Seamans v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance
Seamans v. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance
Opinion of the Court
This is an action upon a policy of insurance upon the life of one Albert P. Seamans, dated April 24, 1874, for $1,000.
At the December term, 1879, there was a trial by jury and a special verdict, upon which judgment was rendered for the plaintiff for the sum of $6.09 only, that being a dividend due the insured at the time of his death. The court held that the plaintiff could not recover on the policy because the same liad been forfeited by the non-payment of the premium which matured April 24, 1877. The policy provides that if the premiums shall not be paid when due the policy “shall cease and determine.”
A motion for a new trial was made by the plaintiff upon the ground that the judgment was not warranted by the evidence, and was contrary to law, and also on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. The court, while doubting the sufficiency of the newly-discovered evidence to change the result, sustained the motion and granted a new trial, with a
First. The premium due April 14, 1876, was paid without objection after maturity, as hereinafter stated. "With this exception, all the premiums were paid as they matured prior to April, 1877.
The defendant’s agents always notified assured in advance of the time when the premium would-become due, and in said notice stated the amount of cash dividend which came due to the assured at the maturity of the premium.
Second. The assured, having moved to Minneapolis, was informed in 1876, before the premium was due, that he could pay the same at the Hennepin County Savings Bank, which he did on the fourteenth day of April, 1876, nearly one month after the same was due, which payment was received by the agent of defendant without objection.
Third. The Hennepin County Savings Bank, early in March, 1877, ceased to be the defendant’s agent to collect said premiums, and no notice was given the assured of that fact, or that any other agent had been appointed.
Fourth. In March, 1877, the defendant notified the assured that the premium on the policy would fall due April 24,1877, and that a cash dividend of $6.09 would be due him at that time, which he could apply on the premium, and after deducting this amount pay the -balance; but no notice was given the assured of any agent to whom the premium could be paid in Minneapolis, and from whom a renewal receipt could be obtained. The notice did, however, require payment to be
Fifth. That the First National Bank of Minneapolis immediately succeeded to the agency of the Hennepin County Savings Bank for the collection of premiums for the defendant company, and was authorized to collect the premium due April 24-, 1877, and was the only agent at that place. The plaintiff had no actual notice of the agency of said bank. Tiie defendant had a state agent at St. Paul.
Sixth. That plaintiff and insured wore informed by William B. Mason, agent of defendant at Minneapolis, shortly before the premium of 1876 became due, that it was not material that the same should be paid when due, but that it might be paid at any time within several months thereafter without prejudice to their rights.
Seventh. Silas A. Seamans, father of the assured, testifies that, at the request of the assured, he went to Minneapolis to pay the premium due April 24, 1877. He cannot fix the exact date, but says that it was not after the maturity of the premium. Ho went to the Hennepin County Savings Bank, where payment had been made the year before, and offered to pay the amount, but was informed that that was not tho place to pay it, and that he would probably have to go to St. Paul. Although he made inquiry of several persons besides the bank officers, with whom he conversed, he failed to find the agency in Minneapolis, and was not informed that the First National Bank of Minneapolis was the agent.
Eighth. The assured was killed June 23, 1877, by a boiler explosion on Lake Minnetonka, Minnesota, and tho premium due April 24, 1877, was not paid or tendered either before or after his death.
Upon those facts should the court declare and enforce a forfeiture of the policy on account of the non-payment of the dividend due April 24, 1877 ?
In Insurance Co. v. Eggleston, 96 U. S. 572, Mr. Justice Bradley, in delivering the opinion of the supreme court, said:
“We have recently, in the case of Insurance Co. v. Norton, (supra, 234,) shown that forfeitures are not favored in the
Under the circumstances, I do not think the assured was bound to hunt for an agent in the city of Minneapolis to whom he-could make payment. If he was bound to make
It is very clear to my mind that if the defendant had sent to the assured the circular notice of the change of agency which it sent to other policy holders, and which it intended to send to him, he -would have sent his money to the proper placo, and would have paid his premium in due time. It was, therefore, the fault of the defendant that the premium was not paid. This is not a case of indifference or wilful neglect on the part of the assured. He was not only willing, hut anxious to keep his contract. He raised the money in time and sent it to Minneapolis for the purpose of making payment. The person sent was unable to find the new agent, of whose appointment, name, and place of business both he and the assured were ignorant. He was, therefore, excused from making payment on the day the premium was due. It is said, however, that he continued to neglect payment until the day of his death, about 60 days after the maturity of the premium. If he was excused from making payment on the day of maturity by the facts and circumstances stated, then he was entitled to a reasonable time before a forfeiture could be declared. In considering what time would be reasonable, we are to bear in mind that the company had, in fact, waived the time of payment the previous year. The jury find that in 1876 the agent of the defendant at Minneapolis informed the assured that a delay of a month or two would not work a forfeiture, and the assured accordingly paid his premium for that year nearly a month after it was duo, without objection on the part of defendant or its agents. Again, it does not appear at what time, if ever, the assured was informed of the place of payment.
Under these circumstances, I am of the opinion that a forfeiture cannot he declared on account of the delay in making payment of the dividend, the assured having been excused
The following authorities show the reluctance of courts to enforce forfeitures in this class of cases, and support the general views I have expressed: Insurance Co. v. Wolff, 95 U. S. 326; Insurance Co. v. Eggleston, 96 U. S. 572; Insurance Co. v. Norton, Id. 234; Insurance Co. v. Pierce, 75 Ill. 426; Thompson v. Insurance Co. 52 Mo. 469; Mayer v. Insurance Co. 38 Iowa, 304; Insurance Co. v. Warner, 80 Ill. 410; Insurance Co. v. Robertson, 59 Ill. 123.
Judgment for plaintiff for amount of the policy and interest.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.