124 N.Y.S. 792 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1910
The plaintiff herein was the assignee of a policy of insurance upon the life of her husband, Ephraim B. Hayes. The policy was dated April 16, 1898,. and the premiums were regularly paid upon the policy from that date until the 16th day of April, 1903. On that date a quarterly premium of seventy dollars and ninety-five cents was due, and the insured paid the sum of sixteen dollars and ninety-five cents in cash and gave the defendant a note, made by himself and the plaintiff, jointly, which reads as follows:
“Pol. 858512 April 16, 1903.
“ Without grace, Two months after date I promise to pay to tiie order of the Hew York Life Insurance 'Company Fifty-four 00/100 Dollars at Central Hational Bank, Hew York City. Value Received, with interest at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum.
“ This note is given in part payment of the premium due
This note was not paid on the 16th day of June, 1903, the day that it became due, probably because the insured was in ill health and the weather was inclement. On the next day, however, the insured offered to pay the premium, hut payment was refused on the ground that the policy had lapsed for non-payment of the note on the day of its maturity. The policy contained a provision that it could not be forfeited after three full years, which had already elapsed, and by its terms the company was hound either to endorse upon the policy the amount of paid-up insurance specified in the contract, less the value of any indebtedness on the policy, or, after repayment of any indebtedness, to extend the policy without request during a torn! also specified in the contract.
The policy also contained a provision that the policy should be reinstated on written application therefor within six months after non-payment of any premium, subject to evidence of good health satisfactory to the company and payment of premiums to date of reinstatement with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum. Belying upon this provision, the insured upon the same day signed an application for reinstatement and paid the sum of twenty dollars and forty-five cents in cash and gave a further note for thirty-four dollars payable on July 6, 1903, in the same form as the note for fifty-four dollars made on April 16, 1903; the cash payment and the note amounting together to the sum due on the note of April sixteenth with interest. He was examined by the company’s examiner on the same day and found not qualified for reinstatement. He then said that he would call again for examination on July fifteenth. He did not call again at that date nor at any time thereafter, apparently because his health had become so had.
The policy was at this time in the possession of the company as security for a loan of $460. The loan agreement contained a clause, “ That the repayment of said loan, with accrued interest, shall, without further action, cancel and annul this agreement, and that thereupon the company will return said policy, duly released, to said party of the second part * * * That in the event of default in payment of said interest, or of any premium on said policy, for one month after they shall respectively become due, said party of the first part (the company), which is hereby irrevocably appointed attorney for that purpose, is hereby authorized at its option to cancel said policy and its accumulations, for the customary cash surrender value then allowed by said party of the first part for the surrender of policies of this class, said party of the first part in that case being liable to said party of the second part, for the return of the balance only of said cash surrender value, after deducting said loan and accrued interest.^
On September 26, 1903, the company notified the insured that, since he had made default in the payment of the premium due on said policy, it had canceled the said policy, in accordance with the loan agreement, for the customary cash surrender value and that the cash surrender value was $635, the amount of the loan $460, leaving a balance of $175 and in addition a balance of interest paid in advance of $19.15; and it enclosed a check for the sum of $194.15. The insured apparently deposited this check but never cashed it. The insured died on July 14, 1904. During the intervening months he apparently in no way expressed any dissatisfaction with the acts of the company. On August 16, 1904, however, the attorneys for the plaintiff herein offered to return the check to the company.
The second cause of action is based on the theory that the insured, by the payment of premiums for five years, had gained the absolute right of having the policy extended beyond the date of his death and that, notwithstanding the terms of the premium note and of the loan agreement, the company had no right to cancel the policy for non-payment of the premium due on April 16, 1903. The plaintiff also urges, though she did not so jilead, that the premium due on April sixteenth was in fact paid by the note of that date, since that note was a joint note of both the insured and the beneficiary. Aside from the fact that no motion was made to conform the pleadings to the proof, I find no merit in the argument. At most, such a note, even though regarded as the note of a third party, would be prima facie a payment; but this prima facie case may be rebutted by the surrounding circumstances. The test of whether or not the note constituted a payment is the intention of the parties. In this case we have the fact that the insured recognized that he had not paid his premium by applying for reinstatement; furthermore, he accepted the return of the money and the note which he had given as an adjustment of this note; and especially we have the fact that the plaintiff has expressly based her complaint upon the theory that
The question then remaining is whether, under a fair interpretation of the policy, the premium note and the loan agreement, read together, the company had a right to cancel the policy upon this default. It is a canon of construction of contracts of insurance that, “ in cases where the meaning is not entirely plain, and where it is capable of two constructions, one involving a forfeiture and the other being fair and reasonable and supporting the obligation of the policy against the insurer, that construction is preferred by the courts which does not involve the forfeiture;” but, if the language is plain and susceptible of but one meaning, that meaning, exmii in cases of contracts involving life insurance, must control, though a forfeiture shall be the result. Holly v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 105 N. Y. 437, 442.
Applying this rule of construction to the present facts, I find that the company had a right to cancel the policy under its loan agreement. The policy was by its terms not subject to forfeiture but, nevertheless, the payment of the premium was a part of the contract and the obligation of the company continued thereafter only in accordance'with the non-forfeiture provisions. I cannot agree with the contention of the defendant that the benefit of these provisions was forfeited by failure to pay the premium note. While this note constituted a valid contract and all its terms must be enforced, it seems to me that it would be a forced construction to hold that it provides for the forfeiture of any right previously secured 'by the insured. It expressly provides that “ all claims to further insurance, and all benefits whatever which full payment in cash of said premium would have secured, shall become immediately void and be forfeited, * * * except as otherwise provided in the policy itself.” The policy itself provided for an extension if the premium was not paid. The right to this extension was absolute. Ho further rights could be gained by giving the note, but none
Judgment for the defendant dismissing the complaint on the merits.
Judgment for defendant.