50 F. 511 | 8th Cir. | 1892
On the 6th day of July, 1885, the Knights Templar ⅞ Masons’ Life Indemnity Company issued a policy of insurance upon the life of John B. Berry, wherein it was provided that upon due
It appears from the findings of fact that the company is a corporation
The defendant company, according to the findings of the trial court, is not a benevolent or fraternal society, but is purely a life insurance company, carrying on business on what is known as the “ assessment plan.” The sole business of the corporation being that of life insurance, it cannot avail itself of provisions of the Missouri statutes applicable to associations organized for benevolent, social, or fraternal purposes,
Upon the assumption that the act passed by the legislature of Missouri in 1887 supersedes and repeals all provisions of the general insurance laws theretofore applicable to companies operating upon the assessment plan, counsel for the plaintiff in error have made a very able argument'in support of the proposition that from the date of the adoption of the act of 1887 the provisions of section 5982 were repealed as to assessment companies, and that the rights of the parties are now to be determined by the terms of the policy sued on, the same as though the suicide clause of the Missouri statute had never been enacted. We do not deem it necessary to determine the question whether this provision of the Missouri statute is to be deemed to be within the rule stated in Ewell v. Daggs, 108 U. S. 148, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 408, to the effect that when the right to avoid a given contract is given to a party thereto •by statutory enactment on some ground of public policy, there being nothing in the contract mala in se, such right of avoidance being merely a privilege belonging to the remedy, and not being an element in the contract itself, may, by a subsequent repealing statute, be taken away, and the rights of the parties be thus left subject to the provisions of tbe contract by them entered into, or whether the provision of the Missouri statute preventing the company from exempting itself from liability for death by suicide, in force when the policy was issued, did not become part of the contract of insurance, under the general rule that the law of the place where a contract is entered into and is to be performed becomes part of the contract itself, in which event subsequent legislation by the state could not take away rights acquired under the policy when it'was issued. Before this question can arise, it must be made clear that the legislature of the state intended to repeal, by the act of 1887, the provisions of section 5982 in its application to policies previously issued by companies doing business on 'the assessment plan, and, in our judgment, the intent to repeal the section in this particular is not made plain. In the first place, the legislature of Missouri has not repealed section 5982. It is still the law of the state that companies engaged in the business of life insurance shall not be permitted to exempt themselves from liability for death by suicide not contemplated when