delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought by the defendant in error upon a policy of insurance issued by the insurance company on the life of W. J. Dunken. The insurance company is a Connecticut corporation. When it issued the policy it was doing business in Tex,as under the laws of that State, of which Dunken then was a citizen and inhabitant.
The Texas statute provides:
“ Any contract of insurance payable to any citizen or inhabitant of this state by an insurance company or cor *391 poration doing business within this state shall be held to be a contract made and entered into under and by virtue of the laws of this state relating to insurance, and governed thereby, notwithstanding such policy or contract of insurance may provide that the contract was executed, and the premiums and policy (in case it becomes a demand) should be рayable without this state, or at the home office of the company or corporation issuing the same.” Art. 4950, Rev. Civ. Stats., 1911.
The statute further provides that where loss occurs failure to make payment within thirty days after demand shall render the company liable to pay the holder of the policy in addition to the amount of loss twelve per cent, damages on the amount of such loss, together with reasonable attorney fees for the prosecution and collection thereof. Art. 4746.
These provisions, together with others, are declared to be conditions upon which foreign insurance companies shall be permitted to do business within the State and any such corporation engaged in issuing insurance policies within the State is deemed to have assented theretо as a condition precedent to the right to engage in such business. Art. 4972.
The policy in question was issued under the following circumstances: On December 17, 1910, H. B. Alexander, manager for the insurance company in the State of Tennessee, took the application of Dunken, then a resident of Tennessee, for a seven-year term policy. The policy was duly issued in Connecticut and delivered in Tennessee to Dunken. By its terms, at the sole option of the insured, upon any anniversary of its date, without medical reexamination, it was convertible, among other forms of insurance, into a twenty payment life commercial policy, bearing the same date and issued at the same age, on payment of the difference between the premiums already paid and those required undеr the converted policy. On February
*392
19, 1916, the seven-year policy still being in force, Dun-ken, in the meantime having moved to Texas, exercised his option and applied to the company’ for a conversion
“
in accordance with the conditions ” of that policy just stated. His application stipulated that the statements and answers in the original application for the seven-yеar term policy should be the basis of the new policy and form a part of the same. The application was mailed to the Tennessee manager and by him forwarded to the home office of the company in Connecticut. There the old policy was cancelled, stamped “ Surrendered; new number, 152,775; $10,000”, and a twenty payment life commercial policy, bearing the new number and conforming to the express terms of the agreement in the original policy, was issued and forwarded to Alexander in Tennessee for delivery. Alexander sent the policy by mail to Dunken at Waco, Texas, together with a loan note and a form authorizing the company to deduct the 1916 premium from the proceeds of the loan to be signed by him and returned. Dunken received these documеnts in due course of mail and retained the policy, but did not answer Alexander’s letter, pay the premiums or execute the loan papers. Three months later he died. In the letter transmitting the policy Alexander fixed no time for the execution and return of the loan note and authority to deduct the 1916 premium; nor did he suggest that the delivery of the policy was in any way qualified. There was no further сorrespondence or notice of any kind from the company. It was agreed that the demand required by Article 4746 of the Texas statute, heretofore cited, was made by defendant in error. Judgment was rendered against the company for the amount of the policy less certain offsets, together with the statutory penalty of twelve per cent, and an attorney’s fee of $3,000, which judgment wаs duly affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.
The judgment below is challenged upon these grounds: (1) The policy as shown by the undisputed evidence never became a completed or binding contract; (2) it was a Tennessee or Connecticut contract and, since under the laws of thosе States no penalty or attorney’s fee was recoverable, the Texas statute as construed and applied, violates the contract impairment clause, the full faith and credit clause, and the several clauses of § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution; and (3) assuming it to be a Texas contract, plaintiff having demanded and sued for substantially more than she recovered, the suit was rightfully defended and the statute as construed and applied to that situation violates the same provisions of the Federal Constitution.
Defendant in error moves to dismiss the writ of error or affirm the judgment of the state court upon the ground that the asserted federal questions are so lacking in substance as to be frivolous. This motion must be denied. Other matters aside, the contention that the contract is controlled by the law of Tennessee or Connecticut — in which event the Texas statute in respect of penalty and attorney’s fee as construed and applied, is unconstitutional — clearly presents a substantial question under the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution.
Royal Arcanum
v.
Green,
First.
Coming then to the merits, the first contention to be considered presents a pure question of fact, which
*394
was decided against plaintiffs in error by the jury in response to specially submitted issues. Upon these issues the jury found that the new policy was delivered by an agent of the insurance company as a completed contract with the intention that it should become effective and binding from the time of its receipt by Dunken; and that such delivery as a completed contract was acquiesced in by an executive officer of the company. This verdict met with the concurrence of the trial court and, after a full review of the evidence, of the appellate court. The rule is settled that the decision of a state court upon a question оf fact ordinarily cannot be made the subject of inquiry here. See for example,
Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co.
v.
Haber,
*395 Second. The argument that the policy was not a Texas contract proceeds upon two grounds: (a) that the converted policy became effective, if it ever did, when it was mailed by the company’s agent in Tennessee; (b) that the original policy was clearly a Tennessee or Connecticut contract, and the converted policy, being еxecuted under the optional privilege granted by the original contract and in exact compliance with its terms, is a subsidiary and not an independent agreement, and the rights and obligations of the parties are controlled by the law of the original contract.
We proceed at once to the consideration of the second ground, since if that is well founded it will be unnecessаry to consider the first. Whether a subsequent contract made in pursuance of the provisions of an earlier one is to be regarded as separate, detached and independent, or as a continuation and in effect the same, is a matter not always free from difficulty. . The question as applied to substituted policies of insurance has not heretofore arisen in this Court and apparently has seldom arisen in the state courts. In
Dannhauser
v.
Wallenstein,
“ It was simply a continuation of the original contract under the option which gave the holder thereof the right, after two or more annual premiums had been paid, to cease paying the annual premiums and take a paid-up policy in exchange for the first one. It was a change in the mere form of the contract exprеssly provided for by its own terms. It is true that the first policy, the original evidence of the contract between the insured and the com *396 pany, was * surrendered to the company and canceled ’ when the paid-up policy was issued, but this was simply a part of, and in compliance with, the terms of the original contract. The contract was continued as it provided that it might be, in the form of ,a pаid-up policy, such as was accepted by the defendant. It was not a modification, but a fulfillment of the original contract.”
The facts were held to justify an opposite conclusion in
Gans
v.
Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
Under different circumstances the same question came before the Supreme Court of Tennessee, in
Silliman
v.
International Life Ins. Co.,
While this Court has not passed upon the precise question here presented, it had before it an analogous question in
New York Life Ins. Co.
v.
Dodge,
“ It should be noted that the clause in the policy providing ' cash loans can be obtained by the insured on the sole security of this policy on demand, etc.,’ certainly imposed no obligation upon the company to make such a loan if the Missouri statute applied and inhibited valid hypothecation of .the reserve as security therefor as defendant in error maintains. She cannot, therefore, claim anything upon the theory that the loan contract actually consummated was one which the company had legally obligated itself to make upon demand.”
The decision proceeds upon the theory that the provision in respect of loans did not constitute an absolute promise to make a loan upon simple demand at аll events; *399 and that the loan contract was an independent, subsequent agreement made in another State. In the Liebing Case, subsequently decided, the policy executed in Missouri provided that “ the company will . . . loan amounts within the limits of the cash surrender value,” etc., and this Court, pointing out that the language of the policy in the Dodge Case was “ cash loans can be obtained,” etc., said (pp. 213-214):
“ The policy nоw sued upon contained a positive promise to make the loan if asked, whereas in the one last mentioned [the Dodge Case] it might be held that some discretion was reserved to the company.”
In the light of these decisions, then, we inquire whether the second policy issued to Dunken is to be controlled by Tennessee or Texas law. The contract contained in the original policy was а Tennessee contract. The law of Tennessee entered into it and became a part of it. The Texas statute was incapable of being constitutionally applied to it since the effect of such application would be to regulate business outside the State of Texas and control contracts made by citizens of other States in disregard of their laws under which penаlties and- attorney’s fees are not recoverable.
New York Life Ins. Co.
v.
Head,
From these premises it necessarily results that the second policy follows the status of the first for which it was exchanged, and is not subject to the Texas statute relating to penalties and attorney’s fees but is controlled by Tennessee law. The judgment below, therefore, in so far as it gives effect to the Texas statutе by imposing a penalty of twelve per cent, and allowing attorney’s fees, is erroneous, in that the Texas statute cannot constitutionally be applied to a Tennessee contract.
Third. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider the third contention urged as ground for reversal.
The judgment below must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
