Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. v. Duerson's ex'or

69 Va. 630, 28 Gratt. 630
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 12, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 69 Va. 630 (Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. v. Duerson's ex'or) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. v. Duerson's ex'or, 69 Va. 630, 28 Gratt. 630 (Va. 1877).

Opinion

Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It must he regarded as settled law, at least in Virginia, that contracts of life insurance entered into' before the late war, by parties who were separated by • the belligerent lines, are not abrogated, but only suspended, by the war. The New York Life Ins. Co. v. Hendren, 24 Gratt. 536; citing Manhattan Life Ins. Co. v. Warwick, 20 Gratt. 614; Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co. v. Atwood’s adm’x, 24 Gratt. 497; and New York Life Ins. Co. v. White—special court of appeals of Virginia—■ Insurance Law Journal for December 1873, p. 917. These Virginia decisions are in accord with the decisions of the supreme courts of the states of Kentucky,, New York, Yew Jersey and Mississippi, and the Federal circuit courts for the southern district of Yew York, J. Blatchford, and for the eastern district of Virginia, J. Bond.

In the case under judgment one of the policies of insurance was issued by the plaintiff in error on the 10th day of June 1850, for the insurance of the life of Kobert O. Duerson, of Spotsylvania county, in the state of Virginia, in the amount of $2,000, for the term of the whole continuance of his life, in conside- ■ ration of'the sum of $70.20 to the said company in hand paid by the said Kobert O. Duerson, and of the annual premium of $70.20 to be paid on the 10th of [639]*639June in every year during the continuance of the policy. The other policy, which is also an insurance for the term of the whole continuance of his life, is dated June 9th, 1851, and is for $1,500, in consideration of $54.45 in hand paid and of the annual premium of same amount to be paid on the 9th of June of every year during the continuance of the policy.

The plaintiff in error was an incorporated company of the state of Connecticut, and had an agent, A. Alexander Little, at Fredericksburg, Virginia. The testator of the defendant in error, B. C. Duerson, was a resident citizen of Virginia. The premiums on both policies were regularly and punctually paid to the agent, in the mode prescribed by the policies, by the insured, in fulfillment of his contracts up to the 9th and 10th of June 1861. At those dates the next premiums were due. They were not paid. The late war between the states, at those dates and prior thereto, was flagrant, and separated the home office and domicil of the company from its agent at Fredericksburg, and from the insured, B. C. Duerson, by the belligerent lines. The contract was thereby suspended, the agent of the company having resolved to receive no further premiums after the preceding 4th day of May, which he made known to the public. There is no direct proof that the premiums then due were.tendered by Duerson to the agent. I think the presumption is they were tendered; or, if not tendered, it was because Duerson knew they would not be received, as the agent had stated publicly he would receive no more premiums; and he now testifies that if they had been tendered he would not have received them.

But I do not think it material whether they were tendered or not, inasmuch as the war suspended the contract, and if they had been tendered they would. [640]*640not have been received. In the Manhattan Life Ins. Co. v. Warwick, supra, it is true we held that a payment tendered to the agent in July 1861, and received by bim, was valid and binding on the company, and that the insured should be credited with it, although the company never received it. But in that case it was shown that the agent had received it in compliance with express instructions from the company, which was therefore charged with it. But in this case there is no special authority given to the agent by the company to receive any premiums during the war, and after the war it refused to ratify his act in receiving payment of a premium from Gordon on the 4th of May 1861. If it had been competent for the agent to receive premiums without special authority, he resolved not to receive them, and it would not be right to hold the assured to a forfeiture of his policies in this case for not tendering them, inasmuch as if they had been tendered, the agent declares they would not have been received, and if they had been tendered and received the company would have refused to ratify it, as is inferrable from the fact, that they disclaimed the authority of their said agent in another case to receive payment of a premium, even at an earlier stage of the war, and refused to ratify it.

But the contract being suspended by the war, all acts which were to be done in its execution were suspended; and the stipulations that the insured should pay the premiums of the 9th and 10th of June 1861, as the conditions of the policies, were suspended.

But this being so, it was obligatory on the insured, if living, to have tendered payment in a reasonable time after the termination of the war. But if the insured had not survived the War, but had died pendente beüo, the case, it seems to me, is different, and the as[641]*641sured is not liable to a forfeiture of the policy by reason of the failure of the personal representative of the insured to make a tender of the unpaid premiums after the termination of the war. The insurer had in his own hands money due from him to the assured, out of which he was entitled to retain the unpaid premiums, and a tender of them by the personal representative would have been unnecessary if not improper. But the insurer should have been informed in a reasonable time after the war ended of the death of the insured, that he might know what his liabilities were. The non-payment of premiums pending the war, and by reason of its existence, were facts within his knowledge, and need not have been communicated to him by the personal representative, because not necessary to inform him of his liability or its extent.

In this case the insured died March 17, 1868, pendente hello. His wife qualified as his executrix, and died in June 1865, soon after the termination of the war. Letters of administration d. b. r., e. t. a., were granted to her brother, J. O. Cammack, on the 12th of October following; and he wrote to the secretary of the company in January following, informing him of the death of R. O. Duerson from disease. He also informed him of the date of his death, and of whatever it was necessary for the company to learn from him to form a conclusion as to its liability. I do not regard this letter as conceding that there was no legal liability on the company to pay the policy as contended for by its counsel. On the contrary, it seems to me that, according to its natural import, the writer was of opinion that the assured had a claim upon the company, but to what extent, or whether it could be legally enforced or not, he was not informed, and wished to have the views of the company with regard to it. Re[642]*642lying upon what he had heard as to its liability in other eases, he hoped it would come to just conclusions. I do not think it can be regarded as a surrender in any manner’of any just or legal claim, which, as the personal representative of R. G. Duerson, he had upon the company, though it is not a positive assertion of any legal claim.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Va. 630, 28 Gratt. 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-mut-life-ins-v-duersons-exor-va-1877.