Spratley v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance

74 Ky. 443 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1875

JUDGE LINDSAY

delivered the opinion oe the court.

October 9, 1860, the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company issued to Ann E. Spratley, of Suffolk, Virginia, a life policy for $5,000 upon the life of her husband, Thomas W. Spratley.

Before the annual premium for 1861 fell due the powers of the agent at Suffolk’had been revoked in consequence of the civil war. For that reason said annual premium, and those subsequently falling due, were not paid.

In September, 1863, Thos. W. Spratley died at Petersburg, Virginia. In October, 1872, Mrs. Spratley, through her agents and attorneys, delivered to K. W. Smith, agent for the insurance company at Louisville, Kentucky, proofs of the death of the insured. On the 17th of February, 1873, this action was instituted.

The company relies on numerous defenses; among others, the failure by the assured, within reasonable time, to present *447due notice and proof of death. It also pleads and relies on the statute of limitations.

It is in proof that the limitation to actions on life insurance policies not under seal (as. is the case with this one) is six years in New Jersey, the domicil of the company, and five years in the state of Virginia, where appellant insists that all the stipulations of the contract were to be performed.

Counsel argue that as by the terms of the policy the money is not due and payable until ninety days after due notice and proof of death, limitation does not begin to run until such notice with proof is given to the company. They attempt to assimilate the contract sued on to notes payable on demand.

It seems to us that there is an essential difference between them. In cases of notes payable on demand the debtor is fully advised as to the existence of his debt and of his subsisting obligation to pay it. It is within his power to seek his creditor and discharge himself from liability by paying it. So long as he remains quiet and inactive it is to be presumed that he consents to the inactivity of the creditor, and that the time when the limitation is to begin to run is postponed by the consent of both the parties to the contract. Not so in cases of life insurance. The company has no certain means of ascertaining when, by the death of the insured, its' liability to pay occurs. To remedy this difficulty the contract requires the assured to notify the insurer of the happening of this event. The presumption is conclusive that the parties to the contract intend that this notice shall be given as soon as it is reasonably possible to do so. The insurer has the right, whilst the witnesses are still alive, and the circumstances still fresh in their memories, to investigate the causes of the death in order to ascertain whether or not he is liable to- pay the insurance. In cases of apparently unreasonable delay the assured must present a satisfactory explanation therefor, or else the statute should be held to begin to run within a reasonable time after the death. In *448this case the prevalence of the civil war rendered it impossible to make and present the proof until about the middle of the summer of 1865.

The evidence shows, however, that with reasonable diligence the assured might have been in an attitude to sue by the 1st day of January, 1866. The action was therefore barred in "Virginia under the statute of limitations of that state on the 1st day of January, 1871.

It is claimed, however, that the running of the statute in said state- was suspended by legislative enactment.

On the 2d day of.March, 1866, the Virginia Legislature passed a statute providing that the time intervening between the 17th of April, 1861, and the enactment of the said statute should be excluded from the computation of time within which it was theretofore necessary to commence any action or proceeding. By this act the limitation commenced to run on the 2d of March, 1866, and the action was barred on the 2d of March, 1871.

But it is claimed that the statute was still further suspended by an act passed on the same day, vrhich deprived creditors of the right to enforce the collection of certain of their debts until the 1st day of January, 1868, and provided that the time during which said act should remain in force should be excluded from the computation of time within which any action or proceeding was required to be commenced.

Foreign debtors were excluded from the operation of this act. The first section of this act was afterward continued in force until the 1st day of January, 1869. We need not determine whether this amendatory act also continued in force the section of the act of March 2, 1866, suspending during its operation the statute of limitations.

Appellee was a foreign debtor at the time both the original and amendatory statutes were passed, and therefore was not affected by them.

*449It may be that' the laws of "Virginia gave to foreign insurance companies doing business in that state before the war “a sort of local existence,” as was held by a bare majority of the Virginia Court of Appeals in the case of Manhattan Life Insurance Company v. Warwick (20 Grattan, 614). But if this be true it is equally true that the course pursued by Virginia in the war between the states effectually uprooted and destroyed the “sort of local existence” this appellee had in that state.

Its domicil was within a state adhering to the Federal Government, and from the time hostilities commenced between Virginia and the Federal Government this appellee could not comply' with the laws of Virginia, and therefore without fault upon its part - it lost its quasi local habitation in that state, and as matter of necessity assumed toward Virginia and her laws its original character of a foreign corporation.

It was therefore', so far as this record shows, a foreign debtor in March, 1866, and in no wise affected by the provisions of the .act of the 2d of that month.

But in addition to all this the policy of insurance was a New Jersey contract, to be performed, so far as the payment of the insurance was concerned, in New Jersey. The company ivas expelled from Virginia by force, and was under no obligation to send agents to that state after hostilities ceased, either to solicit further business or to put it in the power of Virginia creditors to sue it in the courts of that state.

The action was barred by the laws of both New Jersey and Virginia, and the court below was bound to instruct the jury that it could not therefore be maintained in this state. Wherefore the instruction to find for the defendant did not prejudice the substantial rights of the appellant.

Judgment affirmed.

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