From a judgment in favor of defendant after trial before a jury in an action to recover upon an accident insurance policy, plaintiffs appeal.
Facts: On April 19, 1951, John DiMatteo signed a conditional sales contract for the purchase of a used car for his minor son, plaintiff Vincent DiMatteo. The contract con- *789 tamed a request that the seller obtain insurance in a company acceptable to it and include the premiums therefor in the balance due under the contract.
Defendant, upon the request of thе seller, issued its policy of public liability and property damage insurance, naming plaintiff Vincent DiMatteo and his father as insureds. The DiMatteos received the policy by mail and read it to check the coverage, but did not read the fine print. All premiums were paid from May 1951 through November 1951.
The policy contained, among others, this provision: ‘ ‘ This policy may be canceled by the named insured by surrender thereof or by mailing to the company written notice stating when thereafter such cancelation shall be effective. This policy may be canceled by the company by mailing to the named insured at the address shown in this policy written notice stating when not less than five days thereafter such cancelation shall be effective. The mailing of notice as aforesaid shall be sufficient proof of notice and the effective date and hour of cancelation stated in the notice shall become the end of the policy period. Delivery of such written notice either by the named insured or by the company shall be equivalent to mailing. ’ ’
On August 10, 1951, two separate nоtices of cancellation of the policy were placed in the mail, one addressed to plaintiff Vincent DiMatteo and the other to his father. Neither of these letters was ever returned to defendant's office. Both DiMatteos testified that no cancellation notices were ever received by them and that they had no knowledge of any cancellation until November 1951.
On November 15, 1951, Vincent had an automobile accident, in which plaintiffs Jensens and Morrow were injured. A few days later, Vincent and his father learned that the рolicy had been canceled.
Plaintiffs Jensens and Morrow filed an action against Vincent and served him with summons and complaint. The DiMatteos retained Attorney Bernard Mendel to represent them. He made demand upon defendant by telephone to defend the action and later sent a copy of the complaint and summons to defendant with a further demand to defend, which was refused. A judgment in the sum of $10,000 was éntered against Vincent in favor of plaintiffs Jensens and Morrow.
The present action was then filed against defendant predi
*790
cated upon the insurance policy that it had issued. After trial, a verdict was returned in favor of plaintiffs, but the judgment rendered thereon was reversed on appeal.
(Jensen
v.
Traders & General Ins. Co.,
“When a policy of insurance provides as in this case that the policy may be cancelled by the company by mailing to the insured at the address shown on the policy a written notice stating when, not less than five days thereafter, such cancellation shall become effective and further provides that the mailing of such notice shall be sufficient proof of notice it is not necessary that the notice so mailed shall be received by the insured in order to be effective. If you find that the defendant Traders and General Insurance Company mailed a notice of cancellation to John and Jim DiMatteo they have done everything which the policy and the law requires of them and the policy ceased to remain in effect after the date specified in said notice regardless of whether or not the DiMatteos or either of them ever actually received such notice.”
Questions: First. Is the standard cancellation clause set forth, supra, which provides that cancellation may be effected by mailing notice, (a) ambiguous and/or (b) contrary to the public policy of the State of California?
No.
It is the general rule that the parties to an insurance policy are free, subject to legislative restriction, to arrange the occasions, method, and means of cancellation by private agreement.
(Ohran
v.
National Automobile Ins. Co.,
It is likewise settled that in the сonstruction of a contract, the office of the court is simply to ascertain and declare what, in terms or in substance, is contained therein, and not to insert what has been omitted or omit what has been inserted. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1858.)
This rule is applicable to insurance contracts, as was pointed out by Mr. Justice Spence, speaking for this court, in
New York Life Ins. Co.
v.
Hollender,
(a) The cancellation clause in the instant case is clear and unambiguous; it means exactly what it says. It рrovides that the company may cancel the insurance by mailing at least a five-day notice to the insured at the address he has given the company. It expressly provides that such mailing shall be sufficient proof of notice and that the effective date stated therein shall become the end of the policy period.
It is to be noted that the clause further provides that “delivery” of such cancellation notice shall be equivalent to mailing, thus making it clear that there are two methods of canceling the policy, one by mailing, and the other by delivering, notice of cancellation to the insured.
The clause is mutually available on the same terms to both parties to the policy. The unrestricted privilege of cancellation by either side exists for the benefit of the insured, whose interest in the covered property or need for protection may cease during the policy period, as well as for the benefit of the insurer.
In Automobile Liability Insurance, by Appleman (1938), in referring to a cancellation provision similar to that involved in the present case, the author said, at page 476: “By the terms of the standard policy, mailing of notice is the determining factor in cancellation—not the receipt of, or delivery to, the policyholder. Under other types of cancellation clauses this has been held perfectly valid and enforceable. Thus the policy is cancelled at the specified date if notice is properly mailed regardless of whether the notice is ever received by the policyholder.”
(Cf. Savarese
v.
State Farm etc. Ins. Co.,
It is, of course, conceded that the Legislature, by statute, may prescribe that receipt of the notice is required for effective cancellation of an insurance policy. No such statute has existed, or now exists, in this state.
Referring to a similar cancellation provision in insurance policies, in 64 American Law Reports 2d (1959), page 988 et seq., it is stated: “The fourth type of clause is represented *792 by what is called the ‘standard cancellation provision.’ It stipulates that the policy may be canceled by the insurance company by mailing to the insured at his address written noticе stating that in not less than 5 days thereafter such cancellation shall be effective. The specific provision is added that the mailing of notice shall be sufficient proof of notice and that the effective date and hour of cancellation stated in the notice shall mark the end of the policy. . . . The great majority of the cases hold—and doubtless correctly so—that under such provision the actual receipt of the cancellation notice by the insured is not a condition precedent to the cancellаtion of the insurance by the insurer in view of the fact that the express terms of the contract uphold the sufficiency of a notice deposited in the mail. ’ ’
Again, on page 1000, appears the following: “Most of the more recent insúranee policies contain a standard provision dealing with the cancellation of the policy by the insurance company. This so-called ‘standard form’ of policy cancellation clause reads as follows: ‘ This policy may be cancelled by the company by mailing to the insured at the address shown in this policy written notice stating when not less than five days thereafter such cancellation shall be effective. The mailing of notice as aforesaid shall be sufficient proof of notice and the effective date and hour of cancellation stated in the notice shall become the end of the policy period.’ “Where the so-called ‘standard cancellation clause’ has been involved, a decided conflict in the decisions exists regarding the question whether actual receipt of the cаncellation notice mailed by the insurer constitutes a prerequisite to the cancellation of the insurance. A majority of the decisions have held that the actual receipt of the cancellation notice by the insured is not a condition precedent to the cancellation of the insurance by the insurer, provided the cancellation notice itself contains a fixed date on which the cancellation is to become effective, but an opposite result has been reached in some cases under statutes requiring that the insured be given notice of a specified number of days.”
In support of the foregoing statements, American Law Reports 2d cites cases from 24 other states holding that the standard provision is clear and unambiguous, that mailing thereunder is sufficient, and that receipt of the notice need not be shown.
Typical of the decisions in other states are the following: In Midwestern Ins. Co. v. Cathey, (Okla.) 262 P.2d *793 434, 436, it is said: “There is no ambiguity in the language of the policy as contained in the cancellation provision. Under the very strictest construction of the policy, the contrasting [sic] language is not of doubtful meaning. Neither can it be said that the provision is unreasonable or unjust. Under the provision, the assured assumed the risk of receiving the notice when properly mailed to him at the address given in the policy. Under a policy containing the provision involved herein, it would place an unreasonable and unfair burden on the company to say that notice of the cancellation must be actually delivered to the assured. To make such a requirement would be placing additional words in the poliсy far beyond the actual terms of the policy agreed to by the parties.”
In
Service Fire Insurance Co. of New York
v.
Markey
(Fla.),
In
Medford
v.
Pacific Nat. Fire Ins. Co.,
In
Bradley
v.
Associates Discount Corp.
(Fla.),
*794
In
Wright
v.
Grain Dealers Nat. Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
In
Donarski
v.
Lardy,
(b) The cancellation clause here involved is not opposed to the public policy of the State of California. The determination of public policy of states resides, first, with the people as expressed in their Constitution and, second, with the representatives of the people—the state Legislature.
This court well expressed the rule in
Stephens
v.
Southern Pacific Co.,
Again, in
Maryland Casualty Co.
v.
Fidelity etc. Co.,
In
Spangenberg
v.
Spangenberg,
In
Superior Insurance Co.
v.
Restituto,
In other states the courts have held that the standard clause here in question has been found free from criticism on the ground that it was against public policy. In
O’Daniel
v.
Michigan Mut. Liability Co.,
“A contract of insurance is like any other contract. The parties here agreed to a definite way in which notice became effective. Had the insured sought for any reason to cancel the policy the cancellation would have been effective by mailing without proof of delivery. There was mutual consideration. Any other conclusion would be equivalent to this court ignoring the agreement of the contracting parties and making a new сontract. The provision is reasonable and well within the bounds of public policy and must be enforced.”
The Wisconsin Supreme Court in
Putman
v.
Deinhamer,
Massachusetts, which has compulsory automobile liability insurance prescribed by statute, has provided for cancellation by mail, and receipt by the insured of notice mailed in accordance with the statute is not necessary to make it effective.
(Paloeian
v.
Day,
Although this statute was not in existence at the time of the facts involved in the present case, it is significant that the Legislature is presumed to have been familiar with the construction of the standard cancellation clauses by courts throughout the United States and that it left no doubt of its intent to permit effective cancellation by mailing notice to an insured without regard to the receipt of such notice.
Had the Legislature not favored this method of cancellation, or believed it contrary to public policy, it could and would in so many wоrds have so stated. Instead, it referred to “mailing or delivery” as equally lawful means of canceling an insurance policy.
Likewise, in fields other than automobile insurance, the Legislature has specifically prescribed the terminology of cancellation clauses (Ins. Code, §§ 10363, 10369.9), using language not materially different from that employed in the standard cancellation clause now before us. In view of (i) this court’s dicta in
Naify
v.
Pacific Indemnity Co.,
A practical consideration of the problem here presented *798 discloses that the conclusions which we have reached are fair to both the insured and the insurer, if either desires to cancel an insurance policy.
The practice and custom of granting coverage immediately upon the request of insurance agents and brokers, leaving all opportunity to examine the acceptability of the insured to a future date, is an advantage to the business community and to the motoring public.
If insurers cannot cancel coverage in an equally рrompt and certain manner, they will be forced to withhold this advantage. This raises the question whether more drivers would be uninsured because their financial and driving responsibility could not be investigated in time than would have been uninsured if immediate coverage were granted and cancellation ensued.
Insurance companies have endeavored to insure rapidly and provide for a concomitant prompt and certain method of cancellation. If the insured has drifted away without leaving an adequate address of his whereabоuts and the insurer is compelled to accomplish delivery of notice, the insurer may have the hard choice of leaving the policy in force or of spending more to locate the insured than the premium owed or collected.
To require the insurer to prove receipt of a letter mailed or fail in its defense of cancellation would be to compel the proof of an act accomplished under secret circumstances, all the facts of which are in the possession of a reluctant oрponent. The result would be extreme commercial uncertainty if delivery were to be a sine qua non. The insured who moves away or leaves on vacation can arrange for the forwarding of his mail; the insurer cannot do this for him if he fails.
If actual delivery were a prerequisite, these questions would arise: When is the policy canceled if the insured receives it in due course of the mail? When is the policy canceled if he receives it after more than the 10-day period prescribed in the notice ? As of what date is he entitled to prorаtion of the premium in either instance? What if the insured receives it and does not read it? What equities exist in favor of the insurer when the insured has purposely or inadvertently failed to communicate his new address ?
If it is determined that a need exists for amendment of section 651 of the Insurance Code to correct supposed abuses, the Legislature is the proper forum for the determination of *799 the means to be adopted, not the courts. In its deliberations, the Legislature can more broadly study the public welfare. The state, through its Insurance Commissioner, can be heard, as can the varied interests of other segments of the public and affected industries. Such sources of information are not available to the judiciary.
Second. Was it necessary for the insurer to return or tender the unearned premium in order to make the attempted cancellation effective?
No. The policy provides: “If the named insured cancels, earned premiums shall be computed in accordance with the customary short rate table and procedure. If the company cancels, earned premiums shall be computed pro rata. Premium adjustment may be made at the time cancelation is effected and, if not then made, shall be made as soon as practicable after cancelation becomes effective. The company’s check or the cheek of its representative mailed or delivered as aforesaid shall be a sufficient tender of any refund of premium due to the named insured.” (Italics added.)
There is no ambiguity in this language. By its very terms, the clause provides that the return of the unearned premium need not be made at the time the cancellation becomes effective. It clearly makes such return a consequence of cancellation rather than a condition precedent thereto.
(Mangrum & Otter
v.
Law Union & Rock Ins. Co.,
In Jensen v.
Traders & General Ins. Co.,
“A somewhat similar return of unearned premium clause was similarly interpreted by our Supreme Court in
Mangrum & Otter
v.
Law Union & Rock Ins. Co.,
See also
Genone
v.
Citizens Ins. Co. of New Jersey,
The judgment is affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., Spence, J., and White, J., concurred.
Peters, J., did not participate herein.
