56 Miss. 512 | Miss. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
W. H. Harlan took out a policy of insurance for $5,000 on his own life, in favor of his wife. After paying for several years the cash half of the annual premiums, and executing his notes for the credit half of the same, he, on the 27th of September, 1872, surrendered his $5,000 policy, and accepted what was called “ a paid-up policy ” for $2,000. There was at the time the sum of $624 due on the outstanding notes which had been given for the credit portion of the annual premiums on the original policy. For this amount a consolidated note was executed, and the new policy stipulated on its face that the amount of this note was to be deducted, after the death of the insured, from the sum assured by the new policy. Said policy was also conditioned upon the annual payment by the insured; on or before the 27th of September of each and eveiy year, of the interest, at six per cent, to become due on this note.
The second condition of the new policy was, that “ if the interest on said note or credit shall not be paid on or before the day mentioned, * * * the company shall not be liable to pay the sum assured, or any part thereof, and said policy shall cease and determine, and become null and void, without notice to any party or parties interested.”
Harlan died after having twice paid the interest due on the note, but after default made in payment of the sum due last before his death. To this suit, brought after his death, by his widow, to compel payment of the policy, the insurance company pleaded the forfeiture by reason of the default in the payment of the interest due on the 27th of September last preceding the- death of the insured. To these pleas the court below sustained a demurrer, on the ground that they afforded no defence to the fiction.
This ruling, as we gather from the arguments of counsel, was based upon the idea that the interest to become due on
However plausible this theory may be, and however wise it might have been for the insured to have so stipulated with the company, if he could have induced them to agree to such a contract, it certainly is not the contract as actually made. The first clause of this instrument recites that it is issued in consideration of the surrender of the original policy, and of the representations made in obtaining the same, “ and of the payment of the interest annually on all notes or credits given for premiums on the policy surrendered (which notes or credits, amounting to $624, are now charged against this policy), on or before the twenty-seventh day of September in each year.”
Then follow various conditions, the second of which is set forth above. Contemporaneously with the issuance of the policy, the insured executed the note for $624 (in form of a receipt for a loan), by which he obligated himself to account for or pay the same out of the proceeds of the policy then received, and stipulated to pay interest thereon in advance, at six per cent per annum, on the 27th of September of each year, as long as he lived; “ and it is hereby stipulated [such is the recital] and agreed that the failure to pay said interest at the time above specified, shall cause said policy to cease and determine.”
How there can be any mistake as to the meaning of this
It is evident that, by the agreement of the parties, the new policy was “paid up” only in name, and that the right to recover the sum assured by it was to be earned only by the prompt and faithful payment, in future, of the interest on $624. Does it make any difference that this sum was already due the company on the old policy? Certainly not.
Instead of forfeiting and abandoning the old policy, Harlan voluntarily elected to apply for and receive a new one, conditioned that it should be void upon his failure to pay the interest on «the sum already due. There was no sort of compulsion upon him to do this. It is to be observed that, upon the surrender of the old policy, he did not obtain or demand “the surrender value” of his policy in cash, if by the terms of the contract it had any surrender value, which does not appear; but he applied for and obtained a new policy, which, though called “ a paid-up policy,” was distinctly conditioned upon a prompt payment by him of a certain sum, to wit, the annual interest to become due on the note then executed. If it be said that it is a harsh rule that would deprive his widow of $2,000 because of the default in the payment of an insignificant sum, the obvious reply is, that the more insignificant the sum the easier it was for the husband to have paid it. The annual premiums on life-policies are usually small as compared with the sum assured, but as this enables the holders of them the more readily to meet the burden, it should impose the greater obligation to be prompt in their discharge.
In the case of St. Louis Mutual Ins. Co. v. Grigsby, 4 Big. on Ins. 633, the Supreme Court of Kentucky, upon a policy quite similar to this, held that, in the view of a court of equity, the contract would be treated as a mortgage, and a forfeiture thereby avoided.
We are not called upon to say whether the distinction between a court of equity and a court of law is a sound one,
In Russum v. St. Louis Mutual Ins. Co., supra, it was held, and, we think, properly, that a forfeiture would not be allowed to take place where there was due the insured, upon the books of the corporation, net earned dividends sufficient to extinguish the interest due, and that the insurers would be compelled to apply such dividends so as to prevent a forfeiture. This rule we think a sound one, either in a court of law or equity, though it was denied, where the course of business of the company was shown to be otherwise, in Anderson v. St. Louis Mutual Ins. Co., supra.
In the case at bar, we decline to involve ourselves in the mazes of strained and doubtful constructions for the purpose of remedying supposed hardships, and are content to enforce the contract as the parties made it, there being no pretence of fraud or undue advantage.
We see nothing in the circumstances attending the default in payment, to relieve the party of its consequences. However unfortunate and disastrous were the results of his last illness to himself and family, it cannot be pretended that the insurance company were in any manner responsible for it, and he must be held to have assumed the risks necessarily attendant upon a postponement by him of the payment to the last day
The charges given to the jury were unsound, in so far as they conflict with the principles here announced.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.