This is an action on a policy of life insurance in which the plaintiff prevailed in the trial court.
The insured paid his premium annually on the 8th -day of September, 1897, 1898 and 1899. . He failed on the fourth which fell due on September 8, 1900, and he died in the following November. Defendant claims to be what is known as an assessment company and that in consequence the non-payment of the last premium due forfeited the policy; and it is conceded by plaintiff that if the policy is based on the assessment plan as contemplated by the statute, it became void by reason of non-payment -of the premium last due. But the contention of counsel for plaintiff is that defendant is an old line company, or at least that the policy is a contract of old line insurance and that it had a net value at the death of the insured sufficient to keep it in
So, therefore, it is only necessary to consider to which class of companies the defendant belongs. This will be determined, so- far as this case is concerned, by the contract in the policy. If it is an assessment contract, as known to the law, then the sections of the statute aforesaid providing for extended or paid up insurance, known as the non-forfeiture statute, are not applicable. Sec. 5869, R. S. 1889.
An assessment contract, the statute says, is one-wherein the payment of the benefit “is in any manner of degree dependent upon the collection of an assessment upon persons holding similar contracts.” Sec. 5860, R. S. 1889. If provision is-made by the policy in any manner or degree, for an assessment, then it is. an, assessment contract. Elliott v. Ins. Co., 163 Mo. 133; Aloe v. Ins. Co., 164 Mo. 675. In the former JudgeGantt, and in the latter, Judge Marshall, review all the principal cases in this State on the subject. There-must not only be provision made for such an assessment, but a liability of members created for its payment, as well as a right given to a beneficiary to- have the assessment made. Jacobs v. Ins. Co., 146 Mo. 523, 538. For a provision for an assessment in certain contingencies would be valueless if there was no liability
The application made by the insured was for a policy ‘‘on the accumulative reserve plan;” and the policy was issued in consideration of a stated annual premium of $13.65. There is no other premium, or other consideration, called for by the policy, unless it be in the following “safety-clause” provision, which defendant insists makes the policy an assessment contract, viz.: ‘ ‘ This association legally qualifies in the various States where it does business under the laws which do not require-it to assume the liability of maintaining the legal reserve or level premium of old line companies. The rate upon which this policy is issued is based upon the American life tables, and according to American experience will be sufficient to fully carry out the terms of this contract. Should, however, an emergency (hith-’ erto unknown to American experience) arise, which would exhaust the mortuary and reserve, or emergency fund, in excess of the amount of one mortuary rate upon all policies in force, then it is agreed that the policies in force may be assessed their pro rata, according to the American experience table of mortality, of the amount necessary to meet such emergency and maintain the solvency of the association.” That provision does provide for an assessment in a certain contingency (so remote as never yet to have occurred in America, and as to which we will again refer) but it does not provide for any obligation on the insured’s fellow-members to pay it. It provides for a non personam assessment upon other policies. The statute aforesaid makes necessary that the assessment- shall be upon the “persons” holding the policies. An assessment upon the policy may cause its forfeiture if not paid, but it does not create a personal liability on the policyholder any more than a charge on real estate creates a personal liability upon the owner of such realty. One of the essential elements of an assessment contract, and
Our attention has been called to the recent opinion of Judge Bland of the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Williams v. Ins. Co., 71 S. W. 376, which treats of the present subject. In the policy in that case there is a provision reading that: “this policy shall be liable for its share of any deficiency caused” in the emergency fund. But that provision is immediately followed by another making the assessment a charge on the policyholder. The case is therefore in no way opposed to what we have written.-
2. It will be noticed that the courts have from the beginning, marveled at the distinction which the
What we have said is not out of harmony with section 5864 of the statute which simply provides for an emergency fund which is to be invested in securities and which, with the interest thereon, is to be a trust fund held by the superintendent of the insurance department for the payment of death claims whenever the death
The judgment is affirmed.