259 N.W. 281 | Mich. | 1935
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *274 Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada on October 5, 1925, wrote insurance on the lives of Abe Allen and Lukash Cap in the sum of $25,000, payable to Hand Baking Company, a copartnership, as beneficiary, and on January 6, 1926, issued a second policy on the same lives in the sum of $12,500, payable to the same beneficiary. Lukash Cap died August 2, 1927, the cause given in the certificate of death as "hemorrhage following ruptured gastric ulcer; contributory; medical." The death occurred within 17 hours after he was "wrestling" or "struggling" with Elson, in which encounter Elson "squeezed to the bench" his insured partner Cap.
Both policies contained the following provision:
"3. Incontestability. This policy is issued in consideration of the representations and agreements contained in the written application therefor, and together with such application, a copy of which is attached hereto and made a part hereof, shall constitute the entire contract between the parties hereto, and shall be incontestable after the policy has been in force during the lifetime of the assured for a period of two years from the date of issue, except for nonpayment of premiums. All statements made *276 by the assured shall, in the absence of fraud, be deemed representations and not warranties; and no such statement shall void the policy unless it is contained in the said application, a copy of which is attached to this policy when issued."
The certificate of copartnership of defendant company which bore the date of August 30, 1924, was not filed until September 15, 1925, that being the day following the one upon which the application for the first policy was executed by Cap and Elson. This certificate names the copartners as Charles Elson, Rubin Goodstein, Abraham Allen and Lukash Cap. Cap signed both the certificate and application by his mark.
The mortality among the partners of Charles Elson was rather high. Federowitz, a partner, died March 21, 1922, at the age of 33, of either lobar pneumonia or delirium tremens, with $27,500 of life insurance payable to Elson, Goodstein and Allen, for which application had been made on February 25, 1921. Stanislaus Bogacki, another partner, died at the age of 44 from a cause given in his death certificate as "fall down stairs in home, fracture of skull, alcoholism," with $15,000 of insurance payable to the firm, the policy having been issued only three months after the death of Federowitz. Bogacki lived less than three years after his policy was issued. The record is silent as to Allen and Goodstein; all we know is they did not appear as witnesses in the instant case.
After the death, of Cap, plaintiff refused to pay the amount of the policies tendered repayment of the premiums, with interest, and demanded a return of all policies held by defendants. This tender and demand being refused, the insurance company filed a bill in equity on January 3, 1928, praying cancellation, *277 alleging fraud and false representations, and upon filing a bond in the sum of $40,000, secured an injunction restraining actions at law on the policies. Defendants answered and by cross-bill prayed that the policies be declared valid and that plaintiff be ordered to pay the full amount claimed to be due. During the trial plaintiff withdrew from its bill all policies of insurance except those on the joint lives of Cap and Allen. Defendants appeal from a decree which granted plaintiff the relief sought and which dismissed defendants' cross-bill.
The evidence supports the finding of the trial judge that Cap was a drunkard at the time of the application and continued to be one until his death. Mrs. Krowiak, who had known him since his childhood in Poland, summed up the matter when she testified, "he only didn't drink at the time he didn't have anything to buy it with." Defendants' chief witness Elson, and the one most interested in the litigation, somewhat reluctantly corroborated the testimony of Mrs. Krowiak and the other disinterested witnesses as to Cap's habits. The testimony of former employees of defendant company precludes any possibility of a lack of defendants' knowledge on this point. They must have known Cap was a drunkard and yet Elson signed an application in which he declared as to the applicant:
"That the life to be assured is now and usually in sound health; and agrees that this declaration, with the answers to be given by the life to be assured to the medical examiner, shall be the basis of the policy," etc.
Cap, in answer to the questions of the examiner, represented his health as perfect and in one application stated that his use of wine, spirituous or malt liquors was confined to "not over a glass weekly" *278
and in the other to "a glass of beer occasionally." The transactions were, in the words of the trial judge, "conceived in fraud," in that the habits of the insured were misrepresented to the company. The misrepresentations materially affected the result and it is not necessary to show they were intentional. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12444, andKrajewski v. Western Southern Life Ins. Co.,
While in equity the scope of the review of findings of fact is quite broad, State v. Venice of America Land Co.,
"The story of Cap as disclosed by the testimony is at best sordid and tragic. Doubt can hardly exist as to his dissolute habits, nor as to the fact that he could have been of but little use to any business."
The evidence offered warrants the conclusion of the court below that Cap never was a real partner in the Hand Baking Company and that it had no insurable interest in his life. The mere existence of a legal partnership does not establish an insurable interest. As stated in United Security Life Ins. Trust Co. v. Brown,
"To sustain a contract of this character, it must further appear that there is a real concern in the life of the party named, whose death would be the cause of substantial loss to those who are named as beneficiaries. This does not follow the cessation of ordinary service, but arises where the success of the business is dependent on the continued life of the employee."
See, also, Mutual Benefit Ass'n of Michigan v. Hoyt,
46 Mich. 473 ; Warnock v. Davis,104 U.S. 775 ; Connecticut Mutual LifeIns. Co. v. Luchs,108 U.S. 498 (2 Sup. Ct. 949 );Wurzburg v. New York Life *279 Ins. Co.,140 Tenn. 59 (203 S.W. 332 , L.R.A. 1918 E, 566).
We have already indicated that the copartnership certificate was not filed until the day after the signing of the first application, and have commented on the absence of testimony by the partners except Elson. We find it impossible to hold that the partnership could have suffered so substantial a loss upon the death of Cap as to prefer his continued services to the insurance money. Everything points to the opposite conclusion. He had nothing to do with the management of the business; he was not an experienced baker; he had been employed in a stone quarry previous to his connection with the firm; his duties, when sufficiently sober, were to sweep the floors and tend the fires; he paid no money for a partnership interest valued at $20,000, but gave a note for $3,000 which was not produced at the trial; he had no interest in the firm real estate; Elson said he drew $50 a week but this was disproved by the bank records which also failed to show him as a partner. His landlady testified in answer to defendants' question:
"Didn't he tell you at that time that 'Now that I am a partner I don't have to go to work; I can work whenever I want to?'
"No, he said this to me, 'That he was not a partner, only a sweeper, and they had him insured only for this reason, to get money after his death.' "
Assuming that Elson was truthful when he said he took Cap in as a partner to avoid labor troubles, that would not be sufficient to show an insurable interest. Nor did Cap by countersigning the application procure the insurance himself. Elson signed the application, and paid the premiums for the copartnership. He was the moving spirit in the transaction and Cap was merely the stupid tool through which the fraud was perpetrated. *280
Defendants object to evidence introduced by plaintiff as to the insurance and death of Federowitz and Bogacki through which defendants collected large sums of money. They admit, however, that similar acts of misconduct may be shown where, as here, a fraudulent intent is alleged. See Beebe v. Knapp,
Mr. Justice STEERE, speaking for the court in Krolik v. Lang,
"It is an elementary rule that much latitude may be allowed in admission of circumstantial evidence in cases where fraud is charged (14 Am. Eng. Enc. Law, p. 195; 20 Cyc. p. 110), 'and no rigid rule of evidence can be applied to measure the admissibility of circumstances, for they arise out of the condition, relation, conduct, and declarations of the parties, and those are infinitely diversified.' "
It is reasonable to infer that the Federowitz loot was probably used in part to insure Bogacki, and the only reason the Bogacki money was not available to pay for the Cap insurance was the delay occasioned by the litigation inBogacki v. Great-West *281 Life Assuranee Co.,
As to the $25,000 policy issued October 5, 1925, defendant urges that since this action was not brought until January 3, 1928, plaintiff's right to assert fraud is barred by the incontestability clause, more than two years having elapsed since the issuance of the policy. Plaintiff's counsel argue that this provision, though it bars the assertion of such fraud as would otherwise make the policy voidable, has no application in this case since, because of intentional fraud and the lack of insurable interest, the policy is completely void. In view of our recent determination of this matter in the Bogacki Case,supra, we are bound to hold the contention of no avail. Mr. Justice WIEST there said:
"The shade between actual fraud and a violation of public policy in life insurance contract relations is not so pronounced as to justify application of the statute to the one and not to the other. The statute carries the only permissible exceptions to its bar and *282 its construction falls within the rule that the inclusion of an exception excludes everything else."
Plaintiff also argues that the incontestability provision is not applicable here because Cap died August 2, 1927, two months before the end of the two-year period. The clause in the policy is substantially in the words of the statute (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12427), which requires that it be inserted, the essential part of which reads:
"Shall be incontestable after it shall have been in force during the lifetime of the insured for two years from its date," etc.
The language of the amended statute requires that plaintiff's contention be sustained. We considered and denied the same contention in Becker v. Illinois Life Ins. Co.,
"Shall be incontestable after two years from its date," etc.
It was amended to its present form by Act No. 63, Pub. Acts 1923. The almost uniform holding is that where the provision requires that the policy shall have been "in force" or "in force during the lifetime of the insured" for a certain period, the death of the insured within the period forever bars its completion. Jefferson Standard Life Ins. Co. v. McIntyre, 285 Fed. 570; Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Kennedy (C.C.A.),
In Thomas v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
"In the policies before us, however, the incontestable clause is materially different in text and terms. They are to be incontestable after they have been in force for a period of two years from date of issue except for nonpayment of premiums. Ere that period elapsed, Thomas had died, and the obligation of the policies was thereby matured and transformed into a debt due from defendant to the beneficiaries, subject to whatever valid defenses could be effectively offered thereto. It is rather obvious, we think, that this incontestable clause contemplated that the insured should be alive and in good standing with the insurance company by payment of the requisite premiums regularly for the two-year period."
In seeming anticipation of our conclusion, defendants argue that even if we should hold, in ordinary cases, that the death of the insured before the expiration of the period bars application of the clause, we cannot do so here as the policy is a joint one insuring the lives of both Cap and Allen and Allen *284 is still alive. This argument is an empty one since the full amount of the policy became payable on the death of either. When Cap died, the policy was no longer "in force" within the meaning of the statute.
Waiver is asserted by reason of plaintiff's acceptance of premiums in October, 1926, and January, 1927, although it refused to issue additional insurance in April, 1926, after receiving an unfavorable report from investigators; and also because of the claim that the statute groups the lack of insurable interest with other types of fraud. Mr. Justice COOLEY in Agricultural Ins. Co. v. Montague,
"If the instruction was correct, it is manifest that any person may obtain insurance upon property without any right in it whatsoever; he has but to disclose the facts, and the policy, though only a wager policy, will be as legal as any other. But such a doctrine is at war with the fundamental principles of insurance, which require that a person shall have an insurable interest before he can insure: a policy issued when there is no such interest is void, and it is immaterial that it is taken in good faith and with full knowledge. The policy of the law does not admit of such insurance, however willing the parties may be to enter into it. The doctrine of waiver has obviously nothing to do with the case."
See, also, Hirsch v. City of New York Ins. Co.,
Furthermore, defendants' proofs fail to establish that they were led to believe plaintiff had waived the fraudulent misrepresentations by their acceptance of the premiums. Defendants rely on New England Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. LeVey,
"Waiver by acceptance is not based upon contract. It is that the company is estopped to insist on conditions of the contract inconsistent with unconditional acceptance of the premiums."
Upon receiving a report from the Retail Credit Company that Cap was not a desirable risk, plaintiff immediately notified the manager of its Detroit office. Manager Owen, reluctant to lose the business, suggested that an alternative report be obtained from R. G. Dun Company. This was done and as the investigator for R. G. Dun Company secured his information through an interview with Elson, *286 the report was very favorable. Plaintiff then obtained an alternative report from the Retail Credit Company which confirmed their first report. The evidence of fraud confronting the plaintiff was conflicting, and if, as plaintiff claims, they doubted the reliability of the Retail Credit Company report, Elson himself was the cause of that doubt. Though plaintiff did not know Elson was the source of R. G. Dun Company's information, the following quotation seems applicable:
"As between himself and Converse, Blumrich had fully discharged his duty by making the inquiry; and the former will not be heard to claim that Blumrich should have received and acted upon the prior information, instead of the positive statements made by himself to the contrary. When one seeks the best authority to ascertain the truth of rumors, and is there misled, the person misleading him can hardly be allowed to support rights by insisting that he should still be chargeable with the reports which he had endeavored in vain to verify."Converse v. Blumrich,
Defendants' argument, that plaintiff is not entitled to equitable relief because of unclean hands and the other reasons assigned, must be rejected, for, as said by Mr. Justice WIEST:
"Equity looks at the whole situation and grants or withholds relief as good conscience dictates." Thill v. Danna,
In Hess v. Bowen, 154 C.C.A. 417 (241 Fed. 659), speaking of equitable maxims, it is said:
"Nor are these principles and rules, and this practice hard, fast, or without exception. They are rather advisory than mandatory, and the application of the rules and of their exceptions to each particular case as it arises is still intrusted to the conscience *287 of the chancellor. Yet these principles * * * serve to inform the intellect and enlighten the conscience, and by them the judicial discretion of the court must be guided."
The court below required plaintiff as a condition of cancellation of the policies to return the premiums with interest to the date of tender. Defendants say that plaintiff's tender was defective and therefore that interest should be figured to the date of judgment. Plaintiff's tender was defective, they say, because it was of premiums, of all policies issued to the partnership and demand for surrender of all policies, whereas by this action, only the policies on the lives of Allen and Cap are ordered canceled. Perhaps defendants are right that a tender which is too broad is the same as no tender. Brink v. Freeoff,
The court permitted plaintiff on December 9, 1933, to tax the cost of the bond which was required before the issuance of the injunction which restrained all actions at law. Defendants say that since no action at law was pending, the statute, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14350, did not require a bond and that such costs may not be taxed. Plaintiff says the bond "is required by law" and falls within Court Rule No. 5, § 7 (1933). The rule in question not being in effect at the time the bond was executed such costs are not taxable.
The decree is affirmed, with costs to plaintiff, excepting such costs as were taxed with respect to the bond.
POTTER, C.J., and NELSON SHARPE, NORTH, FEAD, WIEST, BUTZEL, and EDWARD M. SHARPE, JJ., concurred. *288