16 F. 650 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1883
The court is now satisfied that it should have charged the jury, on the facts of this case, to find a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount of the policy less the deferred premium notes, and this ' without regard to the value of the leasehold, either at the date of the policy or the death of the life-assured. Recognizing the immense difference between that immeasurable and enduring insurable interest which a wife or child may have in the life-assured, and that computable interest of a creditor, or other like stranger, the court hesitated at the trial to apply to this ease the principle in its fullest extent of the case of the Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Schaefer, 94 U. S. 457, and took the most favorable view of the law that was possible for the defendant company. But it was an error of which the defendant cannot complain; and since, on the proof, the jury found the value of the leasehold .at the date of the policy to have been as much or more than the $2,000 called for by the policy, it was an immaterial error to the plaintiff. If, however, the jury had found the leasehold of less value, thereby reducing the plaintiffs recovery, I should, in the view now taken of the law, grant the plaintiff a new trial.
There is no fundamental difference in principle, but one of only an immaterial degree, great as that degree may be, between the case referred to and this. The supreme court had previously, in the case of Ins. Co. v. Bailey, 13 Wall. 616, indorsed the leading English case of Dalby v. India & London L. Assurance Co. 15 C. B. (80 E. C. L.) 365; S. C. 2 Big. Ins. Cas. 371; overruling Godsall v. Boldero, 9 East, 72, S. C. 2 Smith, Lead. Cas. 292, upon the exploded doctrine of which the defense in this case must ultimately rest; and in other cases fully disapprove of the notion that a contract of life insurance is one of indemnity. There can be no question now that even in Cammack v. Lewis, 15 Wall. 643, the doubt there intimated would be resolved against any defense by the insurer like that made in this
Hence, conceding the contract of life insurance to be one of indemnity, it does not appear that, under all circumstances, the recovery must bo limited to what may bo, under a process of paring to the core, the actual loss of the assured. And this consideration may reduce the dispute on the subject between some of the writers to one of mere words. May, Ins. §§ 7, 8, 115, 116, 117; 16 Amer. Law Reg. (N. S.) 399, note; Bliss, Ins. 42, and note.
Uniting, however, the doctrine of a public policy against wagering contracts of insurance to that of the doctrine that all insurance is indemnity against the loss incurred by the assured, the defense made in this case is easily deducible, whether the prohibition against gambling contracts is found in a statute, as in England, or in the common law, as in most of our American states. It prevailed in Godsall v. Boldero, supra, but was subsequently discarded, as we have seen, and upon the soundest reasons. In the house of lords, recently, the defense was called “a shabby thing,” and it. is said the companies, from the necessities of their business, repudiated it. Burnand v. Rodocanachi, 7 App. Cas. 333, 340; May, Ins. § 116. We have in Tennessee no such statute as 14 Geo. III, c. 48, (May, Ins. 122, note,) though there seems to be one like it in New York, where the defendant company belongs. Bliss, Ins. 27. And I am not aware that it has ever been decided in Tennessee whether we have a common law on the subject different from the common law of England, where ultimately it was settled that wagering policies were not
Whether the courts of Tennessee would find the common law of England which we adopted to be against wagering policies, as some of our courts have done, or that there was no common, law against them, as others have done, and as was done in Ireland, and that, in the absence of a statute, they are all valid, may be doubtful; or whether this matter is to be governed by the law of New York, where the defendant company belongs, may be doubtful. Conceding all that may be asked on this subject, and it will be found, from the cases'already cited, and others belonging to the class of debtor and creditor, pure and simple, or, like this case, in more or less close analogy to that class, which may be traced through the citations, that wherever there is, to begin with, an adequate insurable interest, which demonstrates that the parties are not seeking to evade the prohibition against gambling policies, whether we go by a statutory or common-law prohibition, the insurer must pay according to the contract, and it is no concern of his, unless the policy provides against these misadventures, that there may have been, before the death occurred, a diminution or entire cessation of insurable interest. See the cases cited in Preston v. Neele, 12 Ch. Div. 760; 1 Big. Ins. Cas. 159; 3 Big. Ins. Cas. 156, 255; 4 Big. Ins. Cas. 162, 614. The surplus, if any, may or not, according to the circumstances in-each case, go to the personal”representative of the life-assured, when the remaining interest of the assured is satisfied; but it is now, since God-sail v. Boldero was overruled, never a defense to the insurer that the interest of the' policy-holder has lessened or ceased.
Our public policy goes no further than to prevent unseemly, if not dangerous, speculation in the duration of human life, and has no other qoricern with the contract than this. It does not undertake, with apprehensive nicety, to measure the loss or the insurable interest, lest the assured get more than he loses, and be thus tempted to promote the death, that' is so important a factor in the problem. It does not undertake to protect the parties on either side against bargains that turn out to be unprofitable when death steps in to make
This case is very much like Law v. London Indisputable Life Policy Co. 1 Kay & J. 223; S. C. 3 Eq. 338; and 2 Big. Ins. Cas. 404, except that there the interest was founded in a legacy, while here it is based on a leasehold, and there the insurance was for a limited term, while here it was for the whole life; and this case illustrates the justice of either discarding altogether the notion of indemnity for actual losses, as the law does, or in measuring the loss, to take into account the premiums paid, and a fair return of them, with interest and profits, less cost of insurance, according to the scheme of life insurance; for the plaintiff here has actually paid in premiums nearly as much $s the amount of the policy, to say nothing of the rental value of the femainder of the leasehold interest.
Overrule the motion.