181 Ky. 507 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1918
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
‘ ‘ 4th. If the company is not willing to issue a policy on the plan applied for, it is authorized to issue upon this application such policy of insurance as it may deem' to be proper, by change of plan or amount, increase of premium, lien, or limitation of benefits, rating up age, or by installment payments eommutable and or non-commutable, or some form of sub-standard policy, I reserving the right, however, to accept or decline any such policy upon presentation. My acceptance of any policy shall be a ratification by me of its terms, premium or premiums and conditions.” Upon reference of the application to the medical director of the insurance company, he recommended that “a policy of $5,000.00 upon the terminable endowment, twenty pay life, payable in twenty installments, with lien of 25 per cent for three years” be issued and offered to the applicant. This recommendation was approved by R. L. Gregory, who was the secretary of the company, by an endorsement on it as follows:
“Issue policy 25% lien for three years, 9-17-14. R. L. Gregory.”
The proof shows, without any contradiction, that the policy was then attempted to be made out, by those employees of the company, whose duty it was to prepare the policies, in accordance with the application and directions of the medical director and secretary, and was enclosed in an envelope and sent by mail to Eobinson, at his home in Lancaster. When the application w;as signed by Eobinson, the agent of the insurance company delivered to him a receipt, which stated, that tne company had received from him the sum of $54.20,
“Curtis A. Robinson.”
The term 25% lien, used .in the negotiations, is explained by the witnesses for the company, to mean, that, if the death of the insured should occur, in the years to which the lien is applied, that it reduces the installments to be paid under the policy 25%, or in other words, that it reduces the amount of the insurance 25%. The policy issued insured the life of Eobinson in the sum of five thousand dollars, to be paid, if in force, at the death of the insured, in twenty equal annual installments of $250.00 each. The first three years, were called term insurance, and the premium for the first year was to be $54.20, for the second and third years, each, $165.75, and thereafter the insurance was terminal endowment .and. the premium was $229.60 for each year, until
This action was instituted by the beneficiary of the policy, who, by her petition and a good many amended petitions, taken together, charged that the contract between the insurance company and the insured was that it was to insure his life ■ for the sum of five thousand dollars, all payable at one time, upon his death, with such conditions, only, as are usual in the case of an ordinary life insurance policy, but, that the insurance company, either.fraudulently or by mistake, inserted the “substandard” clause in the policy, against the consent of the insured and without his knowledge, and likewise so drafted the policy, as to make the insurance provided for in it payable in twenty equal annual installments, and fraudulently concealed from the insured the above insertions and agreements of the policy and fraudulently represented to him that it was in accordance with the alleged contract, and procured him by such fraudulent representations, to accept it, believing that
A policy of insurance may be reformed so as to express the real contract between the parties, where it fails tq embrace the contract, either by the mutual mistake of the parties, or the fraud of one and the mistake of the other, as a reformation may be made of any other written memorial of a contract. The evidence, however, to Avarrant a rectification of the terms of the written memorial of a contract must be, in all cases, very clear and convincing. The insured is dead, and the testimony of the agent, who negotiated with him is not in the record. Springfield T. & M. Ins. Co. v. Snowden, 173 Ky. 664, 25 Cyc. 738; Anderson v. S. V. & E. Ry. Co., 171 Ky. 740; Royer Wheel Co. v. Miller, 20 R. 1831; Coleman v. Illinois Life Insurance Co., 26 R. 900; Ison v. Saunders, 163 Ky. 610. A court of equity may reform the written evidence of a contract, so as to conform to the contract, as made by the parties, but it is-poAverless to make a contract for the parties, or to put into it a stipuuation which the parties did not mutually assent to. When, in the instant case, it is sought to ascertain the contract made between the appellant, company, and the insured, there is no evidence of any kind as to what the contract was, except what appears in the written negotiations of the parties. We find no evidence to support the contention, that the contract Avas, such a one as is usually embraced in an ordinary life insurance policy,