Murray v. Home Benefit Life Ass'n

27 P. 309, 90 Cal. 402, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 951
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1891
DocketNo. 13356
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 27 P. 309 (Murray v. Home Benefit Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Home Benefit Life Ass'n, 27 P. 309, 90 Cal. 402, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 951 (Cal. 1891).

Opinion

De Haven, J.

The plaintiff is the beneficiary named, in an insurance policy upon the life of one Lemuel T. Murray, the policy.being a certificate of membership issued by defendant to said Murray upon accepting him as a member of said Home Benefit Life Association. By the terms of the certificate, the holder was to pay to the defendant six assessments per annum, at stated times and in stated amounts, and it was also provided that no claim was to be made thereunder “ should the [406]*406member neglect or omit to pay the last assessment that may have been levied on this certificate within thirty days from the date of the notice thereof.” Upon September 1,1886, the assessments which had fallen due on June 1st and August 1st of that year were still unpaid, and the defendant on that day addressed a note to said Murray, calling his attention thereto, with a request that he remit the amount due. At or about the same day it also addressed to him this letter:—

“According to the conditions of your certificate of membership, No. 8361, an assessment amounting to $29.40 will be due and payable at this office on the 1st of October, 1886. Remittances should always be made payable to Home Benefit Life Association,
“San Francisco, Cal.
“ Return this notice with remittance.”

On September 22,18°6, the said Murray, unable from sickness to make the payment in person, sent to the defendant the amount due on assessments for June and August of that year, which the defendant declined to receive, its president saying that he could not, under the circumstances, “but would be only too happy to do so” when Murray should come and tender it himself. Murray died on September 30, 1886. The plaintiff was non-suited, and the only question before us is, whether, upon the foregoing facts, the certificate or policy was in force at the date of Murray’s death.

There can be no doubt that the failure of the deceased to pay the assessments of June and August within thirty days after notice thereof released the defendant from all further liability upon the certificate held by him, if the defendant company had so elected; but conditions like that before quoted from this certificate, which, in effect, provide for a forfeiture of all rights thereunder unless payment of assessments is made within the time specified, may always be waived by the [407]*407party for whose benefit they are inserted in the contract; and the rule is firmly established in this class of cases that if the insurance company, after knowledge of any default for which it might terminate the contract, enters into negotiations or transactions with the assured which recognize the continued validity of the policy, and treat it as still in force, the right to claim a forfeiture for such previous default is waived. (Viele v. Germania Ins. Co., 26 Iowa, 9; 96 Am. Dec. 83; Queen Ins. Co. v. Young, 86 Ala. 424; 11 Am. St. Rep. 51; Titus v. Glens Falls Ins. Co., 81 N. Y. 419.) Imposing or collecting an assessment by a mutual insurance company, after the company has knowledge of facts entitling it to consider the policy no longer binding upon it, without its assent, is, upon this principle, held to be a waiver of the right to claim the forfeiture which otherwise it might have insisted upon. The cases are numerous which hold that the acceptance of a premium after the time when it should have been paid is a waiver of the forfeiture which might have been enforced because it was not paid when due, and precisely the same effect is given to an agreement to accept at a future time such overdue premium, and a tender in pursuance of such agreement. In speaking of acts showing an election to continue the existence of the policy of insurance, and to waive a forfeiture incurred, the supreme court of the United States in the case of Insurance Company v. Norton, 96 U. S. 234, say: “It is conceded that the acceptance of payment has this effect; and we do not see why an agreement to accept, and a tender of payment according to the agreement, should not have the same effect. Both are acts equally demonstrative of the election of the company to waive the forfeiture of the policy.”

The respondent, while not disputing the general rule that a forfeiture may be waived at .the option of the person entitled to enforce it, insists that the letters of the defendant, above referred to, show only an offer by it to [408]*408waive the previous default in the payment of the June and August assessments upon condition that such past-due assessments were immediately paid, and while the insured continued in the same state of health. There are no such conditions expressed in these letters, and we do not think any such arise therefrom by legal implication. The one, calling attention to the assessments already due, and requesting payment, specified no time within which such payment was to be made. A tender, therefore, within a reasonable time would have been sufficient to satisfy the requirements of this letter, and it cannot be said as a matter of law that the tender actually made was not within such time. But the letter notifying the insured that an assessment would be due and payable on October 1st, and in substance requesting payment, of itself constituted a waiver of the previous default, and must be-construed as an unconditional offer to accept payment of that assessment on or before the date named. It was, in effect, an assertion that the certificate was still in force, and, notwithstanding previous defaults known to the defendant, would remain in force until the dale therein named for such payment. As already stated, this notice was sent after full knowledge by defendant of the non-payment of the previous assessments; and if it was the intention to make the acceptance of the amount to become due on this assessment conditional upon the payment of such prior assessments, immediately upon the receipt of the other letter, it should have so stated; but not having done so, we think its legal effect was to waive the previous forfeiture, and continue the certificate in force until October 1st; and this being so, the insured had the right at any time after receiving it, and before October 1st, to make payment of all assessments accruing prior thereto, and necessary to be made in order to give the certificate continued existence.

Forfeitures are not favored, and it necessarily follows [409]*409from the rule that a forfeiture will not be enforced unless specifically and definitely provided for in the contract, that a waiver thereof will be treated as unconditional, unless it clearly appears that it was otherwise understood by the parties. The supreme court of the United States, in Insurance Company v. Norton, 96 U. S. 234, say: “ It is true, we held in Statham’s case (93 U. S. 24) that in life insurance, time of payment is material, and cannot be extended by the courts against the assent of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
27 P. 309, 90 Cal. 402, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-home-benefit-life-assn-cal-1891.