Campbell v. International Life Assurance Society of London

17 Bosw. 298
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedFebruary 26, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Bosw. 298 (Campbell v. International Life Assurance Society of London) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. International Life Assurance Society of London, 17 Bosw. 298 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinion

By the Court—Hoffman, J.

The question is, whether the tender of the premium on the 29th of June, 1856, being Monday, was sufficient to keep the policy in force. That question will be first considered, upon the terms of the policy merely, irrespective of the letter of the agent and other facts.

1. By one clause of the policy, it is provided that the yearly premium for such assurance is $65.40, and that the said Daniel Campbell hath paid the sum of $65.40, being the annual premium for such insurance, to wit, for the term of twelve months, ending the 28th day of May, 1851.

In the margin of the policy are these words: Risk commencing 29th of May, 1850, ending 28th of May, 1851.”

Thus twelve months is computed as beginning on the 29th, and terminating with the end of the 28th of May.

Treating, then, the time for payment of the premium as exactly commensurate with the duration of the risk, if a premium was paid on the 29th, the risk endured until the last moment of mid night of the 28th of the same month, in the ensuing year, and the new premium ought to be paid before the end of the last moment of the 28th.

But then is added this provision: “The policy will not be considered in force, if the premium remains unpaid beyond thirty days after becoming due.” We may properly say conversely, that the policy shall remain in force, if the premium is paid within thirty days after becoming due.

Upon these terms used by the parties, the premium undoubtedly became due at the endof the 28th of May. The first day of the thirty days for making the payment commenced with the first moment of the 29th of May, and ended with the last moment of the 27th of June. In the year 1857, this fell on Saturday; and in this view, the full thirty days allowed for the payment expired with the end of Saturday. That was the last day for performance of the engagement, and the tender on Monday could not be good.

This computation, it will be noticed, includes both the 29th of May and the 27th of June. The day when the premium became due was the 28th of May, and that is excluded. There is no rule which would also exclude the 27th of June.

[310]*310The Revised Statutes (1 R. S., 606,) provide for the computation of time; and it is observed by the court in Pulling v. The People, (8 Barb. R., 384,) that according to this division of time, a day consists of twenty-four hours, and commences and ends at midnight. <>

This, then, is an adoption of the natural day, as distinguished from the artificial day from sunrise to sunset. (Id.) The first day of any number of days for doing an act, would not expire until the lapse of twenty-four hours from any moment, even the first second of that day. It would expire on the corresponding moment of the second day. This seems to produce the same result as the rule of excluding the first day in computing the time for doing an act.

The Code (§ 407) directs that the time within which any act is to be done, within its provisions, shall be computed by excluding the first day and including the last. If the last day be Sunday, it shall be excluded. It has, therefore, furnished a definite rule for all cases within its own provisions.

There is no way of regarding the question, if we treat the premium to have been due on the 28th of May, which will not make the thirty days end on Saturday, the 27th of June.

2d. We are then to consider the point, whether there is not enough in the case to warrant the conclusion that the 29th of May was, by consent, the true day for payment of the premium.

The policy was dated the 29th of May. The first premium was paid on the 31st of that month, and the premium was paid annually in advance up to the 29th of May, 1857. The general agents informed the party that the premium would be payable on the 29th of May, by the note stated in the case. This note appears to have been conformable to the understanding and practice of the parties.

Again, the note of the general agents was sufficient to justify the assured in treating the 29th as the time when the premium was payable. It was their construction of the effect of the agreement, or of the habit under it, if it was not fully within their authority to vary the day. It justified the party in relying upon that representation, coming from those who were entitled to make a contract of insurance, and acting as the general agents in the United States.

[311]*311Starr, as general agent, possessed the power of binding the association to an insurance. Whether a full policy was obtained within three months or not, his contract was sufficient.

In Wing v. Harvey, (27 Eng. & Eq. L., 140,) an agent of a company received a premium, knowing that the condition of a life policy had been broken. His knowledge was held to be constructive notice to the company of the breach, and acceptance of the premium was a waiver of the forfeiture.

Leeds v. The Mechanics' Insurance Company, (4 Seld., 351,) is a case which, I think, supports this view of the power of the general agents in this instance.

See, also, Brocklebank v. Sugrue, (5 Carr. and Payne, 21,) New York Central Insurance Company v. The National Prot. Insurance Company. (20 Barb., 468.)

I think we are justified in saying that the 29th of May was the true day for payment of the premium in 1857.

If this conclusion is right, the next inquiry is, can the 29th of May be excluded from the computation of the thirty days ? If it may be, then the thirty days expired on Sunday, the 28th of June; and the remaining question will be, had the assured the ensuing Monday on which to pay the premium ?

Besides the rule given in the Revised Statutes of 1830,. construed as before stated, I think that the cases of. Wiggin v. Peters, (1 Metc., 127,) Bigelow v. Willson, (1 Pick., 485,) Sands v. Lyon (18 Conn., 18,) Lester v. Garland, (15 Ves., 243,) and of Dowly v. Foxall, (1 Ball & Beatty, 193,) with the authorities there cited, are decisive to sustain an answer in the affirmative to the first question. The Court, in the case from Connecticut reports, justly commends the opinion of Sir William Grant, in Lester v. Garland, as the most instructive and able of any to be found in the books. That eminent judge says “that it would be more easy to maintain, as the general rule, that the day of an act done, or an event happening, ought, in all cases to be excluded, than any other rule.” In other authorities, this general rule is made applicable to the case of an obligation arising on a particular day, and its performance extended from that day.

So the Court in Massachusetts observe: “ we are warranted in saying, that when time is to be computed from or after the day of a given date, that day is to be excluded in the computation. No [312]*312moment of time can be said to be after a given day until that day has expired.”

The contract, as we now analyze and construe it, was, that the policy should cease to be in force if the premium remained unpaid beyond thirty days after the 29th of May.

3d. Then arises the important question. As by this mode of computation the. last day of the thirty days was Sunday, could the tender of the premium be made on Monday ?

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Bluebook (online)
17 Bosw. 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-international-life-assurance-society-of-london-nysuperctnyc-1859.