Sugg v. Equitable Life Assurance Society

116 Tenn. 658
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 116 Tenn. 658 (Sugg v. Equitable Life Assurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sugg v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, 116 Tenn. 658 (Tenn. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McAlister

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The object of this bill is to recover the sum of $1,000 alleged to be due on a policy of life insurance issued by the defendant company to one Jno. W. Boyd and by the latter assigned to the complainant to secure the payment of a debt which exceeded the face amount of the policy. The policy was issued on the 27th of September, 1901, and provided for the payment of a premium of $33 on the 27th day of September of each year. The insured, John W. Bóyd, died November 14, 1904. At the time of his death there had been paid three annual premiums, but the last premium, due and payable September 27, 1904, had not been paid. The policy is made an exhibit to the bill, and among other provisions necessary to be noticed are the following:

“Clause 7. This policy shall lapse and, together with all premiums paid thereon, shall forfeit to the society on the nonpayment of any premium when due, except that, provided premiums shall have been paid for the periods respectively mentioned in the following table, there shall be granted, without any action on the part of the assured, paid-up life assurance for the amount fixed in said table; or in lieu thereof, at the option of the assured, (1) the cash value fixed in said table upon the due surrender of its policy to the society at its home office in New York City at any time after its termination; or (2) provided this policy is surrendered within the days of grace, or with satisfactory evidence of good health [661]*661within one year thereafter, a paid-np term policy for the full amount assured under this policy for the time stated in said table.”

The theory of the bill is that when default was made in the payment of the last premium, due September 27, 1904, the policy was not forfeited, but that by virtue of clause 7, already quoted, the insurance was extended for a period of four years and eleven months.

The defendant company demurred to a portion of the bill and answered the remainder. In its answer it admitted that, notwithstanding default in the payment of the premium due September 27, 1904, the assured was, under the automatic action of clause 7 of the policy, entitled to a paid-up policy for $150, and that the court might treat the case as if this paid-up policy for $150 had been issued to the assured before his death, and' accordingly might pronounce a decree for such amount.

The answer further averred that the company had offered, recently after the death of assured, to pay to the assignee of the policy this sum of $150.

The company demurred to the bill so far as it sought to recover any amount in excess of the sum of $150 admitted by defendant to be due, averring that the policy liad been forfeited for nonpayment of the premium due September 27, 1904; (2) that the alleged agreement made by the agent was by the terms of the policy unauthorized. The disposition of the demurrer depends upon a proper construction of clause 7 of the policy already quoted. It is insisted on behalf of the demur-[662]*662rant that clause 7, when properly construed, provides that when three annual premiums shall have been made, and default is made in the payment of the fourth premium, that there will be granted without action on the part of the assured (1) a paid-up policy for the amount fixed in the annexed table, to wit, the sum of $150; (2) a loan or cash surrender value of the policy for the amount stated in the table, to wit, the sum of $40; or (3) extended term insurance — ;that is to say, an extension of the full amount of the policy for the period fixed in the table, to wit, four years eleven months.

The insistence of counsel for the complainant is that the phrase “without action on the part of the assured” is not confined to any one of these three privileges, but that it applied to extended term insurance, as well as to a paid-up policy, or to a cash surrender value. In the language of counsel, the argument is that “after three premiums are paid, if the fourth premium is not paid, the full benefits of the policy ceased, and the contract automatically offers the insured three different and inconsistent options, and a selection by the assured (or his assignee) is necessary to designate the option. It is certainly not the intent of the policy that the insurer should mate the choice. It is the intent of the-policy that the insured should remain insured, and not that the insurer should compel him to select something he does not want.”

On the other hand, the insistence of counsel on behalf of the company is that the assured, after default in the [663]*663payment of the premium and his failure to exercise any one of the options, had no further interest in the policy, except the right to demand a paid-up policy of $150. We are of opinion that this construction of the policy is sound, and that the contention made on behalf of the complainant is not maintainable. This is perfectly apparent from a careful reading and analysis of clause 7 of the policy, which provides: “This policy shall lapse and, together with all premiums paid thereon, shall forfeit to the society on the nonpayment of any premium when due, except that, provided premiums have been paid for the periods respectively mentioned in the following table, there will be granted, without action on the part of the assured, paid-up assurance for the amount fixed in said table.” It is conceded that this sentence only provides for the paid-up policy without action on the part of the assured for the amount áxed in the annexed table, to wit, $150.

It thus appears that, if no other settlement is selected by the assured in the manner provided by the policy, an automatically paid-up policy for $150 is due and payable by the company; but, as we have already seen, the assured has two other options offered to him in the following clauses of the same sentence, viz.: “Or, in lieu thereof, at the option of the assured, (1) the cash value fixed in said table, upon the due surrender of this policy to the society at its home office in New York City, at any time after its termination or (2) provided this policy is surrendered within the days of grace, [664]*664or with satisfactory evidence of good Health within one year thereafter, a paid-up term policy for the full amount assured under the terms of this policy for the time stated in said table [to wit, four years eleven months].”

It will be observed, however, that the other options may he exercised by the insured upon the condition that the original policy is surrendered to the society within the days of grace (thirty days after forfeiture — fourth clause), or within twelve months, with a certificate of good health. It is only upon a compliance with these conditions that the assured is entitled to a paid-up term policy “for the full amount insured under this [the original] policy, for the time stated in the table.” Now, it is perfectly clear that, if the assured had exercised this option and surrendered the original policy, he would have been entitled to an extended term insurance for $1,000, which would have expired by limitation at the end of four years eleven months.

We held at the present term, in Eliza G. Anderson et al. v. Conn. Mutual Life Ins. Co.

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Bluebook (online)
116 Tenn. 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sugg-v-equitable-life-assurance-society-tenn-1906.