48 A. 800 | R.I. | 1901
This action is brought to recover the amounts claimed to be due on two life insurance policies, issued on the same date. The plaintiff sets up in his declaration that the policies were, by their terms, incontestable after two years from the date of their issue, and that more than two years had elapsed between the date of their issue and the death of the insured. The defendant has filed several pleas in bar, to the effect that certain false and fraudulent answers were made by the insured in the applications. The plaintiff has demurred to these pleas, and the case is before us on that demurrer.
The "incontestable" clause in each of the policies reads as follows: "This policy shall be incontestable after two years from the date of its issue, provided the premiums are paid as agreed."
The only question raised by the demurrer is whether the defendant can be permitted to set up the defence which it has interposed. Counsel for defendant insists that it can, on the broad and familiar ground that fraud vitiates all contracts; and that courts will always refuse to lend their aid in enforcing *525
contracts tainted with fraud, no matter what the agreements or stipulations of the parties may be. As to the correctness of the general proposition of law that fraud vitiates all contracts there can be no doubt. "But while fraud is obnoxious and should be held to vitiate all contracts tainted thereby, courts should exercise care that fraud and imposition should not be successful in annulling a contract which provides, in effect, that if cause be not found and charged within a reasonable and specific time, establishing the invalidity thereof, it should thereafter be treated as valid." The stipulation in the contract sued on is that "This policy shall be incontestable after two years from the date of its issue, provided the premiums are paid as agreed." This is not an absolute stipulation to waive all defences and to condone fraud. "On the contrary," as said by the court inWright v. M.B.L. Assn.,
The practical, and, evidently, the intended, effect of the stipulation in question was to create a short statute of limitations in favor of the insured, within which limited period the insurer must, if ever, test the validity of the policy.
It has repeatedly been held that an agreement limiting the time within which an action may be brought upon a policy of insurance is not against public policy, and may be enforced though less than the usual time imposed by law has been *526
fixed. 2 May on Ins. 4 ed. § 478, and cases cited in note. 11 Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, 349-50. And, as said by the court inClement v. Ins. Co.,
An examination of the reported cases bearing upon the question at issue, from that of Wood v. Dwarris, 11 Exch. 493, decided in 1856, which appears to be the earliest one, down to the present time shows that there is a practical unanimity of opinion in the courts in support of the position taken by the plaintiff in this case, and as the law as declared in said cases meets with our entire approval, there is no occasion for a further discussion of the question involved. See Wright v.Mut. Ben. Assn., 43 Hun. 61; Patterson v. Mut. Life Ins.Co.,
The cases of Holland v. Chosen Friends,
What the effect of the suicide of the insured would be on a policy like those here involved we are not called upon to decide.
Demurrer sustained, and case remanded for trial on the merits.