Cahen v. . Continental Life Ins. Co.

69 N.Y. 300, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 839
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 10, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 69 N.Y. 300 (Cahen v. . Continental Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cahen v. . Continental Life Ins. Co., 69 N.Y. 300, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 839 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Folger, J.

There are some preliminary points made by the defendant, to be disposed of before we reach the main question in the case upon which it was principally litigated.

First. It is contended that the question of insurance by-the plaintiff in the Empire company, and the effect of any agreement between that company and the defendant, was not raised by the pleadings.

The complaint annexes a copy of the defendant’s policy, as a part of itself, and says that the same will be referred to on the trial for its terms and conditions. The policy of the defendant so referred to and made a part of the complaint, recites that the policy of the Empire Mutual Life Insurance Company has been surrendered, and makes the application and representations therefor a part of the defendant’s policy, and those representations a part of the consideration therefor. It is also a condition of that policy, that if the declaration made to the Empire company or any part thereof should not have been discovered to be in any respect untrue within one year from the date of the defendant’s policy, the same should be considered ineontestible by the defendant, unless it should be discovered at any time willfully and fraudulently untrue.

I am not able, therefore, to agree with the defendant that the complaint does not present the fact that the defendant’s policy was issued in the place of the policy of the Empire company, and not upon a primary and original application to the defendant for a policy from it. The plaintiff was not bound to anticipate in her complaint the defence which the defendant has set up, and had a right to rely, in complaining; upon such averments as stated a cause of action, leaving the *305 matter which would meet that defence for proof, or argument from proof, at the trial.

Second. It is contended that the policy of defendant was issued upon a risk which a life insurance company could not safely or properly take. The answer to this position is, that the defendant did not take the risk, in the sense conveyed by this contention. This was not a transaction between the defendant and the plaintiff, nor was it as to this risk alone. The defendant was not to be expected, nay, not to be allowed, so far as the plaintiff was concerned, to inquire with particularity into the circumstances of it, and examine as closely as if it were at liberty to take or to refuse. It was a transaction, (we have a right to infer, as we shall show hereafter), as to all the outstanding risks of the retiring company, by which that company was to be relieved from them all, and the defendant was to take them all, without right to discriminate and reject. So that it does not lie in the mouth of the defendant to say that the risk was an ill one, which it could not safely and properly take. That was a consideration for it to weigh when it was negotiating with the Empire, and about to take on the liabilities of that company.

Third. As akin to this, it is intimated that the terms of the contract between the two companies do not appear in the evidence. It does appear that the defendant had notice to produce the contract at the trial, and that the defendant declined to do so, thus forcing the plaintiff to parol proof of its contents, and itself incurring the penalty of having all inferences from that proof taken most strongly against itself. It was shown that the defendant made a contract with the Empire company concerning the assumption by the defendant of the outstanding risks of the Empire company. Not one risk or few risks, but the risks outstanding, all of them; so it must mean. And when we find the defendant, after such contract, issuing its policy to the plaintiff”, in such terms as appear, we may infer that the contract was not merely about or looking towards an assumption, but that it was a .contract of actual assumption.

*306 We now come to the main question in the case, which is to be determined from the language of the contract between the parties, and the circumstances in which it was made.

We -have already given a paraphrase of the agreement and conditions of the policy upon which the defendant relies. The defence is, that it was. discovered within a year after the issuing of its policy that some part of the declaration made to the Empire company was untrue, and further that it was willfully and fraudulently so. ' In our view of the case it is not needed that we specify what statements in the declaration are alleged to have been untrue.

The success of the defence depends upon whether the warranty of the truth of the representations relates to the date of the application to the Empire company, or the date of the policy of the defendant. We think that it relates to the date of the former, and that the defence is not made out.

The consideration for the policy of the defendant, as stated therein, is twofold: first, the payment of certain moneys; second, certain representations, representations made to the Empire company. They are referred to as made in the past, and to another company. They are not spoken of as of the present time, and to the defendant. It is those representations of the past, made in that past time to another company, of which the warranty speaks. The truth of them is warranted, the truth of those past things. How of necessity those representations must speak of the time then present at the date of them, and of the period of seven years just prior to that date. And to be true representations then, they must speak the truth at that time, and of that period. They did not speak of the future, nor take into their scope and purview any time or period to come after they were made. Hence, when the assertion, though it be later in date, is made of the truth of those representations, it is an assertion of the truth at that prior time of what was then expressed in them. Those representations, and that application, made then, speaking of the time then passing, and of the period of seven years just then passed, it is, which are made a part of the defend *307 ant’s policy. Such is our view of the language of the instrument, by itself considered.

When we consider the nature of the transaction it does not seem probable that the defendant would have sought to exact, or that the plaintiff would have yielded any different warranty. The defendant insists that at the time of the issuance of its policy, the subject of the insurance was mortally ailing, and that he and the plaintiff knew it. Is it reasonable to infer that they would have given up the contract they held with one company, to take the hazard of a new application and renewed representations ? Even in health it is not likely that such would be the case. The transaction gives no countenance thereto. It does not appear that the plaintiff or her husband were active in the matter; the probability and the inference are that they passively yielded to the result of the agreement between the two companies, made for their purposes in some degree at least, and not altogether for the benefit of the policyholders.

It is said that the defendant was interested in knowing what the health of Mr. Cahen was in October. So it was. It Avas not an interest coupled with a right to call upon him to disclose it. It took the risk of his state of health, as it took that of all the other policyholders of the Empire company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 N.Y. 300, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cahen-v-continental-life-ins-co-ny-1877.