93 So. 566 | Ala. | 1922
This is a suit upon a life insurance policy upon which the insured had obtained a loan of $350, and pledged the policy as security therefor. The pledge of the policy was in the form of a loan agreement, called the "certificate of indebtedness," signed by the insured and also the beneficiary. This agreement effected an assignment and transfer of the insurance policy to the company, to which the policy was delivered. This loan was made something like 2 1/2 years before the policy was paid up, but the subsequent premiums were promptly paid and the policy became paid up in November, 1915. No part of the principal or interest of this loan has been paid, and defendant company resists this suit upon the theory that on account of the default in the payment of this indebtedness — due notice having been given to the insured — the policy had been canceled, pursuant to the stipulation set forth in the certificate of indebtedness, which is as follows:
"Interest not paid when due shall be added to the indebtedness evidenced by this certificate and shall bear interest at the rate aforesaid. If at any time the entire indebtedness evidenced by this certificate together with any other indebtedness to the company on said policy shall equal or exceed its loan value the company's liability under said policy shall terminate upon compliance by the company with the requirements of the policy, if any, respecting notice."
As we understand the agreed statement of facts, at the time of the cancellation of the policy the amount of the indebtedness on account of said loan on said policy in fact exceeded the loan value of the policy, and the question of prime importance upon this appeal relates to the validity of the foregoing agreement.
Counsel for appellee insist that, as this was but a pledge of the policy as security for a debt, a stipulation in a pledge agreement of this character upon the debtor's default that the title shall become absolute in the pledgee is void, citing Williamson v. Culpepper,
It is, we think, well settled that agreements relating to pledges may authorize the pledgee to sell the property at either public or private sale, and the pledgee may himself become the purchaser, applying the proceeds to the liquidation of the debt, and *619
holding the balance in trust for the pledgor. The sale must be fairly made, and for a fair price; but, as demonstrated by several of the authorities hereinafter cited, no general market for life insurance policies can be said to exist, at least in this state where the beneficiaries of such policies are limited under the rules of our decisions, and therefore, if such a policy were offered for sale, a vast majority of the public would be prohibited from purchasing, and the result would be that the company would doubtless be the only bidder, and become the purchaser under terms less advantageous to the insured and beneficiary. As said by some of the authorities, such an insurance policy, whether fully paid or not, has no marketable sale value, and an attempt to thus dispose of it at public sale would be futile. Some method, therefore, of enforcement of such contracts, other than sale, has been resorted to, and it has been held by the great weight of authority that agreements of this character, for the cancellation of a policy at the cash surrender value, are not inconsistent with sound public policy or violative of any of the substantial rights of the pledgor. In Palmer v. Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
"On the contrary, it is a reasonable and practicable method of bringing the contract to a final termination."
The opinion in that case points out that an agreement which vests in the pledgee the right to arbitrarily determine the value of the policy at a sum substantially less than its actual cash surrender value would be construed as imposing a penalty for the nonpayment of the debt, and would therefore be void. Under such an agreement oppression would be shown, and the insured or beneficiary protected by the courts, in construing such a stipulation as a penalty and therefore unenforceable.
In the present case, however, no such question arises. There is nothing in this record to indicate any oppression or unfairness or that the policy was of any greater value than that stipulated as its cash value, which appears in the statement of the case. Numerous notices were shown to have been given insured in regard to default in the payment of the interest, to which no attention was paid. The cancellation of the policy by the defendant company was but a method for the enforcement of the foreclosure of the pledge — a practical method of bringing the transaction to a final termination. Such agreements have been sanctioned by numerous authorities. Stevens v. Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
Indeed, a careful reading of the case of Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Lazenby, by the Court of Appeals, reviewed by this court on certiorari in Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Lazenby,
"The contract in the instant case does not purport to transfer the title or interest in the policy, but it is distinctly placed as a pledge. Of course, therefore, in the Palmer Case, supra, when default occurred and the company exercised its option, the title already being in the company, and the company applied enough of the value of the policy to the payment and extinguishment of the debt, paying or offering to pay the balance, if any, to the insured, it became a foreclosure according to the terms of the contract."
This quotation suffices to demonstrate that the holding in the Lazenby Case was in line with the great weight of authority, and in entire accord with the conclusion we have reached.
There is no merit in the insistence that the insurance company, by not canceling the policy immediately upon the amount of the loan exceeding the value of the policy, waived its right of cancellation. The company merely extended to the insured the opportunity to pay up the interest and continue the policy in effect, and at all times insisted that the interest was due and should be paid in order to prevent loss of the policy. Nothing was done by the company to mislead the insured, or in any manner indicating a waiver of such right of cancellation. Some of the cases cited above — Sherman v. Mut. Life Ins. Co.; Stevens v. Mut. Life Ins. Co.; and Frese v. Mut. Life Ins. Co. — consider this question and so hold. Indeed, notice was sent to the insured that his policy had been canceled, and that extended insurance had been purchased for him, and when the same would expire, and the insured offered no objection nor did he pay any interest. While the agreement referred to as the certificate of indebtedness fixes no exact date as to the maturity of the debt, yet it was in the power of insured to prevent a cancellation of the policy by making payments upon the amount of the loan, and meeting the interest installments so as to prevent the *620 amount of indebtedness equaling or exceeding the cash surrender value of the policy. In failing so to do, he has defaulted and given vitality to the remedy of foreclosure, to which he agreed.
We therefore conclude the stipulation was valid, reasonable, and fair, and that under the agreed statement of facts the policy had been duly canceled and was of no force, and that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. It therefore results that the judgment of the court below will be reversed, and one here rendered for the defendant.
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and MILLER, JJ., concur.