90 F. 40 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa | 1898
A suit in equity was brought in this court by the administrator of the estate of Frank E. McMaster against the defendant insurance company, praying a reformation of the policies in question, on the ground that the provision inserted therein making the second annual premiums payable on the 12th day of December, 1894, was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties; and upon the hearing of that case this court held that, under the rules of' construction applied to contracts of this character, the plaintiff could recover at law thereon, but as the evidence clearly proved that the application signed by McMaster had been changed, after he signed it, by the interlineation of the words, ‘'Please date policy same date as application” (this interlineation being made by the agent of the defendant company without the knowledge or'assent of McMaster, which interlineation,- made for the benefit of the agent of the defendant company, and against the interest of the applicant, McMaster, had caused the defendant, when issuing the policies, to make the second year’s premium payable on December 12, 1894, although the policies were dated December 18, and not delivered until December 26, 1893), the policies ought to be reformed to accord with the actual agreement of the parties. McMaster v. Insurance Co., 78 Fed. 33. Upon appeal to the circuit court of appeals for this circuit, the decree of reformation was reversed; that court holding that the policies, in the form in which they were delivered, must be held to represent the contract of the parties; the court further expressing the opinion that no recovery could be had thereon at law or in equity. Insurance Co. v. McMaster, 30 C. C. A. 532, 87 Fed. 63. The case at law is now before the court; the question being whether a recovery can be had upon the policies in their present form, and under the facts now proven by the evidence.
The policies are dated December 18, 1893. They were delivered, and one annual payment of $21 was then paid on each policy. This payment and the delivery of the policies put in force contracts for insurance, good not for one year only, but good for the lifetime of McMaster. Thus, in Insurance Co. v. Statham, 93 U. S. 24, it is said:
“We agree with the court below that the contract is not an assurance for a single year, with the privilege of renewal from year to year by paying the annual premium, but that it is an entire contract for life, subject to discontinuance and forfeiture for nonpayment of any of the stipulated premiums.”
In Thompson v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S. 252, it is ruled:
“We do not accept the position that the payment of the annual premium is a condition precedent to the continuance of the policy. That is untrue. It is a condition subsequent only, the nonperformance of which may incur a forfeiture of the policy, or may not, according to the circumstances. It is*45 always open for tlie assured to show a waiver of the condition, or a course of conduct on the part of the insurer which gave him just and reasonable ground to infer that a forfeiture would not he exacted.”
Forfeitures are not favored, either at law or in equity; and to sustain the right to declare a contract, which has gone into effect, forfeited by reason of a subsequent failure to perform its conditions, it is incumbent on the party pleading the forfeiture to clearly establish the defense; and in the case of contracts like insurance policies, wherein the assured has no voice in the selection of the terms used, the construction must be against the party who prepared the contract; and, furthermore, if there be found in the policy provisions which are inconsistent or contradictory, force must be given to (hose that sustain, rather than to those which would forfeit, the contract. Thus, in National Bank v. Insurance Co., 95 U. S. 673, 678, it is ruled:
“But, without adopting either of those constructions, wo rest the conclusion already indicated upon the broad ground that when a policy of insurance contains contradictory provisions, or has been so framed as to leave room for construction, rendering it doubtful whether the parties intended the exact, truth of the applicant’s statements to be a condition precedent to- any binding contract, the court should lean against that construction which imposes upon the assured the obligations of a warranty. The company cannot justly complain of such a rule. Its attorneys, officers, or agents prepared the policy for the purpose, we shall assume, both of protecting the company against fraud, and of securing the just rights of tlie assured under a valid contract of insurance. It is its own language which tlie court is invited to interpret, and it is both reasonable and just that its own words should be construed most strongly against itself.”
In this case, on page 675, it is said:
“The entire application having been made, by express words, a part of the policy, it is entitled to the same consideration as if it had been inserted ai large in the instrument. The policy and application together therefore constitute ¡he written agreement of insurance, and, in ascertaining the intention of che parties, full effect must be given to tlie conditions, clauses, and stipulations contained In both instruments.”
In the policies sued on in this case the applications are attached to the jiolicies, and are expressly made part thereof, and therefore full effect must be given to the stipulations and provisions therein contained. It is a familiar rule in the construction of contracts that the court should, so far as possible, place itself in the position the parries occupied when the contract was entered into; and to this end it may follow the successive steps which the evidence proves were taken by the parties themselves when entering into the contract which is before tlie court for construction. The policies sued on recite on their face that they are made in consideration of the provisions of (lie applications, and it is well known that (he making of the application precedes the issuance of the policy; so we turn to it, in the first instance, to ascertain from its provisions what the contract was which the parties proposed to enter into. The application contained the usual questions as to the age of the party, his previous condition of health, and other like matters; and then clause 10 required a statement of the sum to be insured, of the premiums payable (whether annually, semiannually, or quarterly), and on what table the premium is to be calculated (whether on that of ordinary life,
“If any premium is not tiras paid on or before the day when due, then (except as hereinafter otherwise provided) this policy shall become void, and all payments previously made shall remain 1he property of the company.” “After this policy shali have been in force three months, a grace of one month will be allowed in payment of subsequent premiums, subject to an interest charge of five per cení, per annum for the number of days during which the premium remains due and unpaid. During said month of grace, the unpaid premium, with interest as above, remains an indebtedness due the company; and, in the event of death during the said month, this indebtedness will be deducted from the amount of the insurance.”
'When the company, in the form of the application submitted to McMaster, stated that the policy would not become binding until the first premium was paid, the company declared that the first premium must be paid in advance (that is, at the time the policy would go into effect); but, as to the subsequent premiums, the company gave Mc-Master the rigid to say whether they should be made payable quarterly, semiannually, or annually; and when he made the choice, agreeing to pay the same annually, that fixed the times at which the subsequent premiums were to come due; and when the company accepted this application, and made it, not only a part of, but the very basis of, the contract of insurance, it seems clear that the company must be bound by its terms. The choice given to McMaster in selecting the mode of payment of the premiums gave one year as the longest limit. He could select a year, or a less period; that is, a quarter or a half year. By electing to pay the premiums annually, McMaster indicated that his purpose was to have a year’s interval between the dates when payment could be demanded of him; and by issuing the policy on an application thus worded, by calculating the premium's on the basis of annual payments, and stating on the face of the policy that the amount of the annual premium was §21 on each policy, and by accepting that amount from McMaster, the company dearly agreed, on its part, that, after the taking effect of the policies by the payment of the first annual premium, the payment of the subsequent premiums could only be demanded after the lapse of one year from ihe date when the preceding payment came due. The company, by calculating the premiums on the basis of annual payments, and by demanding and accepting from McMaster one full year’s premium as the payment necessary to be made to put the policies in force, put its own construction on the application, and thereby showed that it understood that it was entitled to demand payment of the premiums by yearly installments of §21 each; and as McMaster had, in writing on the face of the application, stated that he wished the premiums to be made payable annually, there can be no doubt that both parties understood that the first premium was to be paid in advance, in order to give life to the contract, and that the subsequent payments were to be made yearly thereafter. The company,
*49 “The entire application haring lieen made, by express words, a part of the policy, it is entitled to the same consideration as if it had been inserted at large in that instrument. The policy and application together therefore constitute the written agreement of insurance, and, in ascertaining the intention of the parties, full effect must be given to the conditions, clauses, and stipulations contained in both instruments.”
Taking up, then, for consideration, the contract between the parties, we laid in one portion of it an expre ss provision that the premiums to be paid are to be paid annually, and that the amount thereof is to be calculated on that basis, according to the ordinary life table. Turning to another portion of the contract, we üud a provision which requires the second and subsequent premiums to be paid at periods less Hum one year from the date of ihe contract, and from the time when the first payment was made. Under the first provision, the assured cannot be required to pay the second premiums until after ¡lie lapse of one year from the date of the contract. Under the second provision, payment of the second premiums is demandable in a period of less than one year. These provisions are clearly inc-on-sisfent and contradictory. The rules of construction in case contradictory provisions exist in the same contract are well settled. "Where, as is the fact with reference to insurance contracts, one party prepares the form of the contract, and requires the other party to accept it as thus prepared, the construction thereof must be against the party who prepared the contract. If possible, the contract must be so construed as to sustain it, and not to defeat it. If the parties by (heir own action have agreed upon a construction of the contract, that maj be followed as the guide to the intent of the parties. When the company, having issued the policies sued on, took action thereon, it demanded from McMaster a full year’s premium, and he paid the same; arid thus both parties clearly showed that, as they understood the contract, it was based upon the payment of annual premiums. That this was the understanding of the company is further evidenced by the fact that the amount of each premium to be paid, as shown upon the face of the policy, is $21; that amount being entered under the words "Annual Premium,” which are placed on the side of the first page of the policy, in a position to catch the eye,—being so placed, doubtless, so that any one interested will see at a glance the amount of the premium, and period of payment. If the contention of the defendant to the effect that, under the contract of the parties, it could rightfully demand payment of the second premium before the expiration of a year from the date of the policies, is sustained, it follows that the contract will be forfeited, whereas the recognized rule requires a construction that will sustain the contract, if that be possible. The purpose McMaster had in view in entering into the contract was to secure indemnity in the sum of $5,000 to his estate, in case of his death; and, to secure this indemnity, he agreed to pay to the company the yearly sum of $21 on each policy. The purpose of the insurance company in entering into the contract was to obtain the benefit of the yearly premiums called for by the contract, and, to induce the payment thereof, the company agreed to indemnify the estate of McMaster, upon his death, in the sum of $5,-000; and, to secure the payment of the yearly premiums, it was fur-
I repeat the assumed case already stated: Suppose these policies did not contain the provision with respect to the so-called month of grace in the payment of subsequent premiums, but did contain a provision that, if the premiums were not paid on the day they came due, the policies were forfeited. Suppose the contract of insurance had been entered into in the mode proven in this case, and the policies, in the present form, except as to the forfeiture clause, had been issued, dated December 18, 1893, and had been delivered upon the payment by McMaster of one full year’s premium thereon, and that McMaster had died on the 15th of December, 1894; that is, in less than a year from the date of the policies. Would it be open to the defendant company to claim a forfeiture of the contracts, under such circumstances? Could the company be permitted to say: “It is true, we required McMaster to designate the kind of policy we were to issue, and he selected policies to be based upon annual payment of the premiums, and so stated 'in the application. It is true, we issued policies of the form used for annual payments. It is true that we calculated the premiums on the basis of annual payments, and stated the amount on the face of the policies. It is true, when we delivered the policies, we demanded, and McMaster paid us, one year’s premium in full. It is true, McMaster died in less Hum one year from the date of the policies. But his estate cannot recover the indemnity he had paid for, because we put into the policy a provision making the second premium due and payable on the 12th of December, and, as McMaster had not paid this second premium, his estate cannot recover, even though it be true that he died in less ¡han a year from the date of the policy.” Would a court be justified in holding that a forfeiture of the contract had happened under such circumstances? Would not the answer be that the application, which forms part of the contract between the parties, expressly provided that the premiums were to be payable annually, and the act of the company in so wording another part of the contract as to require the second premium to be paid in a less period simply resulted in putting contradictory provisions in the contract, in which event the construction must be most favorable to the assured, and in favor of sustaining the policy. But it is said that in this supposed case the party assured died during the year for which the premium had been paid, and that while a court would not permit a forfeiture during that period, because in fact the premiums for that period had been paid, yet a different rule would prevail if the party died after the year for which the premium was paid had elapsed, but during the
The fact being proven that the first premiums on the policies were in fact paid to the company, and that the policies were delivered to McMaster, it follows that, from the* time of the delivery of the policies, McMaster had contracts which bound the company-to pay his estate the sum of $5,000 on his death. By their terms the policies of insurance, as contracts, extend, not from year to year, but from their date (December 18, 1898) until- the death of McMaster, whenever that might occur. The payment of the first premium and the delivery of the policies put them into effect for this period, and not solely for one year, subject to the right of forfeiture secured to the company. Therefore when McMaster died, on the 18th of January, 1895, the company was bound to pay to his estate the amount called for by the policies, unless the same had become forfeited under some provision thereof securing the right of forfeiture to the company. The provisions of the policies already quoted in full do not declare that the same shall be forfeited if a premium comes due and is not then paid, but it is declared that during one month after a premium becomes due the company will decree the unpaid premium to be an indebtedness due the company, running at interest, and that, if the assured dies during this month of grace, the amount of the unpaid premium, with interest, will be deducted from the sum due on the policy. Under this clause of the policy, to entitle the company to declare the contract forfeited it must appear that a premium has become due and demandable, that a full month has elapsed since the premium became thus due, and that during this month the amount of the premium, with interest, has not been paid, and that the assured
“This statute was in force at the time the application for the policy in suit was taken, and therefore governs the present ease. It dispenses with any inquiry as to whether the application or the policy, either expressly or by*54 necessary implication, made Boat the agent of the assured in taking such application. By force of the statute he was the agent of the company iu soliciting and procuring the application. He could not by any act of his shake off the character of agent for the company. Nor could the company by any provision in the application or policy convert him into an agent of the assured. If it could, then the object of the statute would be defeated. * * * His act in writing the answer which is alleged to be untrue was, under the circumstances, the act of the company.”
The case just cited was an action at law based upon a life insurance policy issued on the life of Richard Stevens. The defendant company pleaded that in the application signed by Stevens there was a misstatement of a material fact, in that it was therein stated that Stevens had no other insurance on his life, whereas in fact he had, when the application was signed, a large amount of insurance in co-operative companies. On the trial before the jury the court permitted the plaintiff to show by oral testimony that the answer to the question about other insurance was written into the application by the agent of the insurance company after he had been informed by the applicant that he held this co-operative insurance. The supreme court affirmed the action of the trial court; holding that under the statute of Iowa it was open to the plaintiff to prove by whom the statement in the application had in fact been written, and that, it appearing from the evidence that the statement was written by the soliciting agent of the company, it must be held, in law, to be the act of the company, and being its act, and not that of the assured, it could not be relied on to defeat a recovery on the policy, even though it appeared that it was so written into the application before Stevens signed the same. Under the ruling of the supreme court in the case just cited, it must be held that it is open to the plaintiff to show that the words, “Please date policy same as application,” were written into the application, not by McMaster, but by the agent of the company, and that they were so written after the application had been signed by Mc-Master, and without his knowledge or assent. As the proof is clear that these words were thus written into the application by the agent of the company, and without the knowledge of McMaster, it is settled that the placing them in the application was, in law, the act of the company, and not that of McMaster; and the company cannot rely on its own act, done without the knowledge or assent of the assured, as a ground for estopping the assured or his representative from claiming that under the contract of insurance the premiums were to be paid annually. But furthermore the company did not in fact comply with the clause thus written into the application. That requested that the policies should bear the same date as the application, which was December 12, 1893. The policies, when issued, were dated December 18, 1898; .and thus the company refused to comply with the request written into the application. Having refused the request as made, upon what theory can it be said that it made the second premium payable on December 12,1894, at the request of the assured? Heither on the face of the application nor in any other way was such a request made by McMaster or by any one else. The company, by its own act, not requested or authorized by McMáster, chose to write into the policy the provision making the second premium come due
But it is contended on behalf of the defendant that when the policies were delivered to McMaster they contained the provision making the second premium due and payable on December 12, 1891, and by accepting them with this provision he indicated his consent to (his change in the time of payment. If the evidence proved that the company called McMasler’s attention to this provision of the policies, and that he assented thereto, there would be foundation for the claim made; but the evidence proves that his attention was not called to the provision, and tliai he accepted the policies and made payment therefor without reading the same, in reliance upon the statement of the agent of the company that the policies were in exact accordance with the terms previously agreed upon. There is nothing therefore in the facts proven from which it can bo inferred that McMaster ever knowingly assented to the provisions now found in the policies, whereby the second payment of the premium was made payable at a date less than one year from the date of the policies. But it is said that, even though he did not read the policies, he had the opportunity to do so, and therefore that it must be held that he agreed to accept and be bound by the contracts in the form in which they were delivered and accepted. Granted. Wlmt do the contracts, properly construed, require with respect to the payment of the second premiums? Turning to that part of the contract set forth in the application, there is the statement, in plain words, “Premium payable annually.” The policies are dated December 18, 1893, and the first premiums were paid on December 26th; but, under tlie custom of insurance companies, it is considered the same as though paid on the 18th, the date of the policies. Certainly, under this clause of the contract, the second payments could not become due or be claimed until the lapse of one year from December 18, 1893. Turning to another clause of the contract, we find a provision making the second premium due and payable in less than one year from the date of the policies. Are these provisions consistent, or are they inconsistent and contradictory? If inconsistent and contradictory, then it is the settled law that force shall be given to the provision that, maintains the life of the contract, and that protects the assured rather than the company, through whose fault these Inconsistent and contradictory provisions have been introduced into the contracts. Admitting, therefore, that McMaster is to be bound by the contracts in the form in which they were delivered, he can only be held bound by the legal construction thereof as a whole; and thus we come back in every instance to the crucial question, do these contracts contain contradictory provisions with respect to the time when the second premium could be rightfully demanded from McMaster? Upon that question depends the result in the case.
But it is further contended that there is some evidence tending to show that. McMaster did not intend to make a second payment of premiums on these policies, and therefore his representative ought not to recover thereon, as McMaster died after the year for which he had paid the premiums had expired. If policies of life insurance
If free to give judgment according to my own view of the questions involved, I should find for the plaintiff; but, as already stated, the circuit court of appeals held in the equity case that there could he no recovery oil the policies, at law or in equity, and I deem it my duty to follow^ this ruling, leaving it to the plaintiff to carry this action at law before that court for its further consideration; and therefore, while my opinion is with the plaintiff, the judgment must be for the defendant