Lead Opinion
On February 5, 1908, defendant issued to one Charles B. Kimball an ordinary life insurance policy on his life payable to the plaintiff if he survived the insured. The premiums were payable semi-annually on February 5th and August 5th. The insured died January 13, 1916; and the main question is whether the policy was in force at that time. The policy provides that the payment of a premium shall not keep the policy in force beyond the date when the next premium is payable. The premium due August 5, 1912, was not paid. The rights of the parties, therefore, depend upon what occurred subsequent to that date. The policy provides that if default be made in the payment of any premium after the policy has been in force three full years, the owner may within three months thereafter, but not later, elect (a) to accept the cash surrender value of the policy, or (6.) have insurance for the face amount of the policy plus any outstanding dividend additions and less any indebtedness to the company thereon continued in force from the date of default for such time as is therein provided, etc., or (c) have paid-up nonparticipating insurance payable at the same time and on the same condition as the policy. It further provides that if the insured does not within three months from default surrender the policy to the company at the home office for its cash surrender value as provided in option (a), or for paid-up insurance as provided in option (c), the insurance to which he is entitled will be continued as provided in option (6), for such term as the cash surrender value of the policy will purchase at a net single premium at- the attained age of the insured according to the American Tables of Mortality, with interest at the rate of three per centum per annum. The cash surrender value of a policy is made up of the reserve on such policy and on any dividend additions thereto, at the date of default, computed according to the American Tables of Mortality, with interest at the rate of three per centum per annum, less the amount of any
About the time the August 5, 1912, premium was defaulted, steps were taken by the insured and the defendant to reinstate his policy and to that end he executed and delivered to the defendant a promissory note, referred to as the “blue note,” for $19.00, and at the same time delivered to the defendant $9.62 in cash. The purpose of this transaction is stated in the note as follows: “This note together with Nine and 6%oo Dollars in Cash deposited with said Company not as payment of premium either in whole or in part, but upon the following special agreement: First, — That the above numbered policy has lapsed for the .non-payment of premium due on 8/5/12 and application is being made for its reinstatement; That evidence of insurability satisfactory to the Company and payment of all defaulted premiums with interest are conditions precedent to reinstatement which cannot be waived; That if, however, the Company find the evidence of insurability satisfactory, then, although the policy • shall not be reinstated- until the full payment required for reinstatement is made (1) the insurance called for by the policy shall be in force from the date of such findings until midnight of the due date of the note; and (2) if this note is paid on or before the date it becomes due, such payment, together with said cash, will then be accepted by said Company as payment of said premium- with interest, and thereupon and thereby said policy and .all benefits thereunder shall be reinstated; but (3) if this note is not paid on or before the date it becomes due, it shall thereupon automatically cease to be a claim against the maker and said Company shall retain said cash as part compensation for the rights and privileges hereby granted, and thereafter all rights under said policy shall be the same as if said cash had not been paid nor said application for reinstatement made.” This note fell due November 5, 1912, and was not paid. The insured also owed defendant $64.00 which defendant loaned him on his policy in November, 1910, and some interest thereon. This being the status of the policy, and the insured having failed to elect to accept its 'cash surrender value or to take paid-up insurance, the defendant on or about August 4, 1913, foreclosed the policy which it then held as security for the $64.00 loan and ascertained, or attempted to ascertain, the amount of extended insurance to
On the trial below plaintiff offered proof of the policy, of the indorsement thereon, and of the death of the insured and rested. None of these facts were controverted by defendant, but it claimed, and its evidence tended to show, that the term of extended insurance shown by the indorsement was erroneous, due to a mistake in the computation.
Because the insured was a sub-standard risk the policy issued is on the rated-up age plan. It provides: ‘ ‘ The Premiums, Loans and Surrender Values of this Policy are on the basis of the rated-up age of 43 years, which is 17 years in excess of the age stated by the insured. If the age of the insured has been misstated, the amount payable hereunder shall be such as the premium paid would have purchased at the correct age rated-up 17 years.” As already seen, the term of extended insurance is such as the cash surrender value of the. policy will purchase at a net single premium at the attained age of the insured, etc.
See New York Life Ins. Co. v. Van Meter’s Admr., 137 Ky. 4, 121 S. W. 438, 136 A. S. R. 282; Drury’s Admr. v. New York Life Ins. Co., 115 Ky. 681, 74 S. W. 663, 61 L. R. A. 714, 103 A. S. R. 351, and Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Kemp et al., 257 Fed. 265, 168 C. C. A. 349, where extended insurance is held to be a surrender value.
Extended insurance being a surrender value, it is manifestly covered by the rated-up age provision and therefore must be computed on the basis of the rated-up age attained by the insured at the time of default.
It would seem that any other construction would do violence to the plain meaning of the policy, when all its provisions touching -this subject are considered together.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. I cannot agree that the defendant had a right to nse the rated-up age in computing the term of the extended insurance.
That the plaintiff did not question the method or accuracy of this computation, either below or on the original argument in this Court, is, under our holdings, of no importance. The judgment below was for the plaintiff, and if there is any legal ground on which that judgment can be affirmed, it will be, whether that ground is urged°by counsel or not. Simpson v. Central Vermont Ry. Co., 95 Vt. 388, 115 Atl. 299, and cases cited.
Before I take up the terms of this policy, I wish to make brief reference to the rules of construction applicable to such contracts.
All agree that they are to be construed against the company. Just how far this rule carries in a given case will be indicated by a reference to the decisions. Chief Justice Rugg, in Koshland v. Columbia Ins. Co., 237 Mass. 467, 130 N. E. 41, says that, "when for any reason there is ambiguity in the terms employed in the policy, every doubt is to be resolved against the insurer and in favor of the insured. ’ ’ In Goodwin v. Providence Savings Life Assurance Association, 97 Ia. 226, 66 N. W. 157, 32 L. R. A. 473, 59 A. S. R. 411, it was said that, "when the words used may, without violence, be given two interpretations, that which will sustain the claim and cover the loss should be adopted.” This statement is quoted with manifest approval in Kendrick v. Life Insurance Co., 124 N. C. 315, 32 S. E. 728, 70 A. S. R. 592, and other cases.
Our own cases are in accord with these holdings, and furnish an adequate guide to a correct determination of the questions before us. In Wilson v. Commercial Assurance Co., 90 Vt. 105, 96 Atl. 540, this Court called attention to the growing tendency toward treating insurance contracts as being in a class by themselves, and we referred to some of the considerations which had contributed to this result, — using rather mild language, I submit, compared with that previously used in some of our cases and those in other jurisdictions. I do not refer to this case because
In Stanyan v. Security Mutual Life Ins. Co., 91 Vt. 83, 99 Atl. 417, L. R. A. 1917C, 350, in speaking of life insurance contracts, we said: “Language is to be interpreted in the sense intended by the parties, and the meaning and application of phrases and sentences is to be as understood by them, .though the instrument be .susceptible of a different interpretation. In ascertaining such meaning, consideration is to be given to the character and subject-matter of the statement and the end to be accomplished by it. Equivocation and uncertainty, whether in the significance of the terms used or the form and construction of sentences, are to be resolved in favor of the insured and against the company. ’ ’
With this rule in mind, let us examine the policy before us. The clause directly in question reads as follows: “The term for which said insurance will be continued # * will be such-as said cash surrender value will purchase as a net single premium at the attained age of the insured. ’ ’ My first claim is that this language is too plain and unambiguous- to require" or admit of construction. It speaks in unmistakable terms. The words are “the attained age” of the insured. “Attain” means to reach, to arrive at. Webster’s New Intern. Diet. 149.' So the “attained age of the insured” is the age at which he has arrived; the age he has reached — his actual age. This seems too plain to be denied; and I assume that if this clause stood alone, unaffected by other provisions of the policy, its meaning would be admitted to be what I have stated. And I confidently assert that the language used is so specific and unequivocal that its'meaning cannot be affected or controlled by anything elsewhere said in the contract. Suppose the clause had read “the actual age of the insured.” Would any one claim that the meaning could be construed to be his “rated-up” age? I admit, of course, that the policy must be construed as a whole; that the meaning of one part may be affected by another; and that the instrument must be taken “by its four corners” when examined to determine its meaning. When this is done, what do we find ?
I agree that extended insurance is technically a surrender' value, and but for the use of such a positive term as £ £ attained age,” the clause might have to be construed according to the views of the majority. But a computation of the extended insurance involves several factors, one of which is a determination of the cash surrender value. In finding this factor, the rated-up age is properly used and thereby it is cut down in amount and the advantage to the insured under his option is correspondingly decreased. I have no doubt the policy might have been so drawn as to justify the use of the rated-up age again in determining another factor of the computation, thereby further reducing the benefit' of the insured’s option, but from the language used it seems more reasonable that having used it once, the company designedly used the term “attained age” for the very purpose
The majority calls attention to the fact that the rated-up age applies to premiums, and this is said to mean all premiums, both those paid before the forfeiture and those which came after, and so the cash surrender value is a premium included. Well, suppose this is so; I have already admitted that in ascertaining the amount of the cash surrender value the rated-up age was properly used. The argument cuts no figure beyond this, for the next step in the computation is one affecting not premiums, but age. .
In Hoffman v. Ætna, etc., Ins. Co., 32 N. Y. 413, 88 A. D. 337, the court of appeals said that “it is a rule of law, as well as of ethics, that where the language of a promissor may be understood in more senses than one, it is to be interpreted in the sense in which he had reason to suppose it was understood by the promissee.” We said much the same thing in the Stanyan case, above cited; and it is settled by repeated decisions of this Court that a contract means just what the promisee had a right to understand it to mean and did understand it to mean. Pocket v. Almon, 90 Vt. 10, and eases cited. The language here, then, is to be construed in that sense in which the insured would reasonably apprehend the company would understand it. If it reasonably indicated to the insured that the actual age was to be taken in fixing the term, the company cannot now say otherwise. I submit that the insured would reasonably understand that this clause meant exactly what it said.
Remember all the time, that in order to justify my position, I am not' required to prove it. I stand upon the plain words of the clause in question. Before these .can be modified or controlled, it must be shown that.they mean something else. The burden of proof, so to speak, is on the/majority, to prove their construction, not by a preponderance of evidence, but beyond a reasonable doubt. For if there is a reasonable doubt about what the clause means, as Mr. Chief Justice Rugg says above, that doubt must be resolved in favor of the insured. If the meaning of the terms used is left uncertain, as we said in the Stanyan .case, that uncertainty must be resolved in favor of the insured.
But the majority says that the parties have, by their practical construction, determined the meaning of this clause to be •what the company is now contending for; and that this is so, because the tabulation on the second page of the policy makes
My answer to this argument is this: The insured did not by his silence indorse the figures or the method by which they were arrived at, — for the simple reason that he did not and could not know anything about the accuracy of either. So far as conveying any information to him, by which he could check up the process of computation or verify its results, is concerned, this table might just as well have been printed in Chinese characters. He was entirely at the mercy of the company. The process by which the results were reached was highly intricate and technical. A solution of the mathematical problem involved required various tables, a multitude of which are exhibits in the case, and mean nothing to one unskilled in their use; tables that would not be accessible to the insured, unless he applied to some insurance company for them. It also involved an examination of the records of the company,' with computations based thereon, to determine the amount of dividends belong to the policy; all of which would be meaningless to any one who was not an expert in such matters. Then when he had gathered all the data before him, the chances of making the computation and getting a correct result were enormously against him, unless he was highly trained in the business. That' I have not exaggerated his difficulties is apparent when I point to the fact that the company, itself, with its corps of experts, with all the data before them, have made and presented no less than three different computations of this extended insurance. I protest that one should not be held bound when he could not by any possibility know what he was consenting to. Moreover, the rule invoked by the majority applies only when the meaning of the contract is in doubt (White v. Amsden, 67 Vt. 1, 30 Atl. 972), and it is not every act of a party indicative of an understanding of the contract' in accord with the claim of the other party that will be given the effect of a practical construction: McLean v. Windham Light & Power Co., 85 Vt. 167, 81 Atl. 613. It must evidence a reasonable construction (Gillett v. Teel, 272 Ill. 106, 111 N. E. 722); it must be an act performed with knowledge (Kane v. Schuylkill Fire Ins. Co., 199 Pa. 205, 48 Atl. 989); and must relate to the very provision of the con
I would affirm the judgment on .the ground that the policy was in force when the insured deceased.