Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States v. Babbitt

89 P. 531 | Ariz. | 1907

DOAN, J.

— The legal proposition that is decisive of this case is fairly presented in the first and fourth subdivisions of the sixth assignment of error, and it may as well be taken up and determined at the outset, because it is not only determinative of the general result of the case, but upon it depends the correctness or incorrectness of the legal propositions urged in the earlier assignments. There is no question of fact in the case. The testimony is such that the ease may as well be treated as upon an agreed statement of facts.

The applicant stated in the application: “I hereby agree that this application and the policy hereby applied for, taken together, shall constitute the entire contract between the parties hereto.” The policy provides: “This policy shall lapse, and together with all premiums paid thereon shall forfeit to the society on the nonpayment of any premium when due, excepting that upon due surrender of' this policy within six months after lapse, providing premiums have been duly paid for at least three years of insurance, the society will give the assured the choice of either a cash value or non-participating paid-up life policy, at the date of lapse, as fixed in the following table of surrender values, the amount of which shall be based on the number of full years ’ premium that have been paid. ... In consideration of the premises, it is understood and agreed that all right or claim for temporary insurance or any other surrender value than that provided in this contract is hereby waived and relinquished. ...” The table of surrender values provides that, at the end of the sixth year, the cash surrender value shall be $300, and the paid-up life policy $600. The date of the policy was the 8th of March, 1898, the date of the lapse was the 8th of December, 1904, and the date of Coyne’s death was the twenty-seventh day of April, 1905. If the application and policy, taken together, constitute the entire contract between the parties, the policy had lapsed, and had forfeited to the society on the eighth day of December, 1904, and as the assured had not, within six months thereafter, upon surrender of the policy, requested either the cash value ($300) or a nonparticipating paid-up life policy *122for $600, there was nothing due under the contract or policy from the appellant. Inloes v. Prudential Ins. Co., 109 Mo. App. 104, 82 S. W. 1089.

Paragraph 809 of the Revised Statutes of Arizona of 1901 reads as follows: “Every contract or policy of insurance hereafter made by any person or corporation organized under the laws of this territory, or under those of any other state or country, with and upon the life of a resident of this territory, and delivered within this territory, shall contain, unless specifically contracted between the insurer and the insured for tontine insurance, or for other term or paid-up insurance, a stipulation that when, after three full annual premiums shall have been paid on such policy, it shall cease or become void solely by the nonpayment of any premium when due, its entire net reserve by the American experience mortality, and interest at four and one-half per cent yearly, less any indebtedness to the company on such policy, shall be applied by such company as a single premium at such company’s published rates in force at the date of the original policy, but at the age of the insured at time of lapse, either to the purchase of nonpartieipating term insurance, for the full amount insured by such policy, or upon the written application by the owner of such policy, and the surrender thereof to such company within three months from such nonpayment of premium, to the purchase of a nonpartieipating paid-up policy payable at the time that the original policy would be payable if continued in force; both kinds of insurance to be subject to the same conditions except as to payment of premiums, as those of the original policy. It may be provided, however, in such stipulation, that no part of such term insurance shall be due or payable unless satisfactory proofs of death be furnished to the insuring company within one year after death, and that if death shall occur within three years after such nonpayment of premium, and during such term of insurance, there shall be deducted from the amount payable the sum of all the premiums that would have become due on the original policy if it had continued in force. If the reserve on endowment policies be more than enough to purchase temporary insurance as aforesaid, to the end of the endowment term, the excess shall be applied to the purchase of pure endowment insurance, payable at the end of the term if the insured be then living. If any life insurance corporation or company shall deliver to any person in this territory a policy of insurance *123upon the life of any person residing in this territory not in conformity with the provisions of this section, the right of such corporation or company to transact business in this territory shall thereupon and thereby cease and terminate, and any district court of this territory, upon the fact appearing that any company or person has violated the provisions of this section, shall enjoin such company or person from doing or transacting any insurance business within the territory, either as principal or agent; The attorney general, district attorney or any person interested, may be the party plaintiff in such action.” “While no direct reference is made to the statute just quoted, either in the decision of the trial court or in the judgment, it is evident that the court did read the provisions of the statute into the policy, and on that theory made the findings and rendered the judgment presented in this record.

The counsel for the appellees, in his presentation of the case to this court, has said that: “The territory has the right to prevent a foreign corporation from doing business within its limits, to prescribe the conditions under which it may enter, and dictate the character and terms of the contracts it may enter into with citizens of the territory, to any extent it chooses, subject only to the restrictions imposed by the federal constitution.” “Statutory provisions, like paragraph 809 of the Revised Statutes of Arizona, are as much a part of the policy as though written in it, and they are to be construed as though written in the policy. They cannot, by the stipulation or agreement of parties, be waived or modified. The law with reference to which the policy is executed governs absolutely the rights of the parties thereto. . . . Therefore, it is properly said that the law writes in every contract all existing statutes that are applicable to the transaction, and they become parts of the contracts as completely as if the parties had copied them in its face, and, further, these terms render null and void any other provisions agreed upon by the parties that may be in conflict with these terms by the hand of the law. ... In Cooley’s Briefs of the Law of Insurance, volume 3, pages 2395, 2396, may be found the nonforfeiture statutes of many states, showing their similarity to that of Arizona. All the statutes in force are similar to it, not always alike in their phraseology in certain parts, but remarkably similar. Our statute provides a method of determining the value of the policy, and that method is almost identical *124with the method provided for in Massachusetts, in Missouri, in Maine, New Jersey, and formerly New York. Our statute lays down the rule that every contract or policy of insurance hereafter made shall contain the provision that, after three' annual premiums have been paid, it shall not be forfeited, and it then goes into detail as to just how the value of the policy is to be calculated, and that method is identical with the method adopted and in use in all the nonforfeiting acts, except that some acts provide that,.the rate of interest shall be three, others four, and others four and one-half; e. g., see the nonforfeiting law of Missouri, in the note to New York Life Ins. Co. v. Cravens, 178 U. S. 389, 20 Sup. Ct. 962, 44 L. Ed. 1116.”

This reasoning, accompanied by the general reference to the different statutory provisions relative to the remedy of policyholders against insurance companies, and based upon the cases cited that arose under the Missouri statute that is referred to as almost identical with paragraph 809, doubtless misled the learned judge of the lower court, who was called upon to rule on this question without having the different statutes before him. The law as cited in the several instances by the counsel for the appellees is sound, supported by good reasoning, and based upon statutory provisions that have been decided by the United States supreme court to be constitutional. There is no question but that the territory has the right to prevent a foreign corporation from doing business within its limits, and to prescribe the conditions under which it may enter, and dictate the character and terms of the contracts it may enter into with citizens of the territory to any extent it chooses, subject only to the restrictions imposed by the federal constitution or laws. Security Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Prewitt, 202 U. S. 246, 26 Sup. Ct. 619, 50 L. Ed. 1013. In other words, there is no question of the right on the part of the territory to write into the policy any statutory provision within the limits referred to. Orient Ins. Co. v. Daggs, 172 U. S. 557, 19 Sup. Ct. 281, 43 L. Ed. 552.

The only question presented to us is: Did the territory do so? The Missouri statute that has been in one place stated by the counsel for the appellees to be “remarkably similar” to ours, and in another to be “almost identical with it,” has done so. Our statute has not, and for the reason that the one has, and the other has not, the cases decided in the court of last resort under the one statute do not at all control the *125decision of cases arising under the other statute. The Missouri statute provides that: “No policy . . . shall, after payment upon it of two annual premiums, he forfeited, or become void by reason of the nonpayment of premiums thereon, but it shall be subject to, the following rules of commutation, to wit.” 'Had our statute made a like provision, the judgment of the court in this instance would have been correct, and would have been fully supported by New York Life Ins. Co. v. Cravens, 178 U. S. 389, 20 Sup. Ct. 962, 44 L. Ed. 1116; Equitable L. A. S. v. Clements, 140 U. S. 226, 11 Sup. Ct. 822, 35 L. Ed. 497. Our statute, however, instead of making a provision by which the insurance contract should be interpreted by either, declaring, as does the Missouri statute, that such should be the measure of recovery under the contract, whether so expressly provided therein or not (note to New York Life Ins. Co. v. Cravens, 178 U. S. 389, 20 Sup. Ct. 962, 44 L. Ed. 1116), or by providing, as the Ohio statute, a bar to any certain defense on the part of the company in an action on a claim under a policy (section 3625, Revised Statutes of Ohio of 1898, cited in Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Warren, 181 U. S. 73, 21 Sup. Ct. 535, 45 L. Ed. 755), requires that “every contract . . . shall contain, unless ... a stipulation that when, after three,” etc., and then provides in the same paragraph, as a penalty for noncomplianee with such requirement, that, “if any life insurance corporation or company shall deliver to any person in this territory a policy . . . not in conformity with the provisions of this section, the right of such corporation or company to transact business in this territory shall thereupon and thereby cease and terminate, ’ ’ and then provides for terminating the right of any such company. This language clearly recognizes the right of insurance companies to do business in the territory, and to disregard the provisions of paragraph 809 by writing policies not containing the stipulation therein required, and with equal clearness expresses the penalty that would be incurred by any company which might exercise its right to make a contract other than that directed and required by the statute, but does not attempt to formulate or write into the contract any term or provision which the company might neglect or decline to insert therein. Fritts v. Palmer, 132 U. S. 282, 10 Sup. Ct. 93, 33 L. Ed. 317. The distinction between these two classes of legislative enactments in regard to the obligations of the insurance companies under their policies is very similar to the *126distinction between tbe statutory enactments of the different states in regard to the rights of insurance companies to transfer their litigation from the state to the federal courts. The cases that present the different statutes intended to prevent this action on the part of the insurance companies are collated in the case of the Security Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Prewitt, 202 U. S. 246, 26 Sup. Ct. 619, 50 L. Ed. 1013, wherein the distinction is plainly pointed out between the statutes that ■ require the insurance companies, in order to do business, to make an application or an agreement that shall contain a stipulation that such corporation would not remove a pending suit from the state to the federal court, and those that provide that, if any company shall remove any such suit or proceeding to any federal court, the commissioner shall forthwith revoke all authority of such company and its agents to do business in the state. The former class of legislation was generally held to be void; whereas the latter was sustained, the court saying that in the one case it was the exaction of a stipulation or agreement in advance as a condition of granting a permit that rendered the statute illegal, while it was held that, where no requirement or agreement not to remove was required as a condition for doing business in the state, “the mere enactment of a statute which, in substance, says, if you choose to exercise your right to remove a ease into the federal court, your right to further do business within the state shall cease, and your permit shall be withdrawn, is not open to any constitutional ob j ection. ’ ’

If our statute, instead of the language used, had said: “No contract or policy of insurance hereafter made by any person or corporation organized under the laws of this territory, or under those of any other state or country, with and upon the life of a resident of this territory, and delivered within this territory, shall, after three full annual premiums shall have been paid on such policy, cease or become void solely by the nonpayment of any premium when due; but, unless such contract or policy of insurance shall specifically provide for ton-tine insurance, or for other term or paid-up insurance, it shall be subject to the following rules of commutation, to wit, its entire net reserve value at the time the premium becomes due and is not paid as computed by the American experience mortality tables, and interest at four and one-half per cent yearly” — and then follow the language used up to and including the words “payable at the end of the term, if the *127insured be then living,” and let the paragraph terminate there before the words, “if any life insurance corporation or company shall deliver,” the effect-of the statute would be to read that provision into the policy, regardless of any language in either application or policy at variance therewith. Had that been done, the recovery in this case would turn upon the question whether this contract would be taken out from the effect of the statute by virtue of the provision in the contract for a paid-up life policy, as is claimed by appellant in second subdivision of the third assignment of error; but, under the present wording of the statute, that becomes purely an academic question.

Our statute, as cited supra, clearly declares the termination of the right to do business in the territory of any company that violates the provisions of paragraph 809, and confers upon the attorney general or district attorney the power to enforce such forfeiture of right against such company, but does not affect the terms of any contract entered into, or the rights of any person under a policy issued, by such company before the forfeiture of such right to do business. We approve the reasoning of the supreme court of California in two cases very similar to the one at bar, and under a statute identical in its language with ours. Straube v. Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co., 123 Cal. 677, 56 Pac. 546; Rife v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 129 Cal. 455, 62 Pac. 48.

For the reasons above given, the demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained, upon the ground that the complaint failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The allegation that Coyne died on the twenty-seventh day of April, 1905, and had paid all premiums and sums of money due under his said contract of insurance up to December 8, 1904, without any allegation that he had paid the premiums up to the time of his death, or that he had within six months after lapse, upon surrender of the policy, requested either the cash surrender value or a paid-up life policy, failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the company on any other theory than that the reserve value of the policy was, by virtue of the provisions of paragraph 809 of our statutes, automatically applied to the procurement of term insurance in the full amount of his policy that would continue in force from the eighth day of December, 1904, until after the date of his death. For the same reasons the judgment, as rendered, having been neees*128sarily based upon the same theory, was, in the view of the case we have adopted, unsupported by any evidence.

The judgment is reversed, and the case remanded, with instructions to the lower court to sustain the demurrer to the complaint, and for such further proceedings as may be necessary, not inconsistent with this opinion.

KENT, C. J., and CAMPBELL and NAVE, JJ., concur.