Cohen v. . N.Y. Mutual Life Insurance Co.

50 N.Y. 610, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 467
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 50 N.Y. 610 (Cohen v. . N.Y. Mutual Life Insurance 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
Cohen v. . N.Y. Mutual Life Insurance Co., 50 N.Y. 610, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 467 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Allen, J.

A decision of this appeal has been delayed at the request of parties to other actions pending in this court, like in character in some respects to this, that before the questions involved should be decided, their appeals might be heard.

The importance of the questions at issue induced the court to listen to the request, and this case was substantially re-argued, with Sands v. The New York Life Ins. Co., in December last. (Post page, 626.)

The legal status of citizens of States at war, and the relation they mutually occupy, as well as the effect of a state of war upon contracts and obligations of the subjects of litigant States, and their right to contract or hold intercourse with each other, have recently been so frequently the subject of judicial discussion and decision in the State and federal courts, that the leading principles by which the intercourse and dealing between enemies, that is, between the inhabitants of States and nations at war, are prohibited or restricted and regulated, and the effect of war upon their mutual contracts and obligations, are quite familiar.

They have been so often repeated in different forms, that a review of them, or a reference at much length to them, would be out of place.

The general principles and doctrines, as found in the treatises of writers upon public law and deducible from the judgments of courts, are firmly established and cannot be ignored, or essentially' modified by courts at this day. All that courts have to do is to apply the principles thus recognized and setr tied to cases as they arise. It is said in general terms that,, in a state of war, the individuals who compose the belligerent States exist, as to each other, in a state of utter occlusion,” and all intercourse between them is forbidden. (Per *617 Johnson, J., The Rapid, 8 Cranch, 155.) This proposition has been repeated with approval in several later cases. Judge ¡Nelson, in the Prize Cases (2 Black., 635, 687), adopting the language of approved writers on international law, says that one of the legal consequences resulting from a state of war is that the people of the two countries become immediately the enemies of each other; all intercourse, commercial or otherwise, between them unlawful; and all contracts existing at the commencement of the war suspended, and all made during its existence utterly void. The insurance of enemies’ property, the drawing of bills of exchange or purchase on the enemies’ country, the remission of bills or money to it, are illegal and void; all existing partnerships between citizens or subjects of the two countries are dissolved; and, in fine, interdiction of trade and intercourse, direct or indirect, is absolute and complete by the mere force and effect of the war itself.” (See, also, Jecker v. Montgomery, 18 How., 110; Hanger v. Abbott, 6 Wallace, 532; The Onachita, id., 521; Griswold v. Waddington, 16 J. R., 438.) These propositions, general and far reaching as they are, were, however, made in cases relating to commercial intercourse, and involved the question as to the legality and effect of commercial dealings and transactions; and the general language used, in legal effect, extends only to intercourse and dealings of that character, although all other intercourse, clearly within the mischief intended to be avoided, would be within the principle, and therefore within the rule itself. I do not understand that it has been' authoritatively adjudged that all private contracts without exception, made between citizens or subjects of States at war, are necessarily void, although the language of the courts has been sufficiently comprehensive to include the proposition in its largest extent. The subject is elaborately and ably considered in Kershaw v. Kelsey (100 Mass., 561), and the authorities, with the reason and extent of the rule under consideration, reviewed and discussed ; and the result of the examination was that the law of nations, as judicially declared, prohibits all intercourse *618 between citizens of the two belligerents, which is inconsistent with the state of war between those countries. This was regarded as including every act of voluntary submission to the enemy, or receiving his protection; any act or contract which tends to increase his resources, and every kind of trading or commercial dealing or intercourse, direct or indirect. The act of congress of July 13, 1861 (12 U. S. Stat. at Large, 257), and the proclamation of the president, pursuant to that statute, only prohibited commercial intercourse between the citizens of the States declared to be in insurrection and the citizens of the rest of the States.

For all the pmposes of this action it may be assumed that this rule, thus restricted, would prohibit the making of a contract during a state of war for the insurance of the life of an enemy. This was rather assumed by the counsel for both parties upon the argument. It would certainly forbid the transmission of money for the premium from one of the States at war to the other; and it is said that the life of an alien enemy cannot be insured by his creditor, although the latter be a subject of the same country with the insurer. (Bunyon’s Life Assurance, 19.) The authorities cited to sustain this proposition were all, however, cases of insurance upon merchandise. (Harman v. Kingston, 3 Camp., 150; Potts v. Bell, 8 T. R., 548; Flindt v. Waters, 15 East, 260.) The insurance upon the life of the husband of the plaintiff was a valid and lawful contract at the time it was made in 1849, and was “ for the term of his natural life,” in consideration of a sum paid at the date of the policy, and the further consideration of the annual payment of a like sum on or before the second day of April in every year. This was not a policy from year to year, but an insurance for life, subject to be defeated by the non-performance of the condition prescribed, to wit, the payment of the annual premium. It is expressly declared in the contract of insurance that if the annual payments should not be made, “ that said policy should cease and determine,” and “ that all previous payments made thereon should be forfeited to the company.” It was a life *619 policy. (Hodsdon v. Guardian Life Ins. Co., 97 Mass., 144; Reese v. Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co., 26 Barb., 556; N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Clopton, 7 Bush. [Ky.] R., 179.) The contract was not, as to all its stipulations and as to both parties, executory. It was executed by the plaintiff by the payment of the annual premiums from 1849 to and including 1861, while it was wholly executory on the part of the defendant, its undertaking being to pay the amount specified upon the death of the insured. It is no answer to say that the plaintiff had only paid for the risk incurred from year to year. The annual premium paid during the first years of a life policy is in excess of the actual risk; and this excess is so much paid in advance for the greater risk during the later years in case of a prolonged life.

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50 N.Y. 610, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-ny-mutual-life-insurance-co-ny-1872.