Petitioner brought suit in a Federal District Court in 1954 to
recover the proceeds of a National Service Life Insurance policy on
an insured who had been missing since his disappearance from the
Army in 1943. The complaint alleged that, prior to the insured's
disappearance, he was in frail health and had become totally and
permanently disabled. The complaint alleged further that the
insured had died in 1943, and that his total and permanent
disability during the time the policy was in force entitled him to
waiver of premiums on the policy.
Held: upon the allegations of the complaint, petitioner
was entitled to take the case to a jury. Pp.
353 U. S.
44-47.
(a) Where proof of an insured's death must rest primarily upon
his unexplained absence, suit may not be maintained, as a practical
matter, prior to the expiration of the statutory 7-year period, and
it is from that date that the 6-year statute of limitations should
be computed. P.
353 U. S.
45.
(b) The provision of 38 U.S.C. § 810 that the death of the
insured "as of the date of the expiration of such period . . . may
. . . be considered as sufficiently proved" does not preclude the
beneficiary from introducing further evidence from which the jury
might conclude that the insured's presumed death occurred at an
earlier date when the policy was still in force. Pp.
353 U. S.
45-46.
(c) It is only where the beneficiary proves merely the fact of
the insured's 7 years' unexplained absence that the statute
establishes the presumption of death as of the end of that period.
P.
353 U. S.
46.
(d) The "contingency on which the claim is founded," as used in
38 U.S.C. § 445, means the end of the 7-year period when the
presumption of death arose. P.
353 U. S.
46.
(e) Since the claim was filed by petitioner within one year
subsequent to the presumed date of death, it should be considered
as including the lesser claim of premium waiver under 38 U.S.C.
§ 802(n). Pp.
353 U. S.
46-47.
Page 353 U. S. 44
(f) The alternative cause of action, based on allegations of
permanent and total disability of the insured at the time of his
disappearance, would not have accrued until 1950, so the 6-year
statute of limitations had not run when this suit was brought. Pp.
353 U. S.
46-47.
229 F.2d 503 reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner instituted this suit in the District Court in 1954 to
recover the proceeds of a National Service Life Insurance policy.
Petitioner's son, the insured, has been missing since disappearing
from his army unit in 1943. The complaint alleges that, prior to
the insured's disappearance, his condition was one of "general
debility and weakness and despondency," and that he had become
totally and permanently disabled as a result of certain "diseases,
ailments and injuries." The complaint further avers that the
insured had died in 1943, and that his total and permanent
disability during the time the policy was in force entitled him to
waiver of premiums on the policy.
The District Court dismissed the complaint, holding that the
insured would, under the allegations of the complaint, be presumed
to be dead as of 1950, and that the policy had lapsed in the
interim. 138 F. Supp. 810. The Court of Appeals affirmed. 229 F.2d
503. It held that the complaint contained no allegations which
would entitle the trier of fact to conclude that the insured had
died
Page 353 U. S. 45
at a time when the policy continued in force.
Id. at
504. We granted certiorari. 352 U.S. 822.
Respondent urges that the insured's death must be presumed to
have occurred in 1950 at the end of seven years' unexplained
absence, when this policy had long lapsed for failure to pay
premiums. In the alternative, it is argued that, if the
petitioner's claim is founded on the insured's death in 1943, it is
barred by the six-year statute of limitations, 38 U.S.C. §445.
We hold that, under the allegations in this complaint, petitioner
is entitled to take her case to a jury.
Congress has provided in 38 U.S.C. § 810 that a presumption
of death shall arise upon the continued and unexplained absence of
the insured for a period of seven years. Where proof of the
insured's death must rest primarily upon his unexplained absence,
suit may not be maintained, as a practical matter, prior to the
expiration of the statutory seven-year period. Petitioner's cause
of action, therefore, "accrued" at the time when, under § 810,
she might have successfully maintained her suit, and that is the
date from which the six-year statute of limitations should be
computed.
Moreover, nothing in the provision of § 810 that the death
of the insured "as of the date of the expiration of such period my
. . . be considered as sufficiently proved" precludes the
beneficiary from introducing further evidence from which the jury
might conclude that the insured's presumed death occurred at an
earlier date when the policy was still in force.
United States
v. Willhite, 219 F.2d 343.
* The jury might so
conclude here,
Page 353 U. S. 46
if petitioner can prove the allegations of the complaint
concerning the insured's frail health and disability of other
relevant facts. The presumption leaves it open to prove the precise
time of the death, as the statute does not purpose to create a
conclusive presumption that the insured died at the end of the
seven-year period. To compute the six-year limitation period from
the date which the trier of fact establishes as the date of death
would be to say that the beneficiary's right to recover had expired
before she could have successfully prosecuted a lawsuit to enforce
that right. It is only where the beneficiary proves merely the fact
of the insured's seven years' unexplained absence that the statute
establishes the presumption of death as of the end of that period.
The "contingency on which the claim is founded," as used in 38
U.S.C. § 445, must therefore mean and end of the seven-year
period when the presumption of death arose.
That seems to us to be the common sense of the matter; and
common sense often makes good law.
Furthermore, the allegations of permanent and total disability
at the time of disappearance of the insured, if proved, would bring
the petitioner within the premium waiver provisions of 38 U.S.C.
§ 802(n). Since the claim was filed by petitioner within one
year subsequent to the presumed date of death, it should be
considered as including the lesser claim of premium waiver. Hence,
even though the jury found the actual date of death to be later
than 1943, the coverage of the policy might continue. As we read
the complaint, this alternative cause of action would also not have
accrued until 1950; and
Page 353 U. S. 47
the six-year statute of limitations had not run when this suit
was brought.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
is remanded to the District Court for trial.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER took no part in the consideration of
decision of this case.
* That was the view even before the presumption of death at the
end of seven years' absence was codified. In
Davie v.
Briggs, 97 U. S. 628,
97 U. S. 634,
the Court said,
"If it appears in evidence that the absent person, within the
seven years, encountered some specific peril, or within that period
came within the range of some impending or immediate danger, which
might reasonably be expected to destroy life, the court or jury may
infer that life ceased before the expiration of the seven
years."
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER and MR. JUSTICE
BURTON join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Petitioner sues to recover death benefits under a National
Service Life Insurance Policy on the life of her son, a draftee in
the United States Army. The case is before us only on the
complaint, whose substantial allegations are these: the insured
disappeared from his post in the Army on or about July 30, 1943,
and has not been heard of since. At the time of this disappearance,
for some time before, and continuously thereafter until his death,
the insured suffered from "cholera, nervous trouble, mental
trouble, St. Vitus Dance, generally debility, and weakness and
despondency," which prevented him from pursuing any gainful
occupation and entitled him to a waiver of premiums on the policy,
and "to have said policy continue in full force and effect until
his death." It is then alleged that, by reason of the insured's
disappearance and ailments
"the law presumes and [petitioner] avers that he died on or
about July 30, 1943, and while the policy was in full force and
effect and . . . that, on or about July 30, 1950, at the expiration
of said seven years,"
petitioner became entitled to the policy proceeds. Petitioner
finally alleges that she made "due application" to the Veterans
Administration for the policy
Page 353 U. S. 48
proceeds and "to have said insurance contract construed as being
in full force and effect at the time of assured's death," but that
her application was refused by the Administration on July 18,
1951.
Actions on life insurance policies issued under the National
Service Life Insurance Act are governed by a six-year statute of
limitations. [
Footnote 1]
Section 610 of the Act, 38 U.S.C. § 810, abolishes all state
law presumptions of death in connection with these policies, and
substitutes a statutory presumption of death at the expiration of
seven years' unexplained absence. [
Footnote 2] And § 602(n) of the Act, 38 U.S.C.
§802(n), provides for waiver of premiums under certain
conditions, upon applications under certain conditions, in one year
after the insured's death. [
Footnote 3]
Page 353 U. S. 49
The Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of the complaint for
insufficiency and also held the action barred by limitations.
[
Footnote 4] This Court holds
the complaint sufficient and the action not barred.
If petitioner can prove that the policy was still in force in
1950, the date when death is presumed under 38 U.S.C. § 810,
her suit is clearly timely, and she is entitled to recover. I agree
with the Court that, liberally read, the complaint states facts
which should allow her so to prove.
Assuming, however, that the policy was no longer in force in
1950, I think the suit is barred by limitations, and I must dissent
from this aspect of the Court's holding. The insured disappeared in
1943. Petitioner alleges that death occurred in 1943, as indeed she
must, since we now assume that the policy expired soon thereafter.
But if death occurred in 1943, the cause of action accrued at that
time, and is therefore barred after six years, and suit was not
brought until 1954. Yet petitioner asks us to hold that, for the
purposes of the statute of limitations, we use the presumption of
§ 810, that death occurs at the expiration of a continued
seven-year period of absence, in order to postpone the accrual of a
cause of action necessarily founded on a death allegedly occurring
at the beginning of the seven years. I do not understand how we can
accept any such theory. Congress has provided that the suit must be
brought within six years after the cause of action accrued, and
that the cause accrues on the
Page 353 U. S. 50
"happening of the contingency on which the claim is founded."
[
Footnote 5] The contingency
which here starts the running of the statute is clearly the death
of the insured.
United States v. Towery, 306 U.
S. 324. If the insured died in 1943, as the petitioner
avers, she should have brought suit within six years thereafter,
before 1949. For petitioner is relying on actual death, not the
presumed death provided for by Congress in cases of disappearances.
She cannot rely on the latter, for Congress has unequivocally
stated that the presumption created by seven years' unexplained
absence is that the insured died at the end of that period, and the
policy was then, by hypothesis, no longer in effect. [
Footnote 6]
The dilemma petitioner faces is clearly self-inflicted. Congress
has provided a fair choice. If petitioner can prove death in 1943,
as she must if the policy expired then, she has six years within
which to bring suit to prove it. If, on the other hand, petitioner
has no proof of actual death at all, she must merely keep the
policy alive by payment of premiums or application for waiver until
the end of seven years, and she then has six more years in which to
sue on the basis of presumed death at the end of the seven-year
period.
The Court says that
"to compute the six-year limitation period from the date which
the trier of fact establishes as the date of death would be to say
that the beneficiary's right to recover had expired before she
could have successfully prosecuted a lawsuit to enforce that
rights."
I understand neither the logic nor the policy of
Page 353 U. S. 51
this argument. Surely, in every lawsuit on a life insurance
policy, the statute of limitations runs from the date of death, and
yet the date of death is something to be proved in the lawsuit
itself. In fact, I can think of no litigation in which the statute
of limitations does not run from the time the cause of action
accrues and the plaintiff need not prove at trial both that there
is a cause of action and that it accrued within the period of
limitations. Why is it unfair to say to a plaintiff who must prove
a 1943 death that she must prove it within six years thereafter?
Not only is it unlikely that plaintiff will be in a better position
to prove a 1943 death in 1954 than she was in 1949, but the whole
essence of the policy behind statutes of limitations runs counter
to any such assumption.
It is argued that such a result would be harsh, in that a
beneficiary should be left free to prove in the same action either
actual or presumed death, and that proof of actual death may not
turn up until after six years have passed; yet a beneficiary must
wait seven before suing on the basis of presumed death. [
Footnote 7] But this is only another
way of urging that the statute of limitations be waived every time
a plaintiff has difficulty in collecting proof during the period
given by the statute. And it has been the consistent opinion of
this Court that limitations, particularly against the United
States, may not be tolled, without statutory authorization, merely
because a plaintiff might not be in a position to carry the burden
of proof within the statutory period.
McIver v.
Ragan, 2 Wheat. 25;
McMahon v. United
States, 342 U. S. 25;
Pillsbury
v.
Page 353 U. S. 52
United Engineering Co., 342 U.
S. 197;
Unexcelled Chemical Corp. v. United
States, 345 U. S. 59.
Important considerations of policy buttress that opinion.
Hereafter, in every case of disappearance, a beneficiary may,
without keeping the policy alive, wait thirteen years before using
on the policy, and may allege and prove that death occurred
thirteen years theretofore. Surely, in the intervening years, there
will have been loss of evidence due to the death of some witnesses,
clouding in the recollection of others, and loss of records. In
fact, in this very case, the Government is now put to the task of
meeting numerous allegations with respect to the insured's physical
and mental condition, the circumstances of his disappearance, all
in 1943, and his likely movements after disappearance. The whole
purpose of the statute of limitations, it seems to me, is to save
litigants the burdensome effort of having to collect and meet such
stale evidence. The Court overrides that policy today in order to
give one plaintiff whose case has human appeal a chance to recover.
Thus is bad law made.
[
Footnote 1]
38 U.S.C. § 445, so far as pertinent here, provides:
"No suit . . . on United States Government life [converted]
insurance shall be allowed under this section unless the same shall
have been brought within six years after the right accrued for
which the claim is made:
Provided, That for the purposes
of this section it shall be deemed that the right accrued on the
happening of the contingency on which the claim is founded. . .
."
[
Footnote 2]
"No State law providing for presumption of death shall be
applicable to claims for National Service Life Insurance. If
evidence satisfactory to the Administrator is produced establishing
the fact of the continued and unexplained absence of any individual
from his home and family for a period of seven years, during which
period no evidence of his existence has been received, the death of
such individual as of the date of the expiration of such period
may, for the purposes of this subchapter, be considered as
sufficiently proved."
[
Footnote 3]
"Upon application by the insured and under such regulations as
the Administrator may promulgate, payment of premiums on such
insurance may be waived during the continuous total disability of
the insured, which continues or has continued for six or more
consecutive months, if such disability commenced (1) subsequent to
the date of his application for insurance, (2) while the insurance
was in force under premium-paying conditions, and (3) prior to the
insured's sixtieth birthday. . . .
Provided further, That
in any case in which the Administrator finds that the insured's
failure to make timely application for waiver of premiums or his
failure to submit satisfactory evidence of the existence or
continuance of total disability was due to circumstances beyond his
control, the Administrator may grant waiver or continuance of
waiver of premiums: and provided further, That in the event of
death of the insured without filing application for waiver, the
beneficiary, within one year after the death of the insured or
August 1, 1946, whichever be the later, or, if the beneficiary be
insane or a minor, within one year after removal of such legal
disability, may file application for waiver with evidence of the
insured's right to waiver under this section. . . ."
[
Footnote 4]
229 F.2d 503.
[
Footnote 5]
38 U.S.C. § 445.
[
Footnote 6]
At common law seven years' unexplained absence raised a
presumption as to the fact of death but none as to the time of
death.
Davie v. Briggs, 97 U. S. 628.
Congress, however, in 38 U.S.C. § 810, did not adopt the
common law rule enunciated in
Davie v. Briggs, the statute
declaring that death is presumed to have occurred at the end of the
period of absence.
[
Footnote 7]
I see no reason why a beneficiary, uncertain as to whether he
should rely on actual or presumed death, cannot protect himself by
keeping the policy in force and filing his complaint within six
years of the insured's disappearance.
See Fed.Rules
Civ.Proc., rule 8(e)(2). I think it untenable to suggest that such
a complaint would be demurrable as prematurely brought.