Oklahoma Code § 36-4037

Title 36. Insurance: Definitions to be delivered to applicant for replacement
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life insurance policy or annuity.
The following definitions shall be on a form prepared by the
insurer and shall be delivered to the applicant for a replacement
life insurance policy or a replacement annuity policy along with the
notice and statement provided for in Sections 4035 and 4036 of the
Life Insurance and Annuity Policyholders Protection Act, Sections
4031 et seq. of this title:
DEFINITIONS
Premiums:  Premiums are the payments you make on the
life insurance or annuity contract.  They are unlike deposits in a
savings or investment program because if you drop the policy you
might get back less than you paid in.
Cash Surrender Value:  This is the amount of money
you can get if you surrender your life insurance policy or annuity.
If there is a policy loan, the cash surrender value is the
difference between the cash value printed in the policy and the loan
value.  Not all policies have cash surrender values.
Lapse:  A life insurance policy may lapse when you do
not pay the premiums within the grace period.  If your policy had a
cash surrender value, the insurer might change your policy to as
much extended term insurance or paid-up insurance as the cash
surrender value will buy.  Sometimes the policy lets the insurer
borrow from the cash surrender value to pay the premiums.
Surrender:  You surrender a life insurance policy
when you either let it lapse or tell the company you want to drop
it.  If a policy has a cash surrender value, you can receive such
value in cash if you return the policy to the company with a written
request.
Place on Extended Term:  This means you use your cash
surrender value to change your insurance to term insurance with the
same insurer.  In this case, the net death benefit will be the same

as before but you will only be covered for a specified period of
time.
Borrow Policy Loan Values:  If your life insurance
policy has a cash surrender value, you can usually borrow all or
part of said amount from the insurer.  Interest will be charged
according to the terms of the policy, and if the loan and unpaid
interest ever exceeds the cash surrender value the policy will be
terminated.  If you die, the amount of the loan and any unpaid
interest due will be subtracted from the death benefits.
Evidence of Insurability:  This means proof that you
are an acceptable risk.  You have to meet the standards of the
insurer regarding age, health, occupation, and such other standards
as the insurer feels necessary to be eligible for coverage.
Incontestable Clause:  This says that after one (1)
or two (2) years, according to the provisions of the contract, the
insurer shall not resist a claim because you made a false or
incomplete statement when you applied for the policy.  During the
first two (2) years if there are false or incomplete answers on the
application and the insurer discovers them, the insurer can deny a
claim as if the policy has never existed.
Suicide Clause:  This says that if you commit suicide
after being insured for less than two (2) years, your beneficiaries
will receive only a refund of the premiums that were paid.
The definitions of incontestable clause and suicide clause shall be
in 12-point type.

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