Turner v. Peoples Industrial Life Ins. Co.

180 So. 435, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 590
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1938
DocketNo. 16909.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 180 So. 435 (Turner v. Peoples Industrial Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Peoples Industrial Life Ins. Co., 180 So. 435, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 590 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

On November 28, 1921, the Peoples Benevolent Industrial Life Insurance Company of Louisiana issued, on the life of'Prenella Jones Turner, a policy in the sum of $85.50. Later the name of the said company was changed to “Peoples Industrial Life Insurance Company,” which is the name under which it has now been sued. The policy contained a provision to the effect that “a sum equal to 2 per cent, of the amount shown as death benefit-in schedule above will be added to the death benefit above mentioned for each full year this Policy is maintained continuously in force, until said additions equal fifty (50) per cent, of the death benefit referred to.” Premiums were paid to May 13, 1935, although on various occasions — apparently five in number— there were lapses and subsequent reinstate-ments. By indorsement subsequent to issue, Horace Turner, the husband of the insured, was named beneficiary, and he, after the death of the insured on January 20, 1937, made claim for the proceeds, including the additions which he alleged had accumulated.

Plaintiff, while admitting that at the time of the death there was a delinquency in premium payments, alleged that there had accumulated a reserve to which the policy was entitled, which, if applied to the purchase of extended insurance in accordance with the requirements of Act No. 193 of 1906, was sufficient to extend the policy beyond the time of the insured’s death.

Defendant company admitted the issuance of the policy and the change in beneficiary and the payment of premiums from the date of issuance to May 13, 1935, though it pointed to the various lapses as interrupting the life of the policy and as thus depriving the beneficiary of the right to any additions in any event, and it denied any liability at all under the policy, maintaining that, at the time of the final lapse on May 13, 1935, the policy had not accumulated a reserve sufficient to carry it, at the company’s rates, to the day of the death — 1 year, 7 months, and 20 days after the said lapse.

In the court, a qua, there was judgment for $98.37, that being the net amount found to be due after adding to the face of the policy the accumulated additions and after deducting certain indebtednesses. The judgment also included $25, which was awarded as the fee of an actuarial witness called to the stand by plaintiff to give expert testimony. From this judgment, defendant has appealed.

It is necessary that we first consider the issue presented by plaintiff’s claim that there should be added to the original face value of the policy 2 per cent, for each year during which it remained continually in force because it is conceded that, to some extent, on a determination of that issue also depends the question of whether there has accrued a sufficient reserve to “carry” the policy from the date of the final lapse beyond the day of the death.

The stipulation, it will be noticed, requires that, if the added benefit is to be earned, the policy must remain “continually” in force. It is not denied by plaintiff that on the various occasions shown on the face of- the policy there had been temporary lapses. But it is contended that in each case there had been a reinstatement, or revival of the policy, a,nd that, therefore, whenever each revival was assented to by the company, the effect thereof was to continue in force the original policy and not to bring into existence a new contract; that during each period of lapse the policy was continued in force by the extended insurance statute;, and that, therefore, the policy which is now sued on, in spite of the lapses, remained continually in force during the entire period.

In Johnson v. Life Insurance Company of Va., 169 So. 159, we discussed at length the question of whether a life policy, which has been forfeited for nonpayment of premiums and has been reinstated, constitutes a continuation of the original contract, or evidences a new one, and we reached the conclusion that the answer to that question depends upon whether, after the forfeiture, there remains in the policyholder any right to insist upon reinstatement. We said that, if there is a right to demand reinstatement, the exercise of that fight brings about merely a continuance of the original contract, but that, if there is no such right, then the insurer, acting on the new inducements *437 and the new considerations offered, exercises its freedom of right to contract and that, therefore, the'policy becomes a new contract even though the original document may be used to evidence that new contract.

In that case we found a policy which had been issued before the enactment of the extended insurance statute of 1906. The policy had been forfeited in 1919 and had been reinstated by the insurance company and had again- lapsed in 1933. When the insured died in 1935, the beneficiary contended that the policy, at the time of the lapse in 1933, had accumulated a reserve sufficient^ because of the provisions of the extended insurance act of 1906, to extend the policy beyond the date of the death. But the insurer maintained that that statute had no application because of the fact that the policy had been issued prior to its enactment. We found that because the policy, by its terms, had become absolutely void in 1919, the reinstatement at that time could not have been insisted upon and that, therefore, the voluntary reinstatement- constituted a new contract and that it—the new contract—was governed by the provisions of the act of 1906, since the new contract had come into existence long after the effective date of that statute.

In the case at bar the policy was issued after the enactment of the extended insurance statute and it was, therefore, governed by that statute, and, while we are shown no contractual policy stipulations giving to the insured the right, in case of lapse, to - demand reinstatement, we do find that, because of the effect of the statute as it was interpreted in Watson v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 183 La. 25, 162 So. 790, the policy, when it lapsed for the first time in 1929, was entitled to automatic extension for so long a time as the accumulated reserve of some eight years would pay for on the premium rate basis of the company. Since the insurance company obviously, during that extended period, agreed to a reinstatement of the policy on its original basis, it is apparent that at no time during that so-called lapse was the policy not in force.

The same may be said of each of the other four lapses. There was a right in the insured -in each instance to insist upon the granting of the extended insurance. In fact, as we have said, the extended insurance was automatically effected by law, and, consequently, when the company in each instance agreed to a reinstatement, it was not consenting to a new contract, but was merely agreeing that, instead of the extended insurance to which the insured was entitled by law, it would re-establish the original contract at the original rate. Thus the contract which was in existence at the time of the final lapse on May 13, 1935, was the original one which had been entered into in 1921 and that contract had been continuously in force since the date of issue, since, because of the effect of the extended insurance statute, there was never a time between the date of original issue and the date of final lapse at which it was not in force.

An examination of the policy and of the indorsements thereon shows plainly that, at the time Of the first lapse, the policy had actually been in existence for more than 8 years.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 435, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-peoples-industrial-life-ins-co-lactapp-1938.