Shinall v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America

14 P.2d 183, 91 Colo. 194, 1932 Colo. LEXIS 343
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 20, 1932
DocketNo. 12,776.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 183 (Shinall v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shinall v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America, 14 P.2d 183, 91 Colo. 194, 1932 Colo. LEXIS 343 (Colo. 1932).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court.

These parties appeared in the trial court in the same order as here and for convenience we refer to them as plaintiff and defendant.

Plaintiff was beneficiary in a life insurance policy for $1,000 which her husband held in defendant company. At the time of his death a premium was due. The company claims, and plaintiff denies, that the period of grace provided for in the contract had then expired. The action was one to reform the policy as to date, and as reformed, enforce its payment. A general demurrer to the amended complaint was sustained. Plaintiff elected to stand, and to review the judgment thereupon entered against her she prosecutes this writ.

The application for the policy in question was dated February 23, the policy, which gave sixty days ’ grace on premium payments, was dated March 21, and the first, and only, premium was paid and the policy delivered April 20, all in 1929. The insured died June 4,1930. The question is, did the period of grace begin to run March 21, 1930, one year from the date of the policy, or April 20,1930, one year fr'om the date of the first payment and delivery? If the former, the policy had lapsed at the date of death, and the judgment was right; if the latter, it had not lapsed,, and the judgment must be reversed.

The application was expressly made a part of the policy. It provided that if the full first premium was not paid at its date, and it was not, the policy should not take effect until issued and delivered and said premium paid. The policy itself, a twenty-year endowment, provided that the annual premium, $98.55, was “payable on the delivery of this policy. ’ ’ The grace clause recited, “If this policy after being' in force one full year from its date shall lapse for non-payment of premium, the *196 company will continue in force the insurance under the policy for a period of sixty days from the due date of such premium, as specified on the first page hereof.” Said due date, so specified, was “the 21st day of March, in every year during the continuance of this policy.”

It is unquestioned that $98.55 was intended as the annual premium for each year of the total term of this policy, not the premium for eleven months or six months. By the terms of the application, which became as much a part of the contract as any other portion of it, the policy did not take effect until April 20, 1929. If the premium then paid carried it only to March 21 of the following year the insured obtained but eleven months’ protection for one year’s premium, contrary to its recitals as to annual premiums. Furthermore, the insured had but thirty days’ grace on his premium payment instead of sixty as specifically provided. On the other hand, if the policy took effect April 20, as the application, an integral part of it, specifically provided, and grace be figured from that date, as justice clearly requires, then that portion of the contract which provided for payment of premiums and calculation of grace from the “due date,” which is specifically stated to be “the 21st day of March in every year,” is violated. It is thus apparent that the most that can be said for this policy, from the standpoint of defendant, is that it is ambiguous. Hence, in the absence of contrary and controlling authority, that ambiguity, conformable to a universal rule, must be resolved against defendant as the writer of the doubtful document. North Am. Acc. Ins. Co. v. Cochran, 74 Colo. 515, 223 Pac. 28; Western Assurance Co. v. Bronstein, 77 Colo. 408, 236 Pac. 1013.

We turn now to an examination of authorities on the specific point. A vast number are cited and we are urged to examine many of them with care because they are determinative of the question before us. We have, and they are not. In many instances material variations in application or policy, modifications of the contract, *197 peculiarities of pleading, variations in dates of payment or death, special considerations, interpretation of the parties, or waiver or estoppel, make them inapplicable. Most of these we do not notice.

An application was made February 2, the policy issued February 19, and delivered on payment of the first premium April 15, all in 1915. The policy contained a thirty day grace clause and provided that the premium should be paid quarter-aimually “on or before the 19th day of February, May, August and November, in every year.” The application provided “That said policy shall not take effect until the same shall be issued and delivered by the said company, and the first premium paid thereon in full.” The insured died July 15, 1915, within the grace period if due dates were reckoned from the date of the delivery of the policy and payment of the first premium, but not if reckoned from the date of the policy. In an action to recover, in which no question of reformation was involved, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit gave judgment against the company, saying:

“The contract of insurance in the present case contained, as we have seen, two inconsistent provisions; one that the policy took effect only upon the issuance and delivery thereof and the premium was to be payable on such delivery, and thereafter quarter-annually; the other that the premiums were to be paid on the 19th day of February, May, August and November in each year. The contract was fairly susceptible of two different constructions. * * * The construction which the plaintiff in error contends for would require the assured to ignore a plain provision of the contract and to pay a premium for insurance which he never, received. * * *”
“It would have been a very easy matter for the plaintiff in error to prepare a policy which was not ambiguous. If it intended not to be bound by the provision that the policy took effect on delivery and that the premiums were payable quarterly yearly thereafter, it should have *198 made known its intention in plain words. We think the court below committed no error in directing the jury to return a verdict for- the defendant in error. ’ ’ Prudential Ins. Co. of America v. Stewart, 237 Fed. 70, 72.

Counsel for defendant contend that because this policy contained the language “and thereafter quarter-annually,” which the instant contract, which specifically mentions the “due dates,” does not, the case is not in point. But the Stewart policy also-specifically stated the due dates, and the policy here contained the words “annual premium, ninety-eight and 55/100 dollars.” This, we think, leaves no material difference in the contracts and puts- the Stewart case “on all fours” with the one before us. To the same effect are the following: Stinchcombe v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 46 Ore. 316, 80 Pac. 213; Halsey v. Am. Cent. Life Ins. Co., 258 Mo. 659, 167 S. W. 951.

Of the former, counsel for defendant say the policy, after acknowledgement of receipt of premium, recited, “Being the premium for two years term insurance.” Of the latter, they say the policy recited that the company “hereby insures the life of Augustus C. Halsey for a period of one year,”

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 183, 91 Colo. 194, 1932 Colo. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shinall-v-prudential-insurance-co-of-america-colo-1932.