Boulware v. Missouri State Life Insurance
Boulware v. Missouri State Life Insurance
Opinion of the Court
Thisi s an action on a policy of insurance issued -by the defendant company on the life of one Aaron Boulware, in which the plaintiff is designated as the beneficiary. The insured made default in the payment of the premiums on the policy, more than six years before his death, and the suit involves the propriety of the application of the nonforfeiture statute relating to such policies of insurance. The case was tried below before the court, without a jury, resulting in a finding and judgment for defendant, from which the plaintiff has duly prosecuted her appeal to this court.
Pursuant to the request of the parties, the trial court made a written finding of facts, stating its conclusions thereon, which we will here set out in full as follows:
££1. The Safety Fund Life Association was organized in the year 1892, for the purpose of doing a life insurance business on the assessment plan. The
“2. In December, 1892, pursuant to the written application of Aaron Boulware, said Safety Fund Life Association issued to said Boulware a certain certificate of membership number 95', providing for the payment of a benefit of $2000 to Minnie M. Boulware, his wife, upon the death of said Aaron Boulware, conditioned upon the payment of quarterly assessments •of $6.70 for a period of four years from the date of the next quarterly assessment (and afterwards of such an amount as should be required by the by-laws of said association, which were made a part of said certificate). And in September, 1896, pursuant to the written application of said Aaron Boulware, said association issued its certificate of membership, number 2848', providing for the payment of a benefit of $3000 to Maria M. Boulware, his wife, upon the death of said Aaron Boulware, conditioned upon the payment of quarterly assessments of $12.75, until said payments should have been made for five years from January, 1897; and after said date to be reduced to expense element and mortuary requirements; provided no annual payment should be less than $25.50, and provided further that should the total payment required in any one year exceed fifty-one dollars, the safety fund should be used to pay such excess. That said Aaron Boulware, from time to time; paid all the several assessments that were levied and assessed against certificate No. 95 and 2848, until April 1, 1902¡, and each was in force on that day.
“3. The defendant, Missouri State Life Insurance Company, was organized and incorporated March 11, 1902, and became and now is the successor of the Safety Fund Life Association, and assumed all of the outstanding certificates of membership of the said
“4. Tfiat, on tfie first day of April, 1902, Aaron Boulware, wfio was. tfien fifty years of age, made fiis written application to tfi§ defendant for a policy of insurance on fiis life in tfie sum of $5000, .with premiums fixed as of age forty-one, premiums thereon to be fully paid in eleven years which said application is in words and figures as follows, to-wit:
“ ‘I, Aaron Boulware do hereby apply to tfie Missouri State Life Insurance Company of St. Louis, Missouri, for an insurance on my life of $5000 on tfie twenty-payment life of 50 per cent R. P. plan, premiums to be payable anuually. I was bom on tfie 22d. day of March, 1852, and desire policy to be issued as of age forty-one. Premiums to be fully paid in eleven years from this date. Make policy payable to Maria M. Boulware, related to me as wife. In consideration of tfie issuance of the policy of insurance applied for, I hereby surrender to said company all right, title and interest in and to policy of insurance or certificate of membership No. 95 and 2848, issued to me by tfie said company under tfie name and style of Safety Fund Life Association; and I agree tfiat in any distribution-of surplus 'accumulations or apportionments of dividends, tfie principles and methods adopted by tfie company for tfie apportionment and determination of tfie amount equitably belonging to any policy issued on this application shall be conclusive on tfie insured and upon all parties having or claiming any interest, thereunder.
‘Dated at Monroe City, Mo. 4/1/1902.
‘Aaron Boulware, applicant.
‘Witness, R. A. Ogle/
“5. Tfie annual premium charged by tfie defendant for such a policy-as applied for by said Aaron Boulware, at age forty-one years, is and was $227.50 and tfie defendant offered to issue to said Aaron Boul
“ ‘This certifies that the Missouri «State Life’ Insurance Company, home office, St. Louis, Missouri,' has loaned on the sole security of policy No. 9074, the' sum of thirteen hundred, thirty-six and 35/100 dollars' ($1336.35), which, with any additional loan, shall be a lien on said policy until paid. Simple interest at the rate of six per cent to be added until the end of the accumulation period, of said policy, at which time the profits accruing to it shall be used toward the payment of said loan, and any excess paid in cash or used as set forth in the policy, at the option of the insured. Should the profits not fully pay said loan or loans, the amount remaining unpaid at the time may be continued as a loan, interest as aforesaid, and the dividends accruing on the policy to, be thereafter applied to the payment
‘Dated at Monroe City, Mo. 4/1/1902.
‘A. Boulware, the insured.
‘Witness, R. A. Ogle.’
“Whereupon, on April 5', 1902, defendant issued to said Aaron Boulware the policy herein sued on, No. 9074, upon the consideration of defendant’s surrender of certificates No. 95 and No. 2848 to defendant, and of the further consideration of the execution and delivery of said certificate of indebtedness or loan and for the consideration as set forth in said policy of insurance.
‘ ‘ 6. The court further finds that said policy herein sued on recites that it is issued in consideration of $1563.85, said consideration being made up of one cash premium in advance of $227.50, cash then paid by the said insured, and of his certificate of indebtedness hereinbefore set out of $1336.35, it not having been paid in cash to the defendant by the insured. That said policy No. 9074, being policy sued on, was. received by said Aaron Boulware and by him retained until his death, to-wit, December 18, 1909. The court further finds that only one premium was ever paid on .said policy No. 9074, which was for the year 1902, default having been made in the payment of premium due April 5, 1903, and all subsequent premiums. That said policy contained the condition that it would become null and void for the failure to pay any annual premium, and that said policy has, among other provisions, the following, to-wit:
“ ‘Number of Policy, 9074. Amount $5000. Age forty-one years.
“ ‘The Missouri State Life Insurance Company in consideration of the payment in advance of $1563.85,
“ ‘The premium period of this policy ends on the 5th day of April, A. D. 1913. This insurance is granted as of date April 5, 1893, in consideration of the surrender and cancellation of policies No. 95 and No. 2848, heretofore issued under the name and style of the Safety Fund Life Association and of the application for such policies, as well as the application for. this policy, both of which applications are hereby made a part of this contract.
“ ‘If after three annual premiums (from date of execution hereof) shall have been paid in cash on this policy it shall become void solely by the nonpayment of any premiums when due, its entire net reserve, computed according to the actuary’s table of mortality, with interest at four per cent per annum (less any existing indebtedness), on surrender of this policy, at
“ ' (1) To purchase without action of the insured, ' ■of a nonparticipating paid-up life policy, or
“'(2) 'Upon written application by the legal holder of this policy within thirty days from the date of such nonpayment of premium, to the purchase of ' nonparticipating term insurance for the original amount insured by this policy.
" 'After this policy shall have been in force for three years from the date of the execution hereof (all premiums having been paid in cash), and which this policy is in full force and effect, the company will at the time loan on the sole security of this policy, its entire net reserve, computed according to the actuary’s table of mortality with interest at four per .cent per annum (less an existing indebtedness), subject to the rules and regulations of the company, then in force.
“ 'This contract is based on receipt of premiums annually in advance, but premiums may be made payable in semiannual or quarterly installments. Any indebtedness to the company under any provisions hereof or otherwise including any balance of the premiums for the insurance year remaining unpaid will be deducted in any settlement of this policy or of any benefits hereunder. Should this policy lapse by reason of the nonpayment of any premium it may be reinstated at any time upon the insured furnishing evidence of good health satisfactory to the company and the payment of all arrears and any indebtedness to the company under this contract existing at the time of lapse with interest thereon at five per cent per annum. ’
“ (7) The court finds that the plaintiff is the widow and the designated beneficiary in policy sued on, No. 9074. That all defenses based upon failure to
“(8) The court finds that the net value of the policy of insurance is that part of the premiums paid which is in excess of the carrying of the risk, together with interest accumulations; that the gross premiums paid on the policy sued on was $227.50 in cash as hereinbefore stated, and the insured note or certificate of indebtedness of $1336.50, which represents only one annual premium on the said policy and said certificate of indebtedness.
‘ ‘ The court finds that if the nine premiums which were forborne by the defendant of $227.50 each had been actually paid together with said cash premium paid, then the net value of said policy sued on under the actuaries’ combined experience table of mortality with‘four per cent interest would have been $1501.08, and that three-fourths of said reserve having been applied as a single net premium for extended temporary insurance for the amount payable under said policy of $6450.10, at age fifty-nine, the age of said Aaron Boulware at the date of default of payment of premium due, would have carried said amount for a period of ten years and 201 days, which would have been beyond the date of the death of said Aaron Boulware December 18, 1909. And the court further finds that the net value of said policy sued on, had the nine premiums of $227.50 each, which defendant forbore and which the insured never paid, been in fact paid in cash together with the said cash premium paid, would,' computed on the American experience table of mortality at four and one-half per cent have given a premium available for extended temporary insurance sufficient to have carried said policy in force for even a greater period than aforesaid.
“ (9) The court finds that the indebtedness represented by the said certificate hereinbefore set out and for $133A35 was not on account of the past premium
“Therefore, treating the policy sued on as one-upon which only one premium had been paid, and the court so treats it, and the policy so recites it, the non-forfeiture law, section 6946 of the Revised Statutes 19091, is by its terms inapplicable.
“The court finds for the defendant.”
The questions involved in this appeal .are in nowise materially different from those passed upon by this court in Rose v. Insurance Co., 165 Mo. App. 646, 148 S. W. 181. That was an action against this defendant on a policy issued under just such circumstances as those here involved. There the insured effected insurance upon his life in the Safety Fund Life Association, on December 31, 1904, in the sum of three thousand dollars.- On October 13j 1902, after the defendant had taken over the assets of that company and assumed its obligations, Rose surrendered to it this policy and .accepted in lieu thereof a twenty-payment life policy of the defendant for the same amount. The latter policy provided for the payment of premiums for twenty years only, from October 1, 1892, to October 1, 1912, the annual premium’ being $113.10 due on or before the first day of October in each year. The policy, however, was antedated ten years as if issued in October 1892, thus requiring the annual premium of $113.10 to be paid only from and after the date of its issue to and including October 1, 1912. There the insured was forty-five years of age when the policy was issued to him, but it insured him as of the age of thirty-five. The consideration recited in the
It will be thus readily'seen that the. facts of the case before us are in- every essential particular the same as those involved in the Rose case; the difference being only as to unimportant details. There, as here, the question to be determined pertained to the application of the nonforfeiture statute to such a state of facts. In either case had in fact all of the annual premiums upon the policy been paid, from the date which the policy bore up to the time of default, sufficient reserve would have accumulated to the credit of the policy to extend the insurance, under the nonforfeiture statute, beyond the date of the death of the insured. In the cáse before us this would undoubtedly be true had ten whole premiums been actually paid on the policy; and the contention on the part of the appellant is that the policy should be treated as one upon which ten full annual premiums had been paid, and that the amount represented by the loan certificate should be deducted from the proceeds of the policy. This contention however, is disposed of by what we said in the Rose case, supra, on this very question.
The nonforfeiture statute provides a method of computing the net value of the policy, and provides that after deducting from three-fourths of such net value any notes or other indebtedness to the company given on account of past premium payments on the policy, the balance shall be taken as a net single premium for the purpose of extended or temporary insurance. Here, as in the Rose case, to deduct the amount of the loan certificate from three-fourths of the net value or reserve would consume the whole thereof and
It is urged by appellant that the recitals of the policy are conclusive as to the payment of premiums and cannot be denied for the purpose of affecting any rights arising under the contract. But this cannot be true, for it is elementary that the consideration for the policy may be inquired into. And here an inquiry into the consideration discloses that in fact but one annual premium was paid upon the policy; that the actual payments were not made to the defendant whereby a reserve could have been accumulated to the credit of the policy to extend .the insurance to the death of the insured. The only theory upon which it could be said that such a reserve could have been accumulated is that the loan certificate represented an indebtedness to the company on account of past premium payments; and taking it as representing such indebtedness, then the same, under the statute, must be deducted from three-fourths'of the net value of the policy and the balance taken as a net single premium-for the purpose of extended insurance,' and to do so exhausts the net value of the policy.
The lower court found that the indebtedness represented by the loan certificate was not on account of' past premium payments and “not such an indebtedness as would have entitled defendant to deduct the same from three-fourths of the net value of said policy had tlie same had a reserve, but that said certificate was given as a charge against the policy sued on and represented the reserve’ that said policy would-have had if the hide premiums which defendant waived”"
The result, of course, is the-same, whether the policy be treated as. one upon which but one annual premium had been paid, or whether it be treated as a policy upon which ten annual premiums had been paid and the indebtedness represented by the loan certificate regarded as an indebtedness on account of past premium payments. The nonforfeiture statute (Sec. 6946, Rev. Stat. 19091) applies only where three annual premium payments have been made upon the policy. It is altogether clear, therefore, that in order to .here invoke-the nonforfeiture statute at all, the annual premium payments for the nine years which the policy was antedated must be regarded as having been paid. Such premiums can only be said to have been- paid through the medium of the transaction involving the execution of the loan certificate. Such payment could’ only be regarded as constructively made, so to speak, and the indebtedness a constructive loan. The purpose of the loan certificate is obvious, for it is not disputed that the company was required to have on hand “in money or money’s worth,” at the time it issued the policy, the reserve applicable 'thereto. The certificate of indebtedness'in the sum of $1336.35 equaled the amount of this reserve, and was given to cover the same and to fulfill the requirements with respect thereto. To treat the transaction however, as one whereby all of the prior annual premiums are to be regarded as having been paid (which is the only way in which the policy could have actually had a reserve so as to make the nonforfeiture statute, applicable), then logically the indebtedness represented by the loan certificate
Much is said by learned counsel for respondent in tbeir brief concerning tbe surrender of tbe policies previously beld by tbe insured as constituting a consideration for the issuance of tbe policy sued on. It is not necessary, however, for us to pursue this subject further than to say that tbe surrender of these policies was but á part of tbe consideration for tbe issuance of tbe new policy; and that in any event tbe consideration by way of tbe surrender of these policies cannot be utilized to tbe end of creating tbe necessary reserve upon tbe policy here sued upon.
Other questions raised need not be noticed. For tbe reasons given above tbe judgment of tbe circuit court should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.