Seymour had a life insurance, policy in the appellant company, issuеd in 1919. It contained the now common clause, by which, after two years, it should be incontestable except for nonpayment of premium. Early in 1928 it lapsed, for such nonpayment. Shortly thereafter, Seymour appliеd for its reinstatement under that clause of the policy which provided:
“Reinstatement.—At any time within five years after any default, upon written application by tho Insured and upon presentation at tho Home Officе of evidence of insurability satisfactory to the Company, this Policy may be reinstated together with any indebtedness in accordance with the loan provisions of the Policy, upon payment of loan interest, аnd of arrears of premiums with five per cent interest thereon from their due date.”
This application says that “for the purpose of inducing the company to reinstate said policy, 1 make the representations contained in my answers to the following questions:” These answers expressly stated that he was in the same condition of health as when tho policy was issued, and that within the then past' two years he had not had any illnеss, and had not consulted or been treated by any physician. The application concluded: “I hereby certify that the foregoing answers are full, complete and true, and agree that the Company, beliеving them to be true, shall rely and act thereon.” The reinstatement was effective as of February 14, 1928. Seymour died about sixty days later. The insurance company claimed that the two representations above specifiеd were false and fraudulent; and thereupon filed this bill in tho court below against Seymour’s widow, who was beneficiary in the policy, asking that the policy be declared invalid because the reinstatement was proсured by fraud, and praying that the policy be delivered up and canceled. Upon motion of the defendant, the bill was dismissed because there was an adequate remedy at law. In connection with the motion tо dismiss, it was stated, and the court below accepted it as a fact, that after the filing of tho bill, the beneficiary brought an action on this policy in the state court of Ohio, and that this action had been removed by the insurance company to the court below.
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Upon the authority of Phoenix Mut. L. Insurance Co. v. Bailey,
The policy involved in the Bailey Case did not have the incontestable clause; and, however long the beneficiary delayed the suit at lаw, the. assured’s fraud in the application continued to be a good defense, which, if shown, would defeat the action. Manifestly, with the incontestable clause, the situation is different; the beneficiary has only to wait until thе specified time expires; and, to the suit then brought, the defense is not available. This presents, a situation within the exception of the Bailey Case, and gives equity the right to take hold! So the C. C. A. of the Fourth Circuit held (by majority, in Jefferson v. Keeton,
The further specific question is as to the applicability of the incontestable clause to the reinstatement. There is nothing expressed on this subject in the poliсy or in the reinstatement papers. Clearly the original clause, with the original two-year limitation, cannot be literally reinstated in a case like this. It had performed its office, and this policy had been incontеstable for several
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years before the lapse. Both by the proposal of the reinstatement application and by familiar principles of law, it must follow that fraud in obtaining the reinstatement would be a gоod defense to liability upon the contract so procured; and there must be a reasonable opportunity for the assertion of this defense. Nor, when we draw the conventional inference against thе 'party drafting the contract, can wo think it intended that the policy should be always contestable—without any time limit. We think the fair construction is that the incontestable clause took a fresh effect when the policy again came into force by the reinstatement, and that the right to contest because of fraud in the reinstatement would expire two years after that date. This conclusion cannot rest upon any precise language in the policy; but it is the reasonable inference as to what the parties intended by reinstating a policy containing this clause, and also providing, in effect, that liability should be defeated by showing frаud in the reinstatement application. This is held in Teeter v. United Life,
There remains the inquiry whether such a situation should require a eourt of equity to entertain such a bill, not to hear and decide the issue of fraud, but merely to furnish an anchor to windward while the litigation at law continues; and so that if the right to make the defense at law should be actually lost, then the court of equity might interfere. Something of this kind was jlone in Hoare v. Bremridge, L. R. 8, Ch. App. 22 (1812). Such a рrocedure cannot be satisfaetoiy. If the law proceeding is in the same court which lias equitable jurisdiction (or in two branches of the same court, as in the English case), the incidental difficulties are minimized; but that would very often not be the ease. The equity suit might be in the federal eourt and the suit at law in the state court, or vice versa. The two courts might otherwise differ in jurisdiction. A suit at law could be brought in one court, discontinued and brought in аnother court, and, very likely, later in still another. The exercise of the jurisdiction of the equity eourt would not only bo intermittent and evanescent, but would require it to supervise another eourt in an unknown way and for an unknown time.
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The only ease found in the United States tending to support the English case is Crenshaw v. Looker,
Thinking, as we do, that in the present case the court of equity acquired jurisdiction of the controversy when the bill was filed, it would be enough to say that the jurisdiction rightfully so acquired is not lost because a suit аt law is later commenced. Equity jurisdiction is not lost if, after the filing of the bill, an adequate legal remedy becomes available (Dawson v. Kentucky,
The decree is reversed, and the cаse remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
See Jefferson Co. v. McIntyre (C. C. A. 5)
It is suggested thаt a * discontinuance could be prevented if the insurance company in its answer to the suit at law should plead the fraud and [under 274b of the Judicial Code, 28 USCA § 398} ask the equitable relief of surrender and cancellation, thus barring a discontinuance. It is not clear that one may rightly ask, by answer at law, equitable relief which equity would not give him upon his own hill.
A “nurse maid jurisdiction”—Professor Chaffee.
