Opinion
Argued October 15, 1889
Decided October 29, 1889
William H. Arnoux for appellant. L.H. Rowan for respondent.
We are unable to find any ground upon which to sustain the judgment in this action. The interest upon the note was not tendered to the defendant until the day following that upon which, by the terms of the policy, it was made payable, and by the express condition of the contract the policy was forfeited.
A long line of authorities has settled the law to be that when it is expressly provided that the premium on a life insurance policy shall be paid on or before a certain day, and in default thereof the policy shall be void, that the non-payment of the premium upon the day named works a forfeiture. ( Robertson v. Metropolitan L. Ins. Co., 88 N.Y. 541; N.Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Statham, 93 U.S. 24; Attorney-General v. Continential Life Ins Co., 93 N.Y. 70; Holly v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 105 id. 437.)
The record before us does not show precisely what principle the trial court applied in directing a verdict for the plaintiff. The General Term, however, appear to have affirmed the judgment upon the ground that the father of the assured, to whom the money to pay the interest had been remitted, was induced by the statements contained in the pamphlet, which the company had issued, to believe that thirty days grace was allowed for the payment of the premium, and that he was misled by that representation, and induced to act as he did, and not pay the interest on the day he received it from his son.
This view of the case has no support in the testimony. The father, who was a witness upon the trial, nowhere says that he believed that thirty days' grace was allowed in payment of the interest, or that his actions were controlled to any extent by any information obtained from the pamphlet. Nor was such a fact alleged in the complaint.
The right to recover is there claimed upon the ground that the assured "relying on the liberality and fairness promised by said company" in the pamphlet issued by it, "through inadvertence and by mistake * * * failed to pay or cause to be paid" the interest as required by the terms of the contract.
There was no proof offered to sustain this allegation, and there is no evidence that the assured had been misled by any representation of the company or was misinformed or mistaken as to the condition of the policy, or that he did not fully understand the effect of a failure to pay the interest on the day named.
He had paid the interest promptly in 1873, and in 1874 remitted it in ample season to his father to have been paid to the company and the policy preserved.
The father was the son's agent to pay the interest, and in the absence of any evidence that the son did not fully understand his obligation under the contract, it is difficult to perceive how any information derived by the father from a pamphlet issued by the company before the contract was entered into could be said, as was held by the General Term, to be a fraud upon him and upon the assured, and have the effect to estop the company from asserting the forfeiture, or be deemed a waiver by it of the condition of the policy.
The original policy appears to have substantially complied with the representations contained in the pamphlet issued by the company. It was made incontestable after five years on account of any errors in the application except as to age. It allowed thirty days grace in the payment of premiums and it provided for a paid-up policy after the receipt of two or more annual premiums. It also allowed one third of the premium as a loan.
The policy in suit was issued after the payment of three premiums. The assured had, however, not paid all the premiums in cash, but was indebted to the company in the sum of $431.24.
If this debt had been paid the assured would have been entitled to an unconditional paid-up policy for $1,500, and no further payments would have been necessary. But for some reason not disclosed in the evidence, but presumably satisfactory and advantageous to the assured, he chose not to pay the debt; and as the original policy provided that any indebtedness to the company was to be deducted from the insurance money when paid, it was proper, with the assured's consent, to make a like provision in the paid-up policy, and to provide that the non-payment on the interest on that debt should render the policy void. ( People v. Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co., 103 N.Y. 480, 485.)
The claim that such a provision, in a paid-up policy, is unconscionable and oppressive, and presents a case in which a court of equity should relieve from the forfeiture incurred by omission to make prompt payment of premiums, is not a new one. It has frequently been presented to the courts and has recently received very full consideration in this court in Attorney-General v. North American Life Insurance Company ( 82 N.Y. 172, 190) and People v. Knickerbocker L. Insurance Company ( supra). It was decided in those cases that provisions in paid-up policies, issued in lieu of other policies on which notes had been given for premiums, that they should be void in case the interest on such notes was not paid, is not unconscionable, oppressive or usurious.
In the first case cited Judge EARL said: "There are doubtless some decided cases which hold that such forfeiture should not be enforced, but I think the better rule is to uphold and enforce such contracts when free from fraud or mistake, just as the parties have made them." And in Douglass v. Knickerbocker Life Insurance Company ( 83 N.Y. 492, 503) it was said: "It has generally been found most conducive to the general welfare to leave parties to make their own contracts, and then enforce them as made, unless, on the grounds of fraud, accident or mistake, ignorance, impossibility or necessity, relief can be granted against them."
As has already been pointed out, there is no evidence in this case to show that the assured did not accept the policy in suit with perfect knowledge of all its conditions, and in the absence of all evidence on that subject the presumption is that such was the fact. No case was made, therefore, for any equitable relief, and none is asked in the complaint.
We are referred to some cases upon the authority of which it is claimed that defendant is estopped from claiming a forfeiture of the policy, if the pamphlet induced the assured to believe that a strict compliance with the terms for paying at specified times would not be insisted upon.
It would be a sufficient answer to this proposition to say that the fact that the assured was induced to believe anything of that nature is not proven in the case. On the contrary, his acts indicate that he believed prompt payment on the day named in the policy was essential to its validity. But the cases cited do not establish the principle claimed. Ruse v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company ( 23 N.Y. 516) expressly decided that no contemporary publication could be imported into a policy so as to vary its terms.
The same case ( 24 N.Y. 653) does not decide otherwise, although the remarks of Judge DAVIES somewhat weakened the force of the prior decision.
In Howell v. Knickerbocker Life Insurance Company ( 44 N.Y. 276), there was an admission of an agreement at the time the insurance was effected, and also thereafter when the annual premium was paid, that if anything should happen to the assured to prevent his paying the premium on the day named that the policy should continue in force for a reasonable time thereafter; and it was this agreement, thus admitted to have been made, that was held to constitute a waiver of the condition requiring payment of the premium on the day named. The English cases referred to in Ruse v. M.L. Insurance Company ( 24 N.Y. 654), contain nothing that will aid the plaintiff's case.
It would be impossible to sustain the claim that the statements and representations contained in the pamphlet issued by the company were to be regarded as affecting or modifying the strict terms of the policy without disregarding the established rule of law that a written contract merges all prior and contemporaneous negotiations in reference to the same subject, and that the whole engagement of the parties and the extent and manner of their undertaking is embraced in the writing.
This rule is the same in equity as at common law, and although a written agreement may be set aside or reformed, fraud or mistake must be shown to entitle a party to such relief. And it is never competent in an action upon a written contract to show that it was executed on the faith of a preceding parol stipulation not embraced in it.
The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.