During the time of his first enlistment, a seaman in the Navy
applied for and obtained a policy of war risk insurance, executing
at the time of his application an authorization for deduction of
premiums from his pay. He reenlisted twice and held a certificate
of continuous service. Although the authorization for deduction of
premiums was never formally revoked, and there was sufficient money
due him at the end of each month to meet the premiums, deductions
were in fact made only during the first enlistment, and
Page 292 U. S. 338
thereafter he accepted all pay that was due him and made no
effort to pay the premiums.
Held: by his conduct, the
insured abandoned the policy, and it was not in force at the time
of his death. P.
292 U. S. 341.
67 F.2d 412 affirmed.
Certiorari, 291 U.S. 656, to review a judgment which reversed a
judgment against the United States in a suit on a policy of war
risk insurance.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
By complaint filed in the District Court for Oregon, May 22,
1929, petitioner sought judgment against the United States for
benefits said to have accrued to her under war risk insurance taken
out by her son, Elias Melvin Zimmerman, in 1917. While enlisted in
the Naval Service, he died aboard the United States Steamship
Conestoga June 30, 1921.
The United States denied liability upon the ground that the
policy lapsed for nonpayment of premiums and was not in force after
April 30, 1918.
By agreement, the cause was tried without a jury. The District
Court gave judgment for the complainant, petitioner here; the
Circuit Court of Appeals reached a different conclusion, and
ordered reversal.
There is no dispute in respect of he essential facts.
Zimmerman enlisted in the Navy March 18, 1914, as an apprentice
seaman, and was honorably discharged at the expiration of his term
March 17, 1918; he reenlisted March 18, 1918, and received an
honorable discharge September 15, 1919; he enlisted again September
16,
Page 292 U. S. 339
1919, and served until death. He held a continuous service
certificate, but when this was actually received does not appear.
* War risk
insurance amounting to $10,000 issued upon his application dated
December 3, 1917, which contained the following clause, never
formally revoked:
"I authorize the necessary monthly deduction from my pay, or if
insufficient, from any deposits with the United States in payment
of the premiums as they become due, unless they be otherwise
paid."
The policy provided for monthly payments in the event of death
or total disability occurring while it remained in force. It
designated petitioner as the beneficiary. A Bulletin issued by the
Director of War Risk Insurance, as authorized by the War Risk
Insurance Act, 40 Stat. 398, 409, in force when the policy became
effective, contained the following regulation:
"Premiums shall be paid monthly on or before the 1st day of each
calendar month and will, unless the insured otherwise elects in
writing, be deducted from any pay due him from the United States or
deposit by him with the United States, and, if so to be deducted, a
premium, when due, will be treated as paid whether or not such
deduction is in fact made if, upon the due date, the United States
owe him on account of pay or deposit an amount sufficient to
provide the premium; provided that the premium may be paid within
thirty-one (31) days after the expiration of the month during which
period of grace the insurance
Page 292 U. S. 340
shall remain in full force;"
also,
"In case the applicant does not desire the premium to be
deducted from his pay, he should so state in writing at the time of
making application; but if no election is made, it shall have the
effect to provide for such deduction from his pay or if such pay be
insufficient any balance from his deposit."
Payments due upon the policy were met by deductions of $6.50
monthly from the assured's pay until the end of his first
enlistment. Thereafter no deduction was made; he executed no new
authorization for deductions; no premium was actually met. He was
entitled to pay for every day from March 18, 1914, until his
death.
When honorably discharged from his first enlistment, Zimmerman
received the full amount then due him; also, when discharged from
his second enlistment. All pay due at his death was received by his
mother, the petitioner. The records of the Navy Department
"disclose that he never made any allotment for War Risk
Insurance Premiums other than the authorization for deduction of
premiums at the time of his application for insurance."
Petitioner insists that, although no premium upon the policy was
actually paid after March, 1918, it nevertheless remained in full
force and effect during the assured's active service because of the
unrestricted authorization for deductions in his application of
December 3, 1917, never thereafter revoked in writing, since there
was due him at the end of each month enough to meet the required
premiums and the Navy Department was under a duty to make proper
deductions.
In behalf of the United States, the insistence is that the
authorization for deductions was ineffective after the expiration
of the first enlistment during which it was given. Moreover, that
the action of the assured in accepting his pay without deduction
for premiums during all of his second and third enlistments -- more
than three years -- is enough to show acquiescence in the
contemporaneous
Page 292 U. S. 341
construction by the administrative officers; and, no
circumstance indicating the contrary, this establishes his purpose
to surrender the contract as he properly could have done.
We are of opinion there is enough to show abandonment of the
contract by the assured and upon that ground the judgment of the
Circuit Court of Appeals should be affirmed.
After expiration of the first enlistment, neither party to the
contract appears to have treated as operative the authorization for
deductions contained in the application. Zimmerman accepted, every
month during a considerable period, the full amount due him; made
no effort to provide for payment of premiums when he must have been
aware that no deduction had been made. There is nothing to indicate
that he did not have full possession of his faculties or lacked
intelligence or probity, or that he was unaware of the important
circumstances. If he had supposed the insurance remained in effect,
common honesty would have moved him to provide for actual payment
of the premiums. He must have known they had not been met. In the
circumstances, his conduct, we think, adequately indicates the
exercise of his right to abandon the policy.
See Sawyer v.
United States, 10 F.2d 416;
United States v. Barry,
67 F.2d 763;
contra, Unger v. United States, 65 F.2d
946.
The challenged judgment must be affirmed.
* Navy Regulations, 1913.
"Paragraph 3529(1) -- Any man who, having been honorably
discharged, or discharged with a recommendation for reenlistment,
shall within four months thereafter reenlist for four years shall
receive in exchange for his discharge a continuous service
certificate. . . ."
"Paragraph 4427(22) -- If any enlisted man or apprentice, being
honorably discharged, shall reenlist for four years within four
months thereafter, he shall, on presenting his honorable discharge
or on accounting in a satisfactory manner for its loss, be entitled
to a gratuity of four months' pay equal in amount to that which he
would have received if he had been employed in actual service. . .
."