133 Mo. App. 612 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Action on two policies of life insurance of one thousand dollars each, issued by defendant to Edward M. King, on February 4, 1882. The beneficiaries named were the children of the assured living at the time of his death and plaintiff was the only child. Mr. King died July 4, 1901, at his home in Appleton City. The two policies were issued at the same time, were identical in form and belonged to what defendant called its “Safety Fund” ‘class. Defendant was incorporated in 1867 under the laws of Connecticut, and was authorized by its charter to write any legal form of life insurance contract. It began business on the
It is admitted Mr. King made the payments required to initiate his insurance and that he paid the first ninety assessments levied, the last one of which fell due in March, 1901, but defendant alleges in the answer that he failed to pay the ninety-first assessment which amounted on both policies to $13.50, and should have been paid not later than June 5th, and that on account of this default, defendant declared the policies forfeited and afterward declined to pay the loss.
The reply is a general denial. The cause was tried before a jury, verdict and judgment were for plaintiff and defendant appealed.
On the issue of forfeiture, plaintiff contends that the evidence shows, first, that the ninety-first assessment (non-payment of which is admitted) was not ordered to be levied by defendant’s board of directors, a step made essential by the contract, and, second, that the levy of the assessment was wholly unnecessary or, at least, excessive, and, therefore, would have been invalid had it been ordered by the directors. The forfeiture clause in the certificate on which defendant relies, provides: “The holder of this certificate further agrees and accepts same upon the express condition that if either the monthly dues, assessments, or the payment of $10 towards the safety fund as hereinbefore required, are not paid to said company on the day due, then this certificate shall be null and void,” etc.
Defendant issued a separate certificate for each $1,000 of insurance in the “Safety Fund” class, which certificate called for the payment by the holder of an “admission fee” (agent’s commission), another fee of $10 as a contribution to a “Safety Fund,” and bound the holder to pay $3 per annum to the expense fund
Important provisions of the contract between defendant and the trustee (The Security Company of Hartford) are as follows: “It is hereby mutually understood and agreed by both parties hereto that all the hereinbefore recited agreements of the first party with the certificate holders shall constitute the uses and purposes of the trust expressed herein. And it is hereby further understood and agreed that at such time as it shall be shown that all certificates of membership issued by the party of the first part in its Safety Fund Department have been legally settled and surrendered to it, or properly cancelled in accordance with their terms, it shall beheld and considered that the uses and purposes of said trust have been fully accomplished by said insurance company, and the balance of said fund, if any, shall be paid over to the party of the first part. . . . It being understood and agreed that said fund belongs to the party of the first part (defendant) subject to
It will be observed that insurance written in the “Safety Fund” department was purely mutual. The expenses of management and compensation of defendant
The law abhors forfeitures and courts will indulge in no presumption to aid them. Under the admission of the pleadings that King was a certificate holder in good standing up to the time he defaulted in the payment of the ninety-first assessment, the burden was on defendant to show affirmatively the existence of the facts on which it predicated its right to declare a forfeiture. No presumption of right acting in the levy of the assess
If the assessment were excessive, that is to say, if, after making reasonable allowance for expenses and failures to make collections, the proceeds of the call would exceed materially the amount required to meet death claims, the failure or refusal of King to pay the assessment could not be used by the company as a pretext for the forfeiture of his insurance. A certificate holder in an assessment company or association of whom an excessive assessment is demanded is not required to tender a sum equivalent to a legal assessment in order to prevent a forfeiture, but may stand on his right to refuse to acknowledge any liability to respond to such illegal assessment. He cannot be put in the wrong until he rejects or neglects a lawful demand. [Insurance Co. v. Babbett, 7 Allen (Mass.) 235; Mangessen v. Benefit Assn., 42 N. E. 1132; Benjamin v. Life Assn., 79 Pac. 517; Logsdon v. Supreme Lodge, 76 Pac. 292.]
To establish her claim that the assessment not only was excessive but was wholly unnecessary, plaintiff introduced in evidence, over the objection of defendant, the sworn annual statements of defendant filed with the Superintendent of Insurance of this State at the close of the years 1900 and 1901. In the first of these, under the head of “Non-Ledger Liabilities,” and subhead “other liabilities” appear these items:
Reserve on Safety Fund Policies. $265,104 Less deferred premiums____ 34,884 230,220.00
Mortuary Fund held in addition to reserve................ 111,495.36
$1,454,284.50
Under the head of non-ledger assets is the item: “Premiums (assessments) in course of collection, Safety Fund Department, $349,000.” And among the non-ledger liabilities, it is shown that the amount of the death losses in the Safety Fund Department in course of adjustment and not due was $393,750. In the “Exhibit of Policies” the certificates issued from the Safety Fund Department are classed under the head “All Other Policies,” the other classes being “Whole Life Policies” and “Endowment Policies.” The amount of insurance outstanding in the first-mentioned class at the close of the year 1900 is given at $72,519,769. The statement filed at the end of 1901 shows the following items:
“Net Safety Fund in Security Coinpany, Hartford ........$1,166,905.02
Reserve on Safety Fund Policies ...................... 262,257.00
Mortuary and other funds in addition to reserve............ 116,313.59
$1,545,475.61
Death losses in process of adjustment and not due in Safety Fund Department, $328,750. “Premiums in course of collection Safety Fund Department, $358,300; Policies outstanding at end of year 1901, $68,345,961.” The decrease in the volume- of business in Safety Fund Department during the year 1901 is explained by the
We think the objection made by defendant to the admission of these statements in evidence is not well founded. It is true, as counsel urge, they are evidence only of such facts as are required by law to be stated in them. [Reynolds v. Insurance Co., 88 Mo. App. 679.] But the items we have quoted from the statements, even those relating to the so-called “Safety Fund” manifestly were inserted in obedience to the mandate of the statute. [R.. S. 1899, section 7880.] We concede the certificate holders and not the company were the beneficiaries of that fund and that as long as it was held by the trustee it was not a liability of the defendant to the certificate holders, but its status or condition was a fact of which the trust agreement required the trustee to keep defendant informed and was one which very closely concerned the affairs of defendant and its certificate holders. Certainly under the thirteenth clause of section 7880, supra, the Superintendent of Insurance was authorized to require defendant to make an exposition of the condition of that fund and it must be presumed that the showing was made either in obedience to such requirement or in anticipation that if it were not included demand would be made for it. The statements were properly admitted in evidence.
The figures quoted when considered in the light of the conceded facts in evidence clearly point to the existence of the following state of.facts:
At the time of the filing of the first statement in evidence, the “Safety Fund” in the custody of the trustee long since had reached its contractual limit of $1,-000,000, and had accumulated net earnings of over $112,000, which had not been, but should have been, paid over to defendant for distribution among the certificate holders. This excess must have represented the
During the year 1901, this excess increased from $112, 569.14 to $166,905.02 — a difference of $54,335.88— obviously the full amount of the increment for that year. It is perfectly apparent that for at least three years before the levy of the ninety-first assessment, defendant had received from the trustee no payment from the earnings of the fund, though the contract called for semiannual payments of the excess over $1,000,000. In the meantime, defendant, in violation of the contract with its certificate holders was piling up a “Reserve on Safety Fund Policies” and what was but another name for the same thing, “A Mortuary Fund.” These illegal funds which belonged to the policy holders and which defendant had no authority or semblance of right to create necessarily were made up of surplus from proceeds of mortuary assessments over what was required to pay death claims: “Safety Fund” fees paid in by members after the fund in the trustee’s hands had reached $1,-000,000, and which were retained by defendant and the earnings of the fund thus accumulated. Thus, when the assessment was levied, there was, all told, $454,-284.50 available for the payment of $380,000 in death claims in process of adjustment and not due. Beyond the bare assertion that defendant had no funds applicable to the purpose for which the assessment was levied, its witnesses offer no answer to the irresistible conclusion that must follow from the facts disclosed by these sworn statements.
In an affidavit filed in support of the motion for a new trial, defendant’s secretary attempts to explain the
Point is made that the action is barred by the stipulation in the contract which limited the time in which suit could be brought, but we rule this point against the contention of defendant. An inspection of the whole record convinces us that no error was committed against defendant and that the judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.