123 Mo. App. 147 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
(after stating the facts). — It would be entirely proper to pass over the matter of whether the stipulation in the contract providing- a limitation of one year upon the time for instituting suit is valid or invalid, and affirm the judgment of the trial court in granting a new trial for the reason that it erred in excluding plaintiff’s offer of proof that Myrtle E. Dade, beneficiary recorder of the order, promised the plaintiff, within the year mentioned, that his claim should be paid and requested him not to sue therefor, but counsel representing either party have requested that we give an opinion on the several law questions arising on the record. These questions therefore will be noticed as presented.
Plaintiff insists that the seventh stipulation in the contract, as follows:
■ “7th. No action can or shall be maintained on this certificate unless brought within one year from the date of the death of said neighbor,”
is void as against the public policy of the State of Illinois, manifested by its general' Statute of Limitations providing that actions of the nature of this shall be barred in ten years from the date of accrual. We are not persuaded by this argument. It is shown by the admissions and stipulations of
2. It is next insisted by the plaintiff that inasmuch as such provision in the contract with reference to the time in which suits shall be instituted, is in fact a limitation upon the time to sue, it is therefore in the nature of a statute of limitation and as such, pertains to the remedy rather than to the substantial rights of the parties, and for this reason the lex fori instead of the lex loci contractus should control in this case in accord Avith the general rule pertaining to limitation statutes. And as the insured died and the cause of action accrued in this State, our statute, section 899, R. S. 1899, in the folloAving language: “All parts of any contract or agreement hereafter made or entered into AAhich either directly or indirectly limit or tend to limit the time in which any suit or action may be instituted, shall be null and void/5 is invoked as operating upon this provision of the contract, which, it is argued, pertains to the remedy and was therefore subject to the laws of the forum rather than to the laws of the seat of the contract. Now there are tAVO very sufficient reasons why this argument is unsound. First, such provisions are universally held to he qualifications annexed to the right created under the contract and are sometimes mentioned and declared as standing on the same
3. The record shows that the court sustained the motion for neAV trial and set aside the verdict because of- error in its ruling excluding competent evidence offered by plaintiff tending to prove a Avaiver of the stipulation limiting the time in which suits should be instituted. Such stipulation is inserted in the contract for the benefit of the insurer and it may be waived by the officers having general authority in that behalf; the