10 A. 635 | R.I. | 1887
This is an action of assumpsit for money had and received to the use of the female plaintiff Mary A. McQuitty, wife of William G. The action was begun in the Court of Common Pleas, and was there tried on an agreed statement of facts, from which the case appears to be as follows, to wit: The said Mary, on November 16, 1870, being then and ever since then a resident of Rhode Island, procured in Rhode Island, through its Rhode Island agent, F.W. Hart, a policy of insurance, by which the defendant corporation agreed, in consideration of the representations made in the application, and of the annual premium of $87.49, to be paid every year on or before November 16th for the term of fifteen years, to insure the life of said Mary, for her benefit, in the sum of one thousand dollars, to be paid within ninety days after due notice and satisfactory evidence of her death during the continuance of the policy, or, if she should survive November 16, 1885, to be paid then to her, deducting all indebtedness to the company on account of the policy, if any then existing. A note in the margin of the policy states that the annual premiums are payable, $34.99 note, $52.50 cash, each twelve months from November 16, 1870. The policy was issued subject to the condition that it should cease and determine in case of default on the part of the assured in paying the premiums, or interest in advance on the outstanding premium notes, or the notes themselves at maturity; with the proviso, however, that if, after the payment of two or more of the annual premiums, the assured should make default in paying a subsequent premium, the company would convert the policy into a "paid-up" policy for as many fifteenths of the sum insured as there had been complete premiums paid, the application for conversion, with return of the policy, being made within one year after the default. The policy was also issued upon the express condition that, in every case where the policy should cease, or be or become null and void, all payments thereon, and all dividend credits accruing therefrom, should be forfeited to the company. The first two premiums were paid by said Mary in money and notes as required, and receipts therefor given to her by the company. In 1872 said Mary decided to make default and convert the policy *575 into a "paid-up" policy for $133.33, the pro rata amount stipulated for the premiums previously paid; and accordingly she remitted to the company $4.20 interest on the two outstanding notes and applied for such policy, agreeing in her application "to pay to said company annually, in advance, the interest on all outstanding notes given in part payment of annual premiums." Thereupon the company wrote across the face of the policy the following, to wit: "This policy, having lapsed after two annual payments, is hereby recognized as binding upon the company for two fifteenths thereof, or one hundred and thirty-three and thirty-three one hundredths dollars, subject to the terms and conditions expressed in this policy and in the quitclaim to the company bearing even date with this entry." Signed, "Robt. Beecher, Sec'y," and dated, "Hartford, Conn., November 16, 1872." The quitclaim referred to is a quitclaim or release expressed in the application to the company of all claims to the sum assured by the policy except the two fifteenths.
Mrs. McQuitty never paid any further interest on the notes, and the notes are still outstanding unpaid. She demanded payment of the policy after maturity, and the company refused it. The company claims that she has forfeited her policy and all moneys paid by her. She claims that, being a married woman, she was incapable of contracting, and is therefore entitled to recover the moneys paid by her under the policy. It is agreed that if the court find, on the facts as stated, the policy and moneys forfeited, judgment shall be for the defendant for costs, otherwise for the plaintiffs for $ debt or damage and costs. In the Court of Common Pleas judgment was rendered for the defendant, and the case has been brought up on exceptions.
The policy has conspicuously displayed in the margin the words, "Non-forfeiture endowment policy with profits." There are cases which, regarding these marginal catch-words as an element of the contract, hold that the policy, at least when converted into a "paid-up" policy, is non-forfeitable. Cowles v.Continental Life Insurance Co.
The plaintiffs raise the question whether an endowment policy, like the policy taken out by the female plaintiff, is within the purview of our statute. Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 166, § 21.1 We see no reason to doubt it. Such a policy, taken out by the assured on her own life, insures it for a term of years. If she dies within the term, it is payable to her legal representatives. The fact that it is payable to her personally if she survives the term, does not make it any the less an insurance on her life, such payment being one of the considerations for taking the policy for such limited term. AEtna Life InsuranceCo. v. Mason,
The principal ground on which the plaintiffs claim to recover is that the policy was void ab initio, because the female plaintiff, being a married woman, was incapable of contracting, and consequently the premiums paid by her, being moneys paid upon a void consideration, can be recovered back as moneys paid to and for her use. The defendant contends that she was capable of entering into a contract of life insurance by force of the statute. Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 166, § 21. The apparent purpose of this section, however, is not to enable married women to enter into such contracts, but to secure the policy to the extent of ten thousand dollars, when expressed to be for her benefit, "whether effected by herself or by her husband, or by any other person on her behalf," to her separate use, independently of her husband *578
and of his creditors and representatives, and also independently of any other person effecting the same on her behalf, his creditors and representatives." It is true the section recognizes that a policy of life insurance may be effected by a married woman, but we see no reason to doubt that, independently of section 21, under the other provisions of chapter 166, a married woman could invest her own money, being part of her separate estate, in a proper life insurance policy if she chose, as validly as in a pianoforte or a sewing machine. If, for example, Mrs. McQuitty, instead of paying the first two premiums partly in cash and partly by note, had paid them wholly in cash, and then had taken out a paid-up, a really as well as nominally paid-up policy, we do not think there can be any question but that it would have been valid and that she could oblige the company to pay it. The question then is, whether, supposing she was incapable of binding herself personally by her promissory note, the policy was void because the premiums were paid partly in her notes. Suppose she had died in the second year of the original or in the first year of the "paid-up" policy, before committing any default, could the company have repudiated their contract and successfully resisted the payment of it? We think not. The company would have received the larger part of the premiums in cash, and have secured the remainder by the right reserved in the policy to deduct it from the sum insured. That they had taken notes from the assured which did not bind her personally, would not avail them, since they must be presumed to have known her disability when they took them, and to have relied on their right to deduct, and on the conditions of forfeiture as a sufficient protection. They could not be heard to say that the policy was without consideration. Chamberlin v. Robertson 31 Iowa, 408;Abshire v. Mather et al.
Exceptions overruled, judgment of Court of Common Pleasaffirmed with costs of this court.
"Any policy or policies of insurance, or part thereof, which shall not exceed in the aggregate the sum of ten thousand dollars, made by an insurance company on the life of any person, and expressed to be for the benefit of a married woman, whether effected by herself or by her husband, or by any other person on her behalf, shall enure to her separate use and benefit, independently of her husband and of his creditors and representatives, and also independently of any other person effecting the same on her behalf, his creditors and representatives, and such policy may be sued in the name of the person beneficially interested therein, or in the name of the representative of such person."