58 Vt. 253 | Vt. | 1885
The opinion of the court was delivered by
It is quite clear that much inadmissible evidence was received by the master in the hearing before him. The testimony of Blodgett and Dewey and certain exhibits offered in connection therewith were objected to by the defendant, but the objection is not available in this court. Sec. 730 R. L. declares that “no questions in regard to the admission or rejection of evidence by the masters
No such exception was filed in this case and we must give effect to the statute as it reads.
The first question arising upon the master’s report is whether the policy in question has been forfeited so that the right to a paid-up policy has been lost.
The annual premium payable on Bruce’s policy in advance was $104.86. Under the rules of the company this could be paid in cash, or one half in cash and the other half by note running one year, the interest thereon being paid in advance.
Bruce paid his annual premiums on the half cash and half note plan for four years, and then claimed a paid-up policy for four tenths of the sum insured.
It was represented to Bruce before taking his policy by Earr, the company’s agent, and by circulars issued by the company, that the policy would be n on-forfeitable after the payment of two annual premiums. In one of the circulars the company uses this language: “ Should future payments cease after not less than two have been made, the policy is not void, but remains binding by its terms, without further payment of premiums for as many tenths * * * ' of the sum insured as there has been annual premiums paid. The non-forfeiture policies of the company are so written that the payment of two annual premiums render them binding for the amount of the insurance paid for, icithout further attention on the part of the holder, thus obviating all possible danger of loss, either through inattention or inability to meet subsequent payments.”
When the policy was issued it provided in its third condition, that “if the assured shall not pay the said annual premiums on or before noon of the several days hereinbefore mentioned for the payment of the same and the interest annually in advance on anv outstanding premium notes
The language of these conditions leaves no doubt as to the right of Bruce to a paid-up policy for four tenths of the sum for which he was insured. If the language were ambiguous, Bruce had the right to construe it as the company had declared its meaning in the circular above referred to. But we think it needs no extraneous aid in its construction.
The very end aimed at in offering and receiving the reduced or paid-up policy is, as the company’s circular declares, to obviate “ all possible danger of loss.” The paid-up policy issues as a redemption from a forfeiture of the original policy which otherwise would “cease and determine,” for non-payment of premiums. It can issue only in case two full premiums have beexx paid axid if so maxiy have been paid, the right to it is givexi to the policy holder by the oxdginal policy itself. Thus his right to it is a contract xdght that iixheres ixx the oxdgiixal policy.
When issued it is not itself subject to forfeiture for fux’ther noix-payment of premiums. If axxy are payable in cash, xiotes, or interest, the coxnpany must stand for their collectioxx oxx the px'omise of the policy holder to pay. If the paid-up policy could be forfeited for further non-paymexit
The paid-up policy issues for so many tenths of the sum insured as annual payments have been made and is based on the theory that insurance to such amount has been fully paid for.
When Bruce elected to stop his payments he was at once entitled to have his policy converted into a paid-up policy freed of all risk of forfeiture for non-payment of further premiums.
Such paid-up policy would not mature, however, till the end of the twelve years it had originally to run, unless Bruce sooner died. At maturity of the policy the company had the right, by the terms of the policy, to deduct from the sum payable all indebtedness due the company on account of the policy.
In the case of Mary A. Cowles v. This same Company, 1 New Eng. Rep. 247, the precise question here made arose upon the same kind of a policy. The company claimed that the reduced or paid-up policy had been forfeited by the non-payment of interest on three premium notes. Says Doe, Ch. J.: “The forfeiture clause qualified by the provision for a ‘ paid-up ’ policy does not mean that the reduced ‘paid-up’ ‘non-forfeiture’ insurance is annually forfeitable for non-payment.” And again: “The original contract did not make the non-payment forfeiture clause applicable to the promised ‘ paid-up ’ policy into which the original could be converted.”
The master says that the company regarded notes given for part of the annual premiums as loans made to the policy holder. Upon its own theory then a failure to pay interest on such notes does not work a forfeiture. May Ins. s. 345, (a), and cases cited.
The case at bar is unlike Patch v. Ins. Co. 44 Vt. 481. There the question arose upon the construction of a paid-up
The orator being then entitled to a paid-up policy, the question next arises as to its amoxmt.
The time for the maturity of the policy having arrived, to avoid circuity of action a decree may be passed for the present payment of the amount of the policy to which the orator is entitled. Equity will treat that as already done which should have been done.
The defendant is entitled to deduct from the $400, which the paid-up policy should have issued for, the outstanding notes and interest thereon held by it, less1 any dividends or profits in its hands that properly belong to such policy. The policy itself is described in the margin as a “non-forfeitui’e endowment policy with profits.” But the policy is silent respecting the meaning of “profits” in this indorsement, and we are left to ascertain the meaning from other sources.
Farr represented to Bruce that the profits to which he would be entitled would come in the way of dividends, which would be payable after four annual premiums had been paid, and that if he took a paid-up policy the dividends would be applied when he took such policy.
The question is not what profits the company ought to have earned but what in fact it did earn. The company was bound to conduct its business in a way to preserve its solvency. It owed this duty to all classes of its policy holders, and Bruce, as one of them, had no right to share in any plan of distribution of profits that worked insolvency. When the company then discovered that the percentage plan was disastrous to the common interest of its policy holders, it became a duty, grounded in the very theory of
The change to the contributive plan was warrantable and Bruce was entitled to dividends made under it, of §24.57 for four years.
The decree is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to enter a decree for the orator to the effect that he is entitled to a paid-up policy on the life of his intestate for the sum of §293.91 as of December 30, 1882; and, to avoid circuity of action, that the defendant be ordered to pay the orator said last mentioned sum with interest thereon from December 30, 1882, with costs of suit.