Williams v. Union Central Life Insurance

291 U.S. 170, 54 S. Ct. 348, 78 L. Ed. 711, 1934 U.S. LEXIS 496, 92 A.L.R. 693
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 15, 1934
Docket208
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 291 U.S. 170 (Williams v. Union Central Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Union Central Life Insurance, 291 U.S. 170, 54 S. Ct. 348, 78 L. Ed. 711, 1934 U.S. LEXIS 496, 92 A.L.R. 693 (1934).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was brought by petitioner as beneficiary of a policy of insurance for $10,000 issued July 26, 1927, upon the life of her husband, who died on October 15, 1931. Application for the policy was made and the policy was delivered in the State of Texas. A level premium of $449.10 was payable annually on June 10th, and was paid to and including June 10, 1930. The premium payable on June 10, 1931, was not paid either at that time or within the thirty-one days of grace allowed by the policy. *172 The “ loan value ” or “ cash value ” of the policy, as shown by the table which the policy set forth, was then $910. Loans against the policy, with interest, amounted to $898.88. The policy was a participating one, and a dividend of $74.80 was declared in favor of the insured on June 10, 1931. If that dividend had been applied in reduction of the amount advanced against the policy or to the purchase of extended insurance, the result would have been to extend the insurance beyond the date of the death of the insured. Petitioner contends that the dividend should have been so applied. Respondent insists that such application would have been contrary to the terms of the policy and that, on the expiration of the period of grace without payment of the premium due, the policy lapsed and the dividend was payable in cash and not otherwise. ' • -

.Respondent’s request for thé direction of arverdict was denied and the verdict and judgment went for petitioner. The judgment was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 65F. (2d) 240. This Court granted certiorari.

The policy gave the following options as to the disposition of dividends:

“11. Dividend Options. Dividends may be withdrawn in cash; .or applied to the payment of premiums; or left to accumulate with interest at three per cent, increased from surplus interest earnings as apportioned by the Directors, until the maturity of the policy, subject to withdrawal at any time; or applied to the purchase of paid-up participating additions to . 'the policy, convertible into cash at any time for the amount of the original dividends or the-reserve of the additions, if larger; but payment may be deferred by the Company ninety days from the date of application therefor.”

There is' no ambiguity in the terms of these options. They are clear and definite in the terminology of insurance. *173 and each is to be applied with its distinctive significance. No one of these options provides for the use of a dividend to procure extended insurance; that is, to procure an extension of the term of the insurance from the date to which premiums have been paid, without any further payment. Dividends may be ■ withdrawn in cash or applied to the payment of premiums or left to accumulate with interest subject to withdrawal at any time. The further option to have dividends “ applied to the purchase of paid-up participating additions to the policy” is quite distinct from an option to' procure extended insurance. A “ paid-up addition ” to the policy, by the application of a dividend, is the .amount added to the face of the policy and purchased by the use of the dividend as a single premium. For such paid-up additions, there must be a legal reserve.

The .insured did not exercise any one of the options given by article 11. It appears that he had several other policies issued by the same company, and in addition to the amount advanced by the company he had borrowed certain amounts from the company’s agents in Dallas, Texas. These' agents, on September 18, 1931, obtained an order on the company, signed by the insured, which directed payment to them of the dividend on the policy in suit together with dividends on other policies. On this order, the dividend here in question was paid to the agents. Petitioner contested the order as having been signed at a time when the insured did not have sufficient mental capacity to understand the transaction. This issue of fact was decided by the jury in favor of petitioner and the Circuit Court of Appeals-did not pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence -in that relation. Nor do we deal with that question. The only other indication of the intention of the insured is sought to be drawn from a statement in a letter addressed to the company by its *174 agents on September 14, 1931, referring to .a conversation with the insured about September 1st. The agents said that the insured had rejected their proposal for the use of dividends on his policies in partial payment of his note held by the agents, saying that “ he was going to have every nickel applied towards' paying .these policies as far as it would carry them.” . We agree with the view of the Circuit Court of Appeals that this statement was too indefinite to serve as a direction to the company to apply the dividend in question in any particular way and, unless the insurance had been extended under, the provisions of the policy, it had already lapsed and coüld be reinstated only in accordance with the requirements of the policy, that is, upon payment of premium arrears with interest and satisfactory evidence of insurability. We are. Unable to find any basis for the conclusion that the insured either had, or attempted to exercise, any option to use the dividend to obtain extended insurance, and oUr decision must turn upon the construction of the provisions of the policy applicable to such a case.

Article 12 provides for the “ automatic disposition ” 'of dividends as follows:

12. Automatic Disposition. On payment of the. premium, or on the policy anniversary if no further premium is payable, if no other option has been elected, the dividend then due shall be applied to the purchase of paid-up additions. In the event of the death of the insured during the days of grace, the current premium being unpaid, if no other option has been elected, or if the policy shall lapse, the dividend then due shall be paid in cash. At the death of the insured during the continuance of. the policy, the pro rata part ef the dividend.for the current policy year shall be paid in cash.”

The first sentence of article 12 is inapplicable as it provides for the disposition of the dividend “ on payment *175 of the premium, or' on the policy anniversary if no further premium is payable, if no other option has been elected.” The present case is not one where the premium was paid or where on the policy anniversary ” no further premium was payable. The first part of the second sentence is also inapplicable, as the insured did not die during the days of grace. It is also clear that the third and last sentence does not apply. .But the case does fall directly within the alternative of the second sentence, “ or if the policy shall lapse, the dividend then, due shall be paid in cash." That is precisely this case. And this provision of the policy is in plain opposition to the contention that the. dividend should be applied to an extension of the insurance. The provision presupposes a dividend* due and the lapse of the policy for non-payment of premium, and the dividend is then to be paid in cash.

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Bluebook (online)
291 U.S. 170, 54 S. Ct. 348, 78 L. Ed. 711, 1934 U.S. LEXIS 496, 92 A.L.R. 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-union-central-life-insurance-scotus-1934.