Andrew v. Ideal National Insurance Co.

509 P.2d 367, 29 Utah 2d 343, 1973 Utah LEXIS 802
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1973
DocketNos. 13040 and 13166
StatusPublished

This text of 509 P.2d 367 (Andrew v. Ideal National Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew v. Ideal National Insurance Co., 509 P.2d 367, 29 Utah 2d 343, 1973 Utah LEXIS 802 (Utah 1973).

Opinion

HENRIOD, Justice:

Appeal from a summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ class action with respect to rights under a Bonus Fund endorsement on a life insurance policy. Reversed, with costs to plaintiffs.

In 1960, about 12 years after issuance of the policies subject of this litigation, the defendant merged with another company, acquiring its assets and assuming its liabilities under policies it had written, including those considered here, which were written in 1948 and 1949. Such policies had a single annual premium covering life insurance coverage and a savings feature, — the Bonus Fund, — where the insurer agreed to deposit at least $1.00 into the Bonus Fund for every $1,000 of insurance written over a 20-year period, to be divided among those who were current in their premium payments during such period. The number of policies to' be sold was limited. The policies sold were delivered to the purchasers along with a letter of cheer, congratulating the lucky purchasers for having made “a sound and wise decision.” In March 1948, shortly after having bought a policy, the plaintiff Andrew, after contacting the Utah Insurance Commissioner, received a letter from the latter stating that the company was “sound financially in every respect,” that the policy had been approved and that it was “a special policy granted this company to get them established” and that “all the older companies have had the same privilege.”

Under the policy’s terms by December 31, 1951, the Bonus had accumulated $6,930. Not long after, and after defendants’ paid actuary rendered an opinion, the company “re-calculated” the Fund for some reason other than that stated in its solicited insurance policy, so that in 1954 the Fund dwindled to $2,416 by some different kind of calculation, ostensibly on account of some sort of illegality which never was reported to the policyholders, — nor was the shrinkage of the Fund, — until the 20th and maturity year of the Fund, when the company, after having collected full premiums for 20 years, bombshelled its pol-' icyholders with an arbitrary letter declaring the Bonus Fund endorsement void, based on an Attorney General’s opinion. The policyholders were offered four options for settlement of this alleged void policy, which options were the brain children of the defendant insurer, — which the [345]*345moving litigants here rejected, — and rightly so on such a self-serving, unilateral basis, bottomed on opinions of its own employees and the Attorney General, neither of which is dispositive. The options were given (which seems to make little sense if defendant asserts and re-asserts that the -contract was void), — without any alternative but to accept one of the four, — an alternative created and dispatched to the policyholders after a unilateral, self-serving •decision made by one party to a contract to interpret and determine the terms thereof, —which it not only presumed to construe but concedes it created. This is a good, -economic business practice, if possible and •enforceable.

It might be urged that the company may be impaled on the horns of its own dilem■ma by its claim that the language' of the -endorsement creates a purported contract that is null and void, but by virtue of which such language it concedes sufficiently is valid to prompt a compromise or settlement of legitimate claims. If the contract is void, it is void. Defendants seem ■to say that this being so, however, plaintiffs cannot enforce it, but defendants can modify it by asserting unenforceability on their own urged statutory violation, subjecting them to a penalty and possible suspension of their license for issuing a void •contract.1

It is axiomatic that he who seeks equity must do it. Hardly can the defendant insurer here conform by attempting to assume a dual role of litigant savior and benevolent Chancellor, — and at once reserve a conscionable expectation of judicial approval. It is difficult to concede the equities lie only with defendants and their predecessors who sought out Andrew, not he them. The facts of this case do not lead us to agree with Ideal’s asserted defense that “special penalties imposed on the insurer would in no way excuse, mitigate or condone the unlawful act of the insured (Andrew).”

First, it assumes something not in the record: That Andrew approached the company to get it to sell him a policy; second, that the company consistently can say that, after it illegally sold to Andrew, the latter became particeps to such illegality, although the company, but not he, could be punished under the statute.

Defendants’ brief largely is devoted to self-serving reports of employed actuaries and some insurance commissioners (who tended to agree with such reports), without bothering to consult anyone representing the policyholders. For example, to illustrate the indifference to insureds’ interest, the Commissioner who heard and granted the merger petition in 1960 said nothing in his findings or conclusions anent any sug-[346]*346gestión of illegality in the Bonus Fund endorsement, saying only that the merger agreement was “fair and equitable to the policyholders and stockholders of the companies,” — while ironically, ten years later in an affidavit prompted by defendants, saying that the “endorsement appeared to be unfairly discriminatory,” without having done anything about it, and that therefore he, in his quasi-judicial capacity, under oath, said it “would be void.” Neither did any other Commissioner do anything about this “void” rider, for 20 years until the 20th and “year of reckoning year,” when the present Commissioner requested and obtained an Attorney General’s opinion dated June 27, 1968. This opinion seems to have nothing to do with this case, although it heavily is relied on and is one of the bases for the company’s unilateral conclusion and announcement to its policyholders that their endorsement contract was null and void. The opinion of the Attorney General is based on a statute passed in 19SS, — seven years after the Bonus Fund endorsement was entered into, at which earlier time it was approved by the then Insurance Commissioner, and again, apparently approved by the Commissioner in the 1960 merger procedure, — by taking no action, and by the then Attorney General who appeared in the hearing and approved the merger. The Attorney General’s opinion actually attempted to lay down a couple of new legal precedents, one approving the renegation of the impairment of obligations clause of the Constitution, and the other declaring illegal, retroactively, a contract legal when executed, when it said that some other sections and the 19SS statute, “read cumulatively,” were part of an over-all statutory pattern of legislative intent to prohibit the issuance of such inducements and benefits such as the Bonus Fund Endorsement. The opinion talks about the cumulative statutes’ purpose being to prevent deceptive acts or practices, — providing a penalty of revocation of authority or license of any “insurer, general agent, agent, broker, or solicitor guilty of a violation of any stick provision,’’- — citing Replacement Vol. 4, U.C.A.1953, 31-27-16, 22, 23 (1966), and citing Utah Assn. v. Mountain St., 58 Utah 579, 200 P. 673 (1921). It is obvious that the opinion was talking about deceptive insurers, — not insureds, — and that the insureds (public) were to be protected against such deception and not made parties to it, — as defendants contend by citing Chap. 63, Laws of Utah 1947, 43-27-15, p. 276. This was a section which the Attorney General never mentioned. The opinion was

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509 P.2d 367, 29 Utah 2d 343, 1973 Utah LEXIS 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-v-ideal-national-insurance-co-utah-1973.