delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit grows out of the cancellation and surrender of a life insurance policy issued by the Aetna Life Insurance Company, appellee (hereinafter designated as defendant) on the life of one Jimmie Boyd, who, at the time the policy was issued, was the husband of Christine Boyd, appellant (hereinafter designated as plaintiff). The policy insured against permanent total disability at the rate of $50 per month during the life of the insured, beginning six months after the beginning of such permanent total disability, together with abatement of premiums and $5,000 to be paid in the event of death, with no deduction from the face of the policy on account of payments made under the total disability clause. Plaintiff was designated as beneficiary, both for the total disability benefits and the death benefit.
After the policy had been in force for a number of years, plaintiff and her husband separated. Plaintiff continued to live in Carmi, Illinois, but her husband left there and traveled as advance agent for shows that were traveling about the country, so that it was impossible for plaintiff to keep informed as to his whereabouts or his state of health.
Following their separation plaintiff paid the premiums on the insurance policy, up until about the month of August 1938, when, owing to her financial circumstances, she felt that she could no longer afford to pay the premiums and notified the insurance company that she desired to surrender the policy and receive its cash surrender value. A loan had previously been made on this policy, which, with accrued interest., amounted to the sum of $1,039, so that when plaintiff surrendered the policy she received but $4.19 in money, that being the balance of the cash surrender value above the loan and interest.
Shortly after the policy had been surrendered and canceled, plaintiff learned the insured had been permanently and totally disabled more than six months before the surrender of said policy. Neither plaintiff nor defendant knew of the physical condition of the insured at the time the policy was surrendered. Upon learning of the permanent total disability of the insured, plaintiff requested the reinstatement of the insurance policy she had surrendered, and the payment of the disability benefits provided therein. After-wards, on April 8,1939, the insured, Jimmie Boyd died and plaintiff then requested of defendant the payment of the death benefit, in addition to the disability benefits, claimed to have previously accrued. This was not paid, whereupon suit was instituted.
The amended complaint filed by plaintiff, set forth in substance the above facts, and prayed that defendant be required to produce the surrendered policy in court; that an accounting be had, and that defendant be required to pay plaintiff whatever sum might be found to be due her upon such accounting. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the amended complaint which was allowed by the court. Plaintiff elected to stand upon her amended complaint, whereupon the court dismissed said cause for want of equity and rendered judgment against plaintiff for costs, from'which action of the court, plaintiff prosecutes her appeal to this court.
Plaintiff alleges as error the action of the court in dismissing the case for want of equity, upon motion of defendant, and'it is argued in her behalf that equity has jurisdiction to relieve against the consequences of a mutual mistake of fact and the cancellation or rescission of the insurance policy in question was made under such mutual mistake of fact.
It is defendant’s earnest contention that at the time plaintiff decided to surrender the policy and asked for the cash surrender value, she knew that she did not know the condition of health of her husband, the insured. It is stressed that there was no unconscious ignorance on the part of plaintiff as to the health of insured, so it is claimed that the allegations of the amended complaint failed to show any mistake of fact in the legal sense upon her part; that notwithstanding her conscious want of ignorance of the condition of health of her husband she had elected to surrender the policy in question and take the cash surrender value thereof, in lieu of paying any further premiums on the policy and by such action waived any rights she had under the policy of insurance.
There has been cited, and we have found no case in Illinois, directly in point. The case's of Hoops v. Fitzgerald,
Counsel for defendant seem to particularly stress the case of Kowalhe v. Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co.,
In reversing the judgment of the trial court and holding that the compromise entered into was binding upon the plaintiff, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin held that the question of her pregnancy was a collateral one, one merely calculated to enhance the damages. There the court said, “In a case of doubt like this, if the doubtful fact is material, parties may compromise and include the uncertainty among those covered by the settlement; they may refuse to settle until the uncertainty is removed, or they may settle everything else and expressly omit therefrom the specified contingency.”
In the instant case, the question of the state of health of insured was not a collateral matter, nor a- matter calculated to merely enhance the damages. It was not a compromise, comparable to the case of parties entering into a contract based upon uncertain or contingent events, purposely as a compromise of some doubtful claim arising from them, in which case, in the absence of bad faith, no rescission can be had, though the facts turn out differently from the expectation of both parties. In such agreements the parties are presumed to calculate the chances and to assume the risks. Such was the underlying principle of the Kowalke case, and so may be differentiated from the instant case.
The Wisconsin case is further distinguished from the instant case by reason of the fact that in the former case, the plaintiff had merely an action based upon tort, the amount of damages that she might recover being uncertain, at the time when she entered into the compromise settlement. In the case at bar, upon the happening of certain contingencies, the plaintiff was entitled to a definite amount of money, under the terms of the contract of insurance. We find no true basis for comparison between the two cases.
We believe that the case of Duncan v. New York Mut. Ins. Co.,
The case of Riegel v. American Life Ins. Co.,
The decisive and practically sole question for the consideration of this court, is whether the facts alleged in the amended complaint, set forth a sufficient mistake of fact, in the legal acceptation of the term, as to justify the intervention of a court of equity, and relieve against the consequences of that alleged mistake of fact, in the entering into the contract of rescission.
Mistake of fact has been defined to be a mistake, not caused by the neglect of a legal duty on the part of the person making the mistake, and consisting in an unconscious ignorance or forgetfulness of a fact past or present material to the contract, or belief in the present existence of a thing material to the contract which does not exist, or in the past existence of a thing which has not existed. Purvines v. Harrison,
It is fundamental, that for the purposes of this case, the material averments of fact contained in the amended complaint must be taken as true, the motion filed against it, being in the nature of a demurrer. The allegation of the amended complaint is that, “plaintiff . . . presumed said Jimmie Boyd to still be. in good health,” and subsequently, it is alleged that “both plaintiff and defendant were ignorant of the true physical condition of the said Jimmie Boyd.” It would be wholly unreasonable and unwarranted to hold that the parties treated upon the basis that the fact which was the subject of their agreement was doubtful or that the contract of rescission was made in view of doubtful facts. It is not contended that plaintiff had any claim at the time of cancellation or supposed that she had one. There was in no sense a compromise. As a matter of fact, at the time of cancellation plaintiff had a perfectly valid claim, but she and the company were both at that time, according to the allegations of the amended complaint, ignorant of the fact that there was a claim in .existence, due to the total permanent disability of insured. The supposed element of doubt as to the health of Boyd never entered into the contemplation of either party, nor did it form any part of the consideration for the cancellation and surrender of the policy. It would be quite natural that they would assume as they evidently did, that the insured was in good health. As matter of fact such is the express allegation of the amended complaint.
In the Kowalke case, supra, the court at page 477 of the opinion said," “Passing the requirement that the fact as to which mistake is made must be either past or present, — for it is obvious that the coming into existence of any future fact must at the time of contracting have been understood to rest in conjecture, and the contingency thereof to have been assumed by both parties, — another essential element of the definition is that the fact involved in the mistake must have been as to a material part of the contract, or, as better expressed by Mr. Beach (Mod. Eq. Jur. §§ 52, 53), an intrinsic fact; that is, not, merely material in the sense that it might have had weight if known, but that its existence or nonexistence was intrinsic to the transaction, — one of the things actually contracted about. ’ ’
In the instant case, the insured’s state of health was not merely incidental, nor was it a matter that would merely enhance the amount of damages. The subject matter of the mistake was intrinsic to the transaction. As set forth in plaintiff’s amended complaint, “if she had known the true facts as to said Jimmie Boyd’s total permanent disability . . . she would not have surrendered same (the policy) to the defendant.” This policy was in full force and effect at the time of total permanent disability. Upon that contingency coming to pass the liability of defendant was fixed. The cancellation was not intended to reach back and absolve defendant from any liability which it had already incurred. Even as in the Duncan case the parties believed the vessel insured was still in existence; and as in the Riegel case, the parties believed the insured alive, in the instant case both parties believed Jimmie Boyd in good health, and contracted with reference to that supposed state of facts. We are of the opinion, therefore, that the facts alleged show ground for equitable relief, and that the court erred in dismissing the amended complaint for want of equity.
The order and judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to overrule the motion to dismiss, and for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
