Southern Life Insurance v. Booker
Southern Life Insurance v. Booker
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Mary A. Booker brought this action, in the Circuit Court at Memphis, upon a policy of insurance for ten thousand, dollars, (|10,000), issued hy the Southern Life Insurance Company upon the life of her husband, Edmund J. Booker, who died the 20th of September, 1867. The policy was read in evidence and is admitted to have been executed in due form by the Company.
There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff below: and, upon the refusal of the Court to grant a new trial, the defendant appealed in error.
The defense rests upon several distinct grounds:
1st. That the policy was never in fact delivered, so as to become ' binding upon the Company. The facts, upon which the questions arise, are: That about the first of. October, 1866, Edmund J. Booker, then in business in New Orleans, made the application for assurance through one Smith hurst, the agent of the Company for the State of Louisiana; the application was forwarded to the home office in Memphis, Tennessee. The policy was made out and duly executed by the proper officer, dated the 5th of October, 1866, and forwarded to Smithburst at New Orleans. The terms of the contract were, the payment in cash of three-fifths of the first annual premium, to-wit: $237.60.
It appears that it was the duty of the agents, and they were so instructed, to deliver policies only upon the actual payment of the cash part of the premium. In this case, however, Smithhurst delivered the policy without the cash payment, accepting the note of Edmund J. Booker for the amount. Soon after, Smith-hurst was succeeded as agent, by Hatch & Smith,, who jointly represented the Company in Louisiana.. They found that this policy had been delivered without the payment of the cash part of the premium. Thereupon, a draft for the amount was drawn by the agent,. Smith, payable to the order of the Company, at sixty days, dated the 23rd of October, 1866, and accepted by Booker. This was not paid at maturity — but was-afterwards, on the 7th of January, 1867, surrendered and a note taken from Booker, payable to the Company on the 25th of January, 1867, for the amount of the draft, less $25, claimed by Booker to have been loaned to Smithhurst. This note was taken by the authority of the Company, and provides that it shall bear eight per cent, interest, after maturity, until paid. This note was not paid: it is proven by the agents that frequent demands were made for its payment, but
Upon the issuance of the policy, the defendant applied for and obtained a re-insurance of $5,000 upon the life of Booker in the ACtna Life Insurance Company — and, upon being notified of Booker’s death, gave notice of his death to the latter Company.
The written application for assurance made out and •signed by the plaintiff and said Edmund J. Booker, and shown to be a part of the contract, contains this provision: “ That the policy hereby applied for shall not be binding upon the Company until the amount of the premium as stated therein shall have been received by said Company, or some authorized agent thereof, during' the lifetime of the person therein •assured.”
Upon these facts it is argued for the Company, that the contract was never completed, and that the Company never became bound thereby; that the agent, Smithhurst, was only authorized to deliver the policy upon the payment of the cash part of the premium— and if actually delivered, it could not bind the Company : 1st, because the agent had no authority to deliver it without the payment of the cash part of the premium; and, 2d, because by the express terms of the contract, it could only take effect upon the pay-, ment of the premium in the lifetime of the assured. And here the question arises, Did Smithhurste, the agent, have the authority to waive that part of the
A similar doctrine was held in the case of The Trustees of the Baptist Church v. Brooklin Fire Insurance Company, 19 New York Court of Appeals. This was a cause where there was a verbal agreement that the policy should be renewed, from year to year, and the premium paid on demand. The policy contained a provision that it should not be considered binding until the actual payment of the money. In that case the Court, among other things, said: “A provision in a policy already executed and delivered so as to bind the Company, declaratory of a condition that premi-
The case of Sheldon v. The Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, in the Supreme Court of Connecticut, reported in 1 Bigelow Insurance Reports, 27, is a case still stronger. In that case the declaration or application for a policy, which was a life policy, contained a proviso very similar to the one in the present (¡ase. When solicited by the agent to apply for a policy, the applicant expressed his inability to pay the cash part of the premium; the agent then agreed to provide the cash part of the premium himself, and told the applicant he might at some convenient time make his note payable to the Company, and pay the other half to the agent. Upon this the application was made, the policy issued and sent to the agent, who countersigned it, but retained it in his possession, and upon the death of the party returned it to the Company. A judgment in favor of the insured, upon these facts, was affirmed. 1 Bigelow, 51; Baber v. Union Life Insurance Company, in the Superior Court of New York, Id., 595.
Therefore we hold, that Smithhurste, if he was a •general agent of the Company, had the right to waive the payment of the cash part of the premium and •deliver the policy: and, if he did so, absolutely and unconditionally, — in the absence of fraud, — the delivery would be binding upon the Company.
As to the question, whether Smithhurst was a gen-' eral agent or not, we are of opinion that, if he had entire or general charge of the business of the Company for the State of Louisiana, acting under the general instructions to such agents, and without special instructions limiting his authority, — he was a s general agent, in the sense of the authorities above recited, although his authority was limited to a single State. If he had, under general instructions, authority •to deliver the policy and receive the premium, without
Again: If Smithhurst was the general agent of the Company, and as such waived the payment of the cash part of the premium, and delivered the policy to take effect absolutely and unconditionally, — in the absence of fraud, — we hold that the contract can not be avoided by that provision in the application for the policy before referred to, to-wit: “That the policy hereby applied for shall not be binding upon the Company until the amount of the premium as stated therein shall have been received by said Company, or some authorized agent thereof, during the lifetime of the person therein assured.” For the reason, as we have seen, that the agent having the power to waive this cash payment, it must be taken, for the purposes of this question, that the payment has been in fact made.. The note or promise of the party has been accepted as cash and must be so regarded. It will be observed that this has no application to the question, Whether the policy could be avoided by reason of a failure to pay the premium note, or any subsequent premium: — this, to some extent, stands upon a different ground.
The argument for the defendant — and it has much force and plausibility — is, that the written contract upon, its face, (that is the application which is a part of the policy), shows in express terms, that the policy is not to be binding until the money is actually paid—
The more reasonable view, therefore,, is, that when the policy has been in fact delivered, unconditionally and without fraud, it must be taken that this stipulation has been complied with, either by the actual payment of the money, or by some means that the insurer is willing to accept as a compliance with this stipulation. And furthermore, while the application contains the stipulation that the policy is not to take effect until the money is actually paid — on the. other hand — the policy upon its face shows an acknowledgment of the receipt of the money. The one statement may as well be varied by parol as the other.
It has been held in a number of cases, that where the policy has been delivered unconditionally and with
The Court below held in substantial accordance with these views.
If doubts existed as to the authority of the agent, Smithhurst, to waive the payment of the premium, it is insisted by the counsel for Mrs. Booker, that the jury were justified in finding that the Company had fully ratified the act of Smithhurst, by accepting first the draft, and afterwards the note, of Booker for the premium, and also by taking out in another Company a re-insurance, upon the life of Booker. For the Company it is argued that they offered legal evidence to prove that the acceptance of the draft from Booker was upon the express condition that the contract was to be void and of no effect until the money was paid; and further, that in reality, upon the delivery of the policy in the first instance, it was delivered upon the •condition that it was not to take effect until the premium was actually paid.
We are of opinion that if the policy was delivered in the first instance, upon the agreement and condition before mentioned, and this condition was not afterwards waived by the act of the Company, then the contract would not fake effect until the condition was complied with by the payment of the money.
We come then to consider the evidence, which it is insisted was offered on this question and improperly rejected.
The defendant proposed to prove various statements made by Booker, after the delivery of the policy, in which he admitted that he was not insured, and that he carried his own risk until the premium was paid, and said he wo\ild get that policy from his wife and deliver it up. They also proposed to prove his statements as to the conversation between himself and Smithhurst, at the time the policy was delivered to him. They also proposed to prove, that at the time the draft for the premium, taken by Smith & Hatch, was delivered, it was accepted upon the express agreement, that unless the same was paid at maturity the policy was to be void. They also proposed to
There is much force in the argument, that the husband, in procuring a policy upon his own life for the benefit o f his wife, is the reaí party — that the wife is in reality not known. Yet, it is in the form of a contract with the wife in her own name, for her own benefit, and the husband, in procuring the contract, is treated as her agent — in this respect she is allowed to act as a feme sole, and the benefit of the contract becomes her separate right, in this case, by the express provisions of the defendant’s charter. Then we treat Booker as having acted as the plaintiff’s agent.' The rule upon which the declarations of an agent are admissible against his principal is familiar. They must be declarations accompanying the act, or as part and explanatory of it. In the first transaction, upon the delivery and acceptance of the policy, Booker acted as the agent of the plaintiff, and all that was said by him as explanatory of the transaction, and to show the real agreement between him and Smithhurst, was certainly competent evidence. But how shall this be proven ? Can it be proven by showing what Booker afterwards admitted that he had said and done upon that occasion? This direct question arose in the case of The Fraternal Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Applegate, before the Supreme Court of Ohio. In that case a plea was offered, that the husband had surrendered the policy, which was upon his own life
The charter of the defendant places the rights of married women, in cases of this character, upon the-footing which the Court of Ohio, in the cases referred to, assumes they had under the statutes of that State.
Upon this principle, the declarations or admissions of Booker, made after the delivery of the policy, as-to what had occurred at the making of the original
As to the proof offered, that at the time the draft •of Booker was accepted for the premium, there was an agreement that if the draft was not paid at maturity the policy was to be void — it may be said that in this transaction Booker was the agent of the plaintiff, and what he said at the time, was admissible as explanatory of the transaction. It may be doubted, whether, in accepting this draft, Booker was the agent of the plaintiff, upon the assumption that the note of Booker had been accepted in the first instance by the Company; then the payment of this note, by draft or otherwise, was a matter between Booker and the Company. But assuming that in accepting this draft, Booker was acting as the plaintiff’s agent — while any statement then made by him was admissible as explanatory of that act, yet it could not be admitted to prove that he then made an agreement, which might result in the surrender and abandonment of the plaintiff’s policy, unless it be shown that he had authority to make such an agreement. This is upon the assumption that the original delivery of the policy was Unconditional. If the delivery of the policy was conditional, and its validity made to depend . upon the
The Court, instructed the jury in substance, that if the agent delivered the policy in the first instance without authority, yet if the delivery was afterwards ratified by the Company, it would be binding; and that they might look to the fact, whether or not the Company were in the habit of waiving the cash payment in other cases; or that the Company, knowing that the policy was delivered without authority, acquiesced therein; or that they published a list
In this case, however, it was proper for the Circuit Judge to instruct the jury as to what was necessary to constitute a ratification. He might even, we think, have gone farther than he did, and might have told the jury that certain acts, if proven, would, of themselves, amount to a ratification. Evans v. Buckner, 1 Heis., 291. It might be a question worthy of consideration, whether the act of re-insurance in another Company, and giving notice of the death of Booker, was not a full admission of an interest in Booker’s life, without which they could not insure. Bliss on Insurance, 9.
What the facts are upon the other side of the question, that the Judge should have pointed out to the jury, we do not perceive. There were perhaps other circumstances bearing xipon this question, and in defendant’s favor; but we are of opinion that there is not in this any error for which we should reverse.
It is urged that these answers are false and fraudulent, and avoid the policy. The construction of the language above quoted from the written application, has been questioned. We agree with the defendant’s counsel that the language means, “that any untrue or fraudulent answers,” referring to the answers previously given and set forth in the application, “or any suppression of facts in regard to the above-named party’s health — the latter provision being in general terms — shall avoid the policy; and that the untrue and fraudulent answers need not necessarily be in regard to the party’s health.” It is obvious that there might be untrue and fraudulent answers, not directly in regard to the party’s health, and yet seriously affecting the risk.
The question, however, as to what shall constitute untrue and fraudulent answers in the true and fair meaning of the contract, is the question of doubt and difficulty. According to the authorities, the question seems to turn upon the distinction between those statements made by the assured in the application or policy which are held to be warranties, and those which are regarded merely as representations. As to the former, it seems to be generally held that they must be strictly true, whether material or not. Bliss on Insurance, 34, 35; Anderson v. Fitzgerald, 4 House of Lords, 2 Denio, 75. As to the latter, it must appear that
Great uncertainty seems to exist as to what shall be . deemed warranties, and what representations; and it appears to be very difficult in some instances to place the distinction upon any very sound basis. It does not follow, because they are inserted in the application or policy, that they are warranties. It is said their character will depend upon the form of expression used, the apparent purpose of the insertion, and sometimes upon the connection or relation to the other parts of the instrument. Bliss on Ins., s. 43, et seq.
Upon this question the authorities are in apparent, if not real, conflict. It has been said that either view of the case might be well sustained by authority. The question is manifestly one of great importance and comparatively new in the courts of this State. The number of persons, who resort to this means of investment for their families, makes it important that their rights and duties should be defined and understood. The contract is one which imposes upon the-insurer an obligation of an unusual character, and the performance of it sometimes becomes very onerous;, and it is proper that they should be guarded against fraud and imposition, and that the utmost good faith should be required of those at whose instance they undertake these obligations. On the other hand, they should not be allowed to insert, as parts of the con*tract, terms and stipulations of matters wholly unim
It would seem to be gross injustice to allow this, in a case where the insured has acted in the utmost good faith, and honestly disclosed every fact material to be known, because, merely by inadvertence or oversight, an error of fact has been inserted in his application, — an error that is clearly immaterial, and that could not by possibility have affected the contract. It is true, that the parties have the right to make their own contract, and by its terms we must be governed; but before a court could hold a policy void, and all premiums paid thereon forfeited, because statements of this character in the application turned out to be untrue, they should be fully satisfied that such terms were fully and distinctly agreed to by the parties. It can not be supposed that an applicant for insurance would agree to pay annual premiums for life, for the purpose of securing the payment of the policy to his family, and agree to make the payment of any part of the sum depend upon the literal and exact accuracy of immaterial facts, to the importance of which his attention was not called. An applicant states that he was born in a certain county upon a certain day — facts which of his own knowledge he can not know — and upon this and other warranties, as it
To avoid the harshness and gross injustice of such constructions, it has been held, that statements of this character shall be held as representations rather than warranties, unless the contrary clearly appears. Bliss on Insurance. The statements in this case are called in the policy representations. This, of itself, would not be very important; but as the statements in question are not, in express terms,' made warranties, we are left to determine their true character upon a fair and just construction of the policy, and the application upon which it was issued. And in determining the question whether these statements are to be regarded as warranties or representations, we may look to the question whether these were acted upon by the Company and treated as material. 2 Pars. Con., 446.
Shall we hold, upon. this contract, that the policy was issued upon the warranty that the assured was born in Ottoway county, Virginia, when with slight attention it must have been known to both parties that there was no such county? This was clearly but a clerical mistake, and we think it could not by possibility have misled or deceived the defendants, and. the court below was correct in holding that this was
We are of opinion that the Circuit Judge was not in error in instructing the jury, that the policy would not be avoided by proof that at its date the assured resided at Jefferson, a place contiguous to New Or
With regard to the occupation of the assured, and, his service in the Confederate army, the Circuit Judge instructed the jury, that the assured having stated-that his occupation was merchant and steamboat agent,, proof that he was steamboat agent, without proof that he was also merchant — and that the assured having stated that he had been a volunteer in the Confederate States army four years, the proof only showing-that he was in said army one year — the policy would-not be on either of these grounds avoided.
We. can not say that there is any material error in this against the Company. Waiving the questions whether these representations are to be considered as. warranties, and important — where the forfeiture of the-entire contract is sought upon questions of this character, we think the insurers should be required to prove affirmatively that the statements are not true,, and not simply to leave it to the jury to infer that the statements are false, because the proof does not affirmatively show that they are true.
While, therefore, we think the Circuit Judge erred in construing the language contained in the application to mean, that the untrue answers or suppressions of fact which were declared to be a forfeiture of the contract, included only those untrue answers or sup-pressions of fact which related to the party’s health; yet when he came to charge specifically upon the facts,, which it was alleged were the untrue answers and
It can not be doubted, that these grounds of defense would be regarded as having but little weight, were they presented in a case where the premiums had been regularly paid, and the policy kept up for years; and yet their force must be governed by the same rules in the present case. They can not be allowed to have any additional weight from tKe apparent want of merits of the plaintiff’s claim upon the first grounds.
If in reality the policy be regarded as binding— by an actual and bona fide delivery, without fraud, for a consideration that was accepted — then it must have the same force and effect, and be governed by the same rules as any other.
It is important that these questions be determined upon principles alike fair and just to the parties upon both sides. And while it is true the apparent merits of the plaintiff's claim are not so strong as in cases where the premiums have been actually paid; yet we think the case turns upon the question, "Whether the contract was in fact entered into and complete — Was the risk assumed? If the Company, through its agent, chose to assume the risk alone in consideration of Booker’s note, the result in law is the same as if the money had been paid.
Without reviewing the various propositions of law
Affirm the judgment.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.