The plaintiff insurance company has come into equity asking for reformation of the annuity provisions of a life insurance policy on the basis of mistake. Thirty years after issuance of the original policy it tendered the defendant insured an amended policy which he refused. On trial, the chancellor found that the amended policy represented the true insuring agreement originally entered into by the parties and allowed reformation. The defendant appealed.
At the instance of his mother, the defendant, when nineteen, submitted an application to an agent of the plaintiff for a life insurance policy. The plan requested in the application was one insuring the defendant’s life for five thousand dollars, with an annuity at age 65 for five hundred dollars a year for the balance of his life, ten years certain. When the application was accepted and the policy prepared in the home office of the plaintiff, the correct descriptive information was inserted on the wrong policy form. The printed portion of the form used yielded the correct life insurance contract, but produced an annuity obligation to pay five hundred dollars a month for life, *116 100 months certain. The application was made a part of the policy, by its terms. In accordance with its usual practice, the plaintiff did not retain a copy of the policy itself, but kept a record of the information permitting reproduction of the policy if the occasion demanded.
The premiums were regularly paid on the policy issued in 1931, and about the middle of 1961 the actual policy came into the possession of the defendant for the first time. The semi-annual premiums charged and paid were identical with the prescribed premium for five thousand dollars of life insurance with annuity at age 65 of five hundred dollars annually, with payment for ten years certain. This $40.90 semi-annual premium was applicable only to that policy plan, issued at the defendant’s then age of 19, and no other. The plaintiff had no rate for and did not sell a policy for five thousand dollars life insurance with an annuity at age 65 of five hundred dollars monthly, payment for one hundred months certain.
After being told by a third party that his policy could not have the provisions he claimed for it, the defendant took the policy to the office of the defendant’s agent that sold the policy and made inquiry. Shortly thereafter, in late 1961, the amended policy was tendered. There is no evidence that the defendant then knew that his original policy provided for an annuity payment larger than he was entitled to in view of the premium paid and the life insurance coverage purchased.
Vermont law, like that of many jurisdictions, imposes upon the party seeking reformation the duty of establishing, beyond a reasonable doubt, the true agreement to which the contract in question is to be reformed.
deNeergaard
v.
Dillingham,
The only agreement that the plaintiff and defendant made was for $5,000 insurance with annuity of $500 per year at attained age 65, 10 years certain.
Adequate evidentiary support for all findings of fact, including this one, made in this case by the chancellor, appears from the transcript of the evidence.
Indeed, in his appeal the defendant does not question any of the findings relating to the facts already recited. His principal attack
*117
on the decision relates to the chancellor’s finding that the mistake in issuing the policy furnished the defendant came about through no fault of the defendant, but solely through the negligence and inattention of the plaintiff. This, says the defendant, is a finding of unilateral mistake, and therefore, under the authority of
New York Life Insurance Co.
v.
Kimball,
Since that case was only the first of four trips to this Court for the parties in the course of this litigation (see
In the first New York Life Insurance Co. v. Kimball case in 93 Vt., Justice Miles commented on p. 153, just ahead of his definition of the classes of mistakes, “The law of a case cannot be determined from a brief quotation of portions of the opinion separate from the facts of a case, especially where the law upon the subject has many exceptions, as in the subject now under consideration.” This thought is particularly applicable to cases dealing with mistake and reformation, including the New York Life Insurance Co. v. Kimball cases.
That view is echoed in 3 Corbin, Contracts, §597, p. 583, (1960) in the following language and citing all of the New York Life Insurance Co. v. Kimball cases:
“Cases involving mistake are difficult of classification because of the number and variety of factors to be considered. These factors are found in many combinations. The citation of authorities for a rule stated in general terms is made perilous by this *118 fact. It is equally perilous, and it may be positively harmful, to construct a rule of law, unless it is so- limited as to be applicable to a particular combination of many factors. If this exact combination does not recur, what we really have is merely one precedent, and not a rule.”
One variety of classification is suggested by the difference between a subsequent erroneous recording or transcription of a contract already in fact agreed to by the parties, and a mistake or misunderstanding occurring while the parties are seeking to arrive at or believe they are arriving at an agreement. In the first case an agreement already exists, while in the second considerations of mutuality, together with knowledge of and responsibility for the mistake, weigh heavily in determining whether or not an enforceable agreement, or a right to relief, exists. Unfortunately, language appropriate to the second situation has sometimes been transposed to the first, where it may be both inappropriate and misleading. See 3 Corbin, Contracts §608 (1960).
Where, as here, an antecedent contract has been established by the requisite measure of proof, equity will act to bring the erroneous writing into conformity with the true agreement.
Burlington B. & L. Ass’n
v.
Cummings,
Other courts have exercised the equitable power of reformation in similar cases. In New England Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Jones, D.C., 1 Fed. Supp. 984, a clerical mistake in the policy was discovered after the death of the insured when a double indemnity benefit claim for accidental death was made. The pol^r provided for double indemnity on the basis of the face amount of the policy, but in the blank space stating the obligation the figure $5,000.00 had been entered. This considerably increased the double indemnity figure above that computed on the face amount of the policy. Premiums had been assessed and paid on the basis of the correct figure. Reformation was allowed.
*119
In
Stamen
v.
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
41 N. J. Super 135,
A leading and frequently cited case dealing with this problem is
Columbian National Life Insurance Co.
v.
Black,
Each of these cases speak of the reformation as justified either because there was “mutuality” of mistake or because the policyholder knew or ought to have known that there was a variation between the policy described in the accepted application and the one handed the insured. To insist on enforcement of the contract once knowledge of the error is acquired by the insured is held to be unconscionable, and classified as then a unilateral mistake known to the other party, which supports reformation. If the mistake exists in the writing unknown to both parties, it is classified as “mutual” and reformation is allowed.
Since these cases support reformation irrespective of the insured’s knowledge of the existence of the mistake conferring a benefit on him beyond the bargain, talk of “mutual” or “unilateral” mistake seems to be of little help in this kind of situation.
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.
v.
Henriksen, 6
Ill. App.2d 127,
If, in this kind of case, talk of “mutuality” of mistake is unnecessary, much confusion can be avoided. Invariably, two mistakes are involved. There is a natural tendency to concentrate on the making of the clerical error in the writing as the critical mistake involved, when the true crucial error is the mistaken belief of the parties about the correctness of the written instrument. When a test of “mutuality” is applied to the clerical error, the confusion is compounded, since the concern of the court should be with the belief or knowledge of the parties. The concept of “mutuality” adds nothing to the right to a remedy in this type of case. It is important as a concept in other, different, reformation situations. Applying to all the common linguistic label of “mutuality” gives to unlike situations an illusion of similarity. This invites the misapplication of principles, sound for one type of situation, to a different type, for which they are unsound.
Accordingly, we hold that where there has been established beyond a reasonable doubt a specific contractual agreement between parties, and a subsequent erroneous rendition of the terms of the agreement in a material particular, the party penalized by the error is entitled to reformation, if there has been no- prejudicial change of position by the other party while ignorant of the mistake. If such change of position can equitably be taken into account and adjusted for in the decree, reformation may be possible even then.
Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Baltimore
v.
Metzger,
Change of position is raised as an issue by the defendant. It cannot be said that the defendant acted in reliance on the terms of the policy which, he testified, were not exactly known by him until he received the policy in 1961. But he argues that the mere passage of time, in this case 30 years, should overcome the chan
*121
cellor’s finding to the contrary and establish a change of position. But clearly this aging process was inevitable, and not a prejudicial act induced by the mistaken term in the policy. The defendant has not demonstrated that he was prejudiced by the existence of the error.
Ward
v.
Lyman, supra,
Reformation was properly granted.
Decree affirmed.
