142 A. 221 | Pa. | 1928
Argued April 17, 1928. The defendant company executed, on January 6, 1911, a policy of insurance for $3,000 on the life of Julia Lynch, in which her daughter Katherine Sipp, the present plaintiff, was named as beneficiary. In the application, the mother stated her age to be fifty, and on this basis the annual premium was fixed. Prior to her death on March 7, 1919, she borrowed from the company $423, *295 and this sum was not repaid during lifetime. After the decease of Mrs. Lynch, the beneficiary named made prompt demand for payment of the insurance, and, upon failure of defendant to comply, brought this suit. The defense interposed was a denial of liability for the full sum of $3,000, claiming that the insured had misrepresented her date of birth when the contract was made, being at that time in fact 65, and, under the terms of the policy, the beneficiary was therefore entitled to such amount only as could have been purchased for the premium charged, had a correct statement of the facts been given, a total of $1,585. After deducting the loan from this amount the balance was tendered in satisfaction of further claim. From the order, discharging a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, plaintiff has appealed.
The complaint here made is directed to the refusal to enter a summary judgment, and the action of the court below must be sustained unless it appears to have been based on a plain error of law: Yentis v. Mills,
The policy upon the life of Mrs. Lynch provided for the payment of a fixed sum at death, less indebtedness due the company, in case the annual premiums named were paid. This, with the application attached, in which the insured represented her age to be fifty, constituted, by express stipulation, the entire contract between the parties. By the former, it was provided that: "This policy shall be incontestable, except for nonpayment of *296 premiums, after one year from its date," subject, however, to the following condition set forth under the same heading: "If the age of the insured has been misstated, the amount payable hereunder shall be such a sum as the premium actually paid would have purchased at the correct age." The affidavit of defense averred the age of Mrs. Lynch was sixty-five when the contract was entered into, and, under "the practice, rules and custom" of the company, the amount of premium actually charged and paid would have purchased insurance to the amount of $1,585 only, had the true facts been set forth.
Prior to the Act of June 23, 1885 (P. L. 134), a misrepresentation as to age, though sincerely made, would have been ground for forfeiture of the policy (U. B. Mut. Aid Society v. White,
It is first insisted that there was a waiver of the right to complain of the misstatement as to date of birth, as the policy is made incontestable after one year. Under the same heading there appears a limitation of liability in providing for the adjustment of the sum payable in case of error. If such stipulation did not appear, it might well be that the statutory provision for correction could not be enforced, for the parties could agree that no defense whatsoever should be interposed, and, unless in contravention of some rule of public policy, the contract would control. Such was the situation disclosed in Central Trust Co. v. Fidelity M. L. I. Co.,
The incontestability clause and the one fixing the amount of recovery in case of misstatement of age are not inconsistent. The like question has been the subject of discussion when there appeared a stipulation against liability in case of suicide (Starck v. Union Life Ins. Co.,
It is urged, however, that the defendant is without power in the present instance to take advantage of the wrong of the insured, since the policy and the attached application fail on their face to set forth the amount of insurance purchasable for the premium fixed by one aged sixty-five, and that this sum cannot be determined by extrinsic evidence, proof of the tables in force definitely determining this fact, or "the practice, rules and custom of the company." This contention rests upon appellant's construction of the Act of May 11, 1881 (P. L. 20), which safeguarded the interests of the insured by directing that, to be effective, limitations of liability must appear in the policy or papers appended and be made part thereof. This statute provided that "the application of the insured, or the constitution, by-laws, or other rules of the company," should be affixed to the contract, "and unless so attached and accompanying the policy, no such application, constitution orby-laws shall be received in evidence, in any controversy between the parties to, or interested in, the said policy, nor shall such application or by-laws be considered a part of the policy or contract between such parties." This statute, in force when the present agreement was made, though requiring that the "rules" of the company shall be appended, does not provide that proof of their contents should not be received, if there was a failure to affix them, and there was no statutory requirement that they should be, as a condition to their admissibility as proof, until 1921; General Insurance Law, June 1, 1921, P. L. 682, 701, section 318. This last named legislation has no application to the contract before us. *299
Since the constitutionality of the Act of 1881 was upheld (Hebb v. Kittanning Ins. Co.,
Appellant relies upon Mitchell v. Pa. Mut. L. Ins. Co.,
The Act of 1881 was intended to protect against some wrongful concealment by the company of a condition affecting liability. That of 1885 made it liable even though misled by the insured, if he acted in good faith, and later legislation provided likewise, even though the honesty of the insured was not made evident. Both the contract and the statutes provided for readjustment, and no provision for attaching tables to meet possible contingencies, arising from mistakes of the insured himself, appears. The legislation in force, when this contract was made, did not prohibit the admission in evidence of "rules" of the company, not part of the constitution or by-laws, and there is therefore no bar in the present case against showing, on trial, "the practice, rules and custom" to fix, by definite mathematical calculation, the amount of insurance purchasable for a given sum at a certain age. The proof here suggested by the affidavit of defense would not fairly be held to come within the meaning of the statute, as a regulation limiting liability, but is merely a tabulation showing results based on determined figures as to age and premium paid.
To hold the contrary would either negative the provision for adjustment in case of misstatement of date of birth, as provided by statute, and since 1921 necessarily embodied in all contracts of insurance, or would make necessary the affixing to each policy of a calculation indicating the amount of insurance purchasable for the premium designated covering each year from that named as correct by the insured to the possible end of life. It would further require, for the company's protection, the *301 annexing of a tabulation, for each of these periods, of the loan and surrender values, as well as the extended insurance allowable in case of defaults. Though the preparation of such document would be possible, it is not practicable, and would tend to confuse the insured, when the statutory purpose was to protect him against his own mistakes. The issuance of such contracts and attached exhibits, to meet the contingency of possible errors, honest or otherwise, of the insured, could not have been in contemplation of the legislature when we consider the act was passed for his protection against the company's possible wrongdoing. The amount payable in case of misstatement of date of birth is determinable by fixed and definite standards, not subject to shifting or evasion by the company, and proof of tables showing these results is admissible, where made necessary by the insured's incorrect representation of the facts. It follows that the affidavit in the present case presents a meritorious defense, and summary judgment for the plaintiff was properly refused.
The order appealed from is affirmed.