
    Hinkler, Appellee, v. The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, Appellant.
    (Decided December 12, 1938.)
    
      Messrs. Harmon, Colston, Goldsmith S Hoadly and Mr. Henry B. Street, for appellee.
    
      Messrs. Maxwell & Ramsey, for appellant.
   Hamilton, J.

The plaintiff, appellee in this appeal, brought an action against the defendant, appellant in this court, seeking to recover on two certificates of insurance, issued on the life of her husbánd who died November 18, 1934: She was named the beneficiary in both certificates.

The certificates were issued upon two group insurance policies carried by The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company on its employees with the defendant insurance company.

One of the group insurance policies, or master policies as it could be designated, was' a contributing policy, in which the employees contributed a certain sum toward the payment of the premiums. On the other policy The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company was to pay all the premiums.

Hinkler died while he was still an employee of The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company, in the capacity of manager of one of its stores. On the death of Hinkler, the beneficiary, plaintiff in the case, filed proofs of death with the defendant company, The Equitable Life Assurance Society. Payment was refused on the claimed ground that the policy was, by agreement with The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company, terminated on the first day of November, 1934.

The case was tried to the court, a juror having been withdrawn at the conclusion of the evidence. The court held that the insurance was in force at the time of the death of Hinkler, and that the beneficiary was entitled to recover the full amounts represented by the certificates, less' the sum of $4.50, which the court found to be the amount chargeable to the decedent for premium payments.

The master policies were annual policies and provided for the monthly payment of premiums.

It appears that The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company and The Equitable Life Assurance Society considered the abandonment of the plan under which the master policies in question were issued and the promulgation of a new system of group insurance. The master policies had been taken out some time in the spring and had been carried for some years. As above stated, these master policies were annual policies, and the attempted cancellation was made about the middle of the year, when the policies had several months to run for the current year, and premiums had been paid up to October, 1934. During the month of October and pending the negotiations' for the new system between the Wurlitzer company and the assurance society, the Wurlitzer company paid the current monthly premium for October. The conference between the Wurlitzer company and the assurance society regarding the cancellation of the old plan and the institution of a new plan occurred on the twenty-fifth of October, 1934. After the conference the Wurlitzer company sent a bulletin to all its employees through all store managers and department heads to the effect that it had terminated the master policies in question as' of November 1, 1934, and were putting into effect the new plan of insurance.

On October 29, 1934, as above stated, the Wurlitzer company paid the October premium on the master policies in question.

It is claimed by the defendant that under the circumstances the policies were not in force November 18, 1934, upon which date the insured, Hinkler, died.

The contention of the plaintiff is that the master policies' carried a grace clause, which maintained the policies in full force and effect for the entire month of November. The grace clause is in the policies under the requirements contained in Section 9420, General Code, and reads as follows:

“A grace of thirty-one days will be granted for the payment of every premium after the first, during which period the insurance hereunder shall continue in force # # * 99

To carry out the provisions of the master policies, certificates' were issued to the several employees for the amount of their insurance. Two of them were.issued to the decedent, John L. Hinkler, and provided that: “The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States hereby certifies that The Rudolph Wurlitzer Company * * hasi contracted to insure the life of John L. Hinkler for the sum of five thousand dollars with The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States by a policy of group life insurance. * . * * beneficiary Marie L. Hinkler, wife.”

There can be no question that liability under the certificates and under the policies existed on November 18, tbe date of the death of Hinkler, unless the insurer and the Wurlitzer company could and did cancel the master policies as of November 1, 1934. If the master policies were cancelled, then it must follow that the certificates were voided.

It is shown by the record that the assurance society and the Wurlitzer company did agree that the master policies should be cancelled as of November 1, 1934.

The first question for consideration then is, can the assurance society and the holder of the group policies cancel a policy without the consent of the insured'? If the insured or the beneficiary under the certificates possessed a vested interest in the policies, then the insurer and the holder of the group policies, in this case the Wurlitzer company, could not cancel the policies to the detriment of the insured or the beneficiary. Whether it be called a tripartite contract or a contract between two parties' for the. benefit of a third is immaterial if a vested interest is present. And if vested interests are present these policies cannot be cancelled without the consent of those having such vested interests.

It is not claimed that the beneficiary, plaintiff in this case, ever consented to any cancellation or change in the group insurance plan, affecting the policies in force. The claim that Hinkler, the insured, gave tacit consent because he had knowledge of the bulletin, which contained a notice of the cancellation as of November 1, 1934, did not make any objection, and filled out an application for insurance under the new plan is advanced by the assurance company. A consent to alteration of rights under a written contract must be by agreement of the parties upon sufficient consideration. Such agreement does not appear. Hinkler had the right to believe the master policies' were in force under the grace clause. Nothing that he did would be inconsistent with his belief that they were still in force under the grace clause, and even with the notice of the cancellation as of November 1, 1934, he may still have thought that, under the statutes, the law and the provisions of the policies' themselves, there would be an additional thirty-one days grace.

Under the cases and the authorities, it would also be necessary for the beneficiary in the certificates, the plaintiff in this case, to have given her cons'ent, if she had a vested right. This was so decided in Union Central Life, Ins. Co. v. Buxer, 62 Ohio St., 385, 57 N. E., 66, 49 L. R. A., 737, the first paragraph of the syllabus being:

“Where a husband procures insurance on his life payable to himself after a term of years', if he shall live so long, and if not, then to his wife at his death, and after paying premiums for some years gives a premium note which has a forfeiture clause therein more onerous, as ag*ainst the interests of the wife, than the forfeiture clause in the policy, such forfeiture clause in the note will not avail the insurance company as against the wife, unless she assents thereto.”

In the opinion the court said:

“Payment might be made in cash or by note as the parties should determine. As to his interest in the policy he could give a premium note with a forfeiture clause broader and more onerous than the forfeiture clause in the policy, but as she had a vested interest in the policy, in case she survived him, he could not affect her rights by giving such a premium note without her consent.”

In other words', under the policies in question, the wife (the beneficiary) would have to consent in order to abandon and terminate the policies prior to their termination by reason of nonpayment of premiums.

The master policies provided how these policies might be terminated, and read as follows:

“7. Terminations. The insurance under this policy upon the life of any employee covered by this contract shall automatically ceas'e and determine upon the termination of such person’s employment with the employer in the specified classes of employees without regard to the cause of such termination, except that the employer may elect that all employees who while insured hereunder are temporarily laid off or given leave of absence or are temporarily disabled, shall be considered to be in the employment of the employer during such period subject, in case of military or naval service, to the provision on the second page hereof. For purposes of insurance, re-employment will be classed as new employment and will be subject to all the requirements thereof and the issue of a new certificate.
“8. Optional Settlement. The employer may, by written notice to the society, elect to have the amount for which any employee’s life is insured under this contract paid in a fixed number of payments to be made at intervals of not less than one month and covering a period not to exceed one year.”

Thus, it will be seen that the policies could be terminated in two ways: One, by ceasing to be an employee; and the other, by nonpayment of premiums.

The policies were not. forfeited by nonpayment of premiums because of the grace clause. Nor were they forfeited by Hinkler’s ceasing to be an employee, because he was an employee at the time of his death.

A vested interest is shown by the fact that the employee in severing his employment with the company had certain option benefits under the policies, as shown in paragraph 8.

Enough has been said to show a vested interest in the deceased certificate holder and the beneficiary thereunder, plaintiff in this' case, and that the insurer and the Wurlitzer company could not cancel the policies during the year, and that the policies were in full force and effect during the time for which the premiums had been paid, which, of course, includes the grace period under the statute and contained in the policies themselves. See also, Manhattan Life Ins. Co. v. Smith, 44 Ohio St., 156, 5 N. E., 417, 58 Am. Rep., 806, paragraph 3 of the syllabus.

Our conclusion is that the certificates under the policies were in force at the time of the death of the decedent, and that the plaintiff beneficiary is entitled to recover under the certificates for the full amount provided for therein, less the amount of premium apportionable to Hinlder’s certificates, which the assurance company was entitled to deduct therefrom under the statutes'.

The trial court held the amount retained by the assurance company on the question of premiums was the proportionate share of the decedent, to wit, $4.50. Since recovery is had for the full amount of the certificates under the master policies, it would seem that the assurance company, under the statutes, could retain from its payments sufficient .to discharge the cost of carriage during the grace period, which would he the total amount necessary for the carriage of the two certificates in suit, which would be not only the proportionate share of the insured, but the total amount of the premium for the coverage.

The judgment will therefore be modified in accordance with this opinion, and the judgment, as modified, will be affirmed.

Judgment modified and affirmed as modified.

Ross, P. J., and Matthews, J., concur.  