonforfeiture provision, applied to tho purchase of extended insurance, and notified insured of what it had done, and of the expiration date of the-extended insurance, which was August 23,, 1927. Insured died April 14, 1928.

The grounds upon which the beneficiary claimed the right to recover were: First, that when, on the expiration of the grace period in January, 1927, it was ascertained that the cash value of the policy, less the indebtedness, was not sufficient to support a loan for enough to pay an annual premium, the company, in the absence of a written request from insured, instead of applying the amount available to the payment of a quarterly premium and, at tho expiration of the quarter, the balance to extended insurance, should have applied tho whole amount to the purchase of extended insurance, and she says that, if this had been done, it would have extended the life of the policy to a period beyond January, 1928, and the dividend, which in that case would have accrued on account of the extended policy as of the 30th of December, 1927, used for tho same purpose, would have further extended it some eight or ten days beyond insured’s death. Secondly, that in computing the period of extended insurance, the company should not have deducted from the cash-surrender value of the policy insured’s indebtedness to it, hut that his indebtedness should have been deducted only from tho face of the policy, and that the tabular cash surrender value, without deduction, should have been the criterion in the purchase of extended insurance, tlie effect of which would have been to extend the policy for about eight years from that date. And, finally, beneficiary insists that, even if it be conceded that the application of the cash surrender value of the policy to the quarterly payment premium and extension insurance was properly made as against insured, it would not hind her, because she, as beneficiary, did not consent to the loan.

We are unable to agree in any of these contentions. In his application for the policy, insured selected the automatic premium loan provision, which bound the company, upon his written request, to loan the amount of the unpaid premium, or the largest installment of premium, not less than a quarter *542 year, which the cash value of the policy, together with any unpaid dividends, less any indebtedness, was sufficient for. When the poliey was delivered to him on December 30, 1923, he paid the first premium in cash. When the next premium became due, he borrowed from the company to pay it. When the third premium became due, he neither paid nor promised to pay, and the company, acting under the impulse of the automatic feature, again advanced the premium for another year. On the due date of the fourth premium, he again failed to pay, and, as the then cash value of the policy was not sufficient to pay an entire year’s premium, the company, as we think it was obliged to do, made a further loan of enough to pay a quarterly premium, and at the end of that period, including the thirty-one days of grace, used the residue to provide extended insuraneq for such period as it would purchase. Beneficiary now insists that, because, when the loan for the quarterly payment was made, insured had not made a formal written request for the loan, the company was under no obligation and had no legal right to make the loan, but that it was its duty to declare the original poliey lapsed, and to apply the accumulated cash value, then and there, to the purchase of extended insurance, but this we think is a strained conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F.2d 540, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-mut-life-ins-co-v-jones-ca4-1930.