200 N.Y. 320 | NY | 1911
Lead Opinion
This action was brought on a policy of insurance issued by the appellant, whereby, amongst other things, it agreed to pay to the insured a certain sum each week during sickness. The policy is not set forth in full, but the complaint alleges that it contained "A provision that written notice from the insured or his representative stating the time, place and nature of injury, or death, or commencement of sickness, must be mailed to the Secretary of the Company at *322 its home office * * * within ten days after the date of such injury, death or commencement of such sickness, as conditions precedent to recovery."
Said complaint, after further alleging that the respondent, on November 13, 1904, and thereafter, was sick for the period of a month to a degree and in a manner which brought him within the terms of the policy, contains this important allegation: "And the plaintiff further alleges that during the early part of said sickness he was delirious and unable to remember that he had said policy of insurance, and had wholly forgotten that fact until about the 10th day of December, 1904, when he caused notice to be sent to the defendant of such sickness," and the defendant repudiated liability because of failure to serve notice of sickness in accordance with the terms of said policy.
The question which has been argued is whether or not the insured was relieved from compliance with the terms of his policy requiring service of notice as above stated by reason of mental and physical inability to prepare and serve the same within the time specified.
This question is presented to us by means of a procedure somewhat out of the ordinary course. Originally appellant seems to have answered in the case but it appears by stipulation subsequently made that this answer was withdrawn and the case "submitted on the facts stated in the complaint as upon application for judgment." Therefore, the query practically is whether the complaint sets forth a cause of action in view of the facts appearing therein concerning the failure of respondent to serve or cause to be served the notice which has been mentioned.
There is no dispute that the insurer might and did make it a substantial provision of its contract of insurance and a condition precedent to recovery that it should within a specified time be notified of any sickness of the insured for which he expected to make a claim under his policy. This was a condition which was not only lawful but which we can readily see was only a reasonable and suitable protection to the company *323 against fraudulent claims. It is, however, urged that an insured might be and in this case was relieved from compliance with this provision by a physical and mental condition which precluded such compliance by him. Some question is made and fairly arises on the allegations of the complaint whether the insured was delirious and, therefore, unable to remember the terms of his policy of insurance down to the date when he finally did cause notice to be served, but I shall assume for the purpose of this discussion that the complaint does allege such condition and, therefore, such excuse for non-action on his part.
In most cases of possible municipal liability for negligence, statutory provisions require as a condition precedent to recovery that notice of claim shall be served and action commenced within a certain time after the injuries are alleged to have been received, and in actions brought to enforce such liabilities it has been held that physical and mental disability may operate as an excuse for failure on the part of the injured person to act within the time specified by the statute, provided he does act with promptness after the disability has ceased. Sometimes a notice otherwise late has been said under these circumstances to be a substantial compliance with the statute, and at other times it has been written in substance that the statute should not be construed as requiring impossibilities, and, therefore, inability to serve notice should until removed be a sufficient excuse for not serving it. (Walden v. City of Jamestown,
It is to be observed, however, that in these cases the court was dealing with an exaction and burden placed on a claimant without his consent by statute. That is not this case. Here the parties by their free and voluntary action have entered into a contract by which each has assumed certain obligations. The insurance company has agreed to make certain payments on account of sickness, and the assured as a condition precedent to the enforcement of such obligation has agreed to the *324 payment of certain premiums and to the service of the notice in question, which might have been prepared and served by some one else in his behalf if he was incapacitated from personally doing it. All of these provisions and engagements enter into the substance of the contract which respondent is seeking to enforce, and under such circumstances the courts will not relieve either party under the conditions here presented from fulfillment of the engagement which he has voluntarily undertaken. This distinction between obligations imposed on a party by statute and against his will, and those voluntarily assumed by him as a part of a contract, is clearly recognized by the decisions.
In Wheeler v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. (
In Klein v. Insurance Co. (
Kerr on Insurance lays down the rule (p. 451): "The contract of insurance being a voluntary one, the insurers have a right to designate the terms upon which they will become liable for a loss. The insurer and insured can, in the absence of legislative interference, make a contract to their mutual liking, and can insert in it such conditions and agreements as they choose regulating the rights, duties and obligations of each, both before and after loss; providing always that they are not *326
unreasonable or contrary to public policy or the law of the land. And when parties have made their own contract, have agreed upon their own terms and assented to certain conditions, the courts cannot change them and must not permit them to be violated or disregarded. The conditions may seem harsh and useless, but they are the result of the meeting of the minds of parties capable in law of contracting, and if they have not been waived, or if one party has not been prevented from complying by the act of the other, all conditions must be respected and enforced." (See, also, Roehner v. Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co.,
Under the principles asserted in these authorities, and which are not contradicted or overthrown by any of the cases cited in behalf of the respondent, I think that the latter must be held to the terms of the contract which he had voluntarily made, and that having assented to a provision requiring notice of sickness within a certain time as a condition to recovery, he cannot be excused from fulfillment for the reasons alleged, and especially that this is true in view of the fact already mentioned that the notice called for by his contract might have been served by another person if he was disabled from personally so doing.
I recommend that the judgment of the Appellate Division be reversed and the judgment of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in both courts.
Dissenting Opinion
On the 13th day of November, 1904, the plaintiff became sick, and subsequently, and on or about the 15th of the month, he was confined to his house by reason of such sickness and was visited by a legally qualified physician for one month, and was thereafter, during convalesence, disabled from performing business for a period of more than eight months. On the 10th day of December, 1904, he caused notice to be sent to the defendant of such sickness, whose policy of insurance he held for injury, death or sickness. The policy contained a provision to the effect *327 that a written notice from the insured or his representative, stating the time, place and nature of injury or death or commencement of sickness, must be mailed to the secretary of the company at his office in Chicago, Illinois, within ten days after the date of such injury, death or commencement of such sickness, as conditions precedent to recovery.
I think that the strict rule which obtains with reference to notice of injury or death does not and should not apply to that of sickness. An injury or death are events which do not admit of any doubt with reference to time or place at which they occur. But it is often quite different with reference to disease and sickness, which may approach gradually and under circumstances which the patient may not be aware of their existence or that he is seriously afflicted therefrom to an extent necessary for his application for relief under the provisions of his policy. The commencement of sickness, therefore, in many cases, is an indefinite term as to time and place. The purpose of the notice is to give the company an opportunity to investigate and ascertain the facts with reference to the sickness, and it is, therefore, fully protected by holding that its liability for contribution during the period of the sickness only commences to run from the time that the notice is given, or the ten days specified in the notice preceding that time. Such I believe should be the construction of the provision of the policy.
The plaintiff should, therefore, be permitted to recover the amount stipulated in the policy for sickness after the first day of December, 1904.
CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY, WILLARD BARTLETT and COLLIN, JJ., concur with HISCOCK, J.; VANN, J., concurs with HAIGHT, J.
Judgment reversed, etc. *328