11 A.D. 532 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
From the evidence it appears that a premium became due upon the policy upon the 23d of December, 1883. It further appeared
A notice was issued by the secretary of the defendant stating the amount of premium due on poney No. 901, to wit, fifty-six dollars and sixty-tliree cents, and that it would fall due on the 23d of December, 1883, and to the effect that the premium was due and payable at the office of the company in the city of New York. Tlio service of that notice was proven by an affidavit, pursuant to section 2, chapter 321 of the Laws of 1877. According to the affidavit, the notice was addressed to Nathan M. Rowe, Oswego, N. Y., properly inclosed in an envelope addressed to him, and the same was mailed in the post office in the city of New York, and the postage was prepaid thereon. The affidavit stated that the notice was mailed “ at least thirty days, and not more than sixty days, prior to the date when the premium became due and payable on said policy.”
It is apparent, by the terms of the policy which we have quoted, that it was necessary that the premiums should be paid to avoid the policy becoming void by the terms of the instrument.
Subsequent to the issuing of the policy the Legislature passed chapter 341 of the Laws of 1876, “ regulating the forfeiture of life insurance policies,” and in chapter 321 of the Laws of 1877 section 1 of the act of 1876 was amended. Section 1 of the act of 1877 provides that “No life insurance company doing business in the State of New York snail have power to declare forfeited or lapsed any policy hereafter issued or renewed, by reason of nonpayment of any annual premium or interest, or any portion thereof, except as hereinafter provided.” Inasmuch as this policy was, by the payment of premiums thereon, renewed after the passage of that statute it applies to the policy in suit. (Carter v. Brooklyn Life Ins. Co., 110 N. Y. 15.) In that case, Ruger Ch. J., said: “ The law reads that the notice should be sent to the assured at his known place of address.” That case was referred to with approval in Phelan v. The Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. (113 N. Y. 147).
It is insisted in behalf of the plaintiff that the forfeiture cannot take place inasmuch as no notice was delivered to her in 1883, or subsequently, of the amount of the premium due upon the policy. On the other hand, the defendant claims that a service of notice
In McDougall v. P. S. L. A. Society (135 N. Y. 555) the act of 1877 was under consideration, and in the course of the opinion it' was said: “ It (the act) was intended to and, undoubtedly, does sub-serve a useful purpose, in throwing about the contract between the insurer and the assured reasonable safeguards against a forfeiture or the lapsing of the interest of the assured. * * * The notice was to remind the assured of the privilege he possessed of electing to have the contract continued and extended over the ensuing year and of the conditions of its exercise. * * * The obligation of the statute must not be unreasonably insisted’upon. * * * When applied to an insurance contract out of the ordinary form, it secures to the assured such a notice as will contain statements reminding him of when and where he is to make any payments pursuant to the terms of the contract, their amount and the effect of non-payment. The statute was not meant to operate harshly upon the insurer, but to afford a protection to the assured, by the reasonable requirement of a notice, couched in plain terms, from the insurer, before the "interest of the assured could be forfeited.”
In section 1 of the act of 1877 it is expressly provided that the notice stating the amount of the premium, and the place where it shall be paid, and the person to whom the same is piayable, “ shall be duly addressed and mailed to the person whose life is assured; ” and in section 2 of the .same act, providing for the affidavit showing •that such notice has been mailed, it is provided that any one authorized by the preceding section to mail such notice may state “ that the same was duly addressed to the person whose life is assured by the policy.” The statute seems to be clear and explicit that the notice shall be given to the person whose life is assured.
The respondent calls our attention to Ferdon v. Canfield (104 N. Y. 146). In that case the controversy arose over the ownership of the policy which was issued on the life of one Oantield, payable to Ms wife and children, who were “ expressly declared to be the assured," and
It is a familiar rule that a construction of a statute is to he preferred that shall give full significance to all the words thereof. It is difficult to construe the phrase “ the person whose life is assured,” found" in section 1 of the act of 1877, and occurring again in section 2 of the same act, to wit, “to the person whose life is assured by the policy,” without declaring that the Legislature, by the use of those words, intended to prohibit insurance companies from declaring a forfeiture until such notice had been given to the person upon whose life the policy of insurance had been issued.
In Baxter v. Brooklyn Life Ins. Co. (29 N. Y. St. Repr. 592) O’Brien, J., said : “ The purpose of the statute referred to was to establish a rule which would preserve to the assured the benefit of premiums paid and to prevent the lapse of policies of life insurance without ample notice and an opportunity to save them from forfeiture by payment of premiums due within the specified time, and at the same time secure to the company, in case it is obliged to pay, the full amount of the premiums which the policy calls for.”
The evidence in the case before us discloses that Nathan M. Rowe had been accustomed to pay the premiums upon the policy that was issued upon his life. No valid reason can he suggested why it ivas not competent for the Legislature, in accordance Avitli the usual practice in insurance cases, to provide that the notice to he given should be addressed to the party Avliose life is assured. It is generally understood that the person Avhose life is assured, more frequently than any other person, pays the premium to procure, as Avell as the premium to continue in force, the policy issued upon his life. After the notice was receiAred by the assured,; evidently he, for some fen years, omitted to pay any premiums upon the policy. As we have seen, the policy expressly provided that in case the premium Avas not paid, that the policy “ shall cease and be null, void and of-no effect.” In 1892, by chapter 690 of the laAvs of that year, the general provisions of the Insurance Law Avere revised, and chapter 341 of the Laws of 1876 and chapter 321 of the Laws of 1877 were repealed,
The foregoing views lead to the conclusion that the policy in suit lapsed in 1883, and that when the party whose life was assured died in 1893 the policy was not in force.
(2) We are not satisfied upon the evidence that any waiver took place, and, therefore, the policy was null and void after the lapse of time mentioned in the notice served by the defendant upon the person whose life was assured.
In Wyman v. P. M. L. I. Co. (119 N. Y. 274) it appeared “ that the default was occasioned by the acts ” of an agent of the company. The evidence in the case before us fails to establish that the default was by reason of any act or influence of the defendant, and the case, therefore, differs very essentially from the Wyman case.
The case in hand differs very essentially from Brink v. Hanover Fire Insurance Company (80 N. Y. 108). In that case it was said that the facts disclosed are significant of “ an implied admission on the part of the company that the plaintiffs had not forfeited the policy.” We think the evidence in the case in hand is insufficient to support a finding of waiver.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.