Day v. Connecticut General Life Insurance

45 Conn. 480
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 45 Conn. 480 (Day v. Connecticut General Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Connecticut General Life Insurance, 45 Conn. 480 (Colo. 1878).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

This action is brought upon a policy of insurance upon the life of James B. Colt. The policy is recited in the declaration. It .is then averred that the defendants assumed and faithfully promised to perform all the stipulations and agreements in that instrument on their part to be performed, and to keep the policy in force for the term of the whole continuance of the life of the said Colt upon the terms and conditions therein set forth. It then alleges payment of the annual premiums until October 28th, 1872, on which day another payment fell due for the year then next ensuing, and a tender of the amount due that day, and a refusal of the defendants to receive it. It also alleges an express declaration by the defendants that they would not longer continue the policy in force, and that the same had ceased and determined and had become null and void. A [490]*490verdict was rendered for the plaintiff, and the defendants filed a motion in arrest of judgment for the insufficiency of the declaration. The questions arising on the motion were reserved for the consideration of this court.

It is not claimed that the alleged promise to keep the policy in force is found in terms in the policy. The only express promise found therein is to pay the policy upon the death of the insured — a contract to pay in the future a certain sum of money. But it is claimed that there is an implied promise to receive the premiums and keep the policy in force, and a breach of this implied promise constitutes the plaintiff’s whole cause of action. “ Implied contracts,” says Blackstone, “ are such as reason and justice dictate, and which therefore the law presumes that every man undertakes to perform.” “ Implied contracts are those which are raised by operation of law.” 1 Swift’s Digest, 175. The law raises no contract by implication unnecessarily. Therefore when substantial justice may be done without it, if the party in Whose behalf it is claimed does not need it to protect him in the enjoyment of some legal right, and the party against whom it is claimed does not otherwise obtain some unfair and illegal advantage, no contract will be implied. Let us test this case by an application of these principles.

The plaintiff purchased this policy with knowledge of. the nature of the contract, the conditions therein contained, and the obligations thereby imposed. He assumed the liabilities and the risks growing out of the conditions without any expectation of receiving any thing in return until the policy by its terms should become payable. When it does become payable the defendants must pay it unless they have a legal defense. If the policy had become null and void, as the defendants claimed, that would be a legal defense. But the jury found against the defendants on that claim, and the question recurs as to the legal effect of refusing to receive the premiums and improperly declaring the policy void. These were the defendants’ acts alone, not only without the concurrence of the plaintiff, but against his wishes. It certainly requires no argument to show that neither of these acts, nor [491]*491both combined, would be any defence to the action. The plaintiff then would possess all his legal rights unimpaired, notwithstanding the action of the defendants.

But it may be said that the refusal of the defendants to accept the premium and recognize the continued existence of the policy raises a doubt as to its validity, and throws a cloud, so to speak, over the plaintiff’s property. This may be so; but the claim that a contract has become null and void by reason of the violation of some condition therein contained is not an invasion of the legal rights of the other contracting party. If the claim is not well founded the party claiming it will take nothing by it, and the legal rights of the other party will remain unimpaired. This must be true of most contracts; hence there will be no occasion to invoke the aid of the law to imply a contract in addition to that expressed by the parties. If however by reason of the peculiar nature of this contract, and the length of time which may elapse before a suit can be brought on the express promise, there is danger that the party may be prejudiced, perhaps a court of equity upon a proper petition might have power to determine the question of forfeiture in advance, and if found not to exist to declare the policy to be in full force. But however this may be, we think it is quite clear that justice may be done and the rights of the plaintiff fully protected without resorting to an implied contract. Nor can it be successfully claimed that the defendants by their action obtained any undue or illegal advantage. If they were mistaken in their claim that the policy was forfeited, and if it be true that the policy notwithstanding such claim remains in full force, and that the defendants in due time will be liable thereon, the result of the defendants’ course will simply be the loss of interest more or less on the premiums. The advantages of such a result would be with the plaintiff and not with the defendants.

Again, the law raises an implied contract ordinarily and perhaps always for the purpose of carrying into effect the presumed intention of the parties. When therefore the consequence will be something entirely different from that contemplated by the parties, or if the court cannot clearly [492]*492see that the probable consequences were intended by the parties, no contract will be implied. Let us apply this test. We will suppose that the defendants really and in good faith claimed that the policy was forfeited by a breach of the condition. They could not receive the premium without thereby waiving the forfeiture; and if they could, common fairness would require that they should give notice of their intention to claim the forfeiture and decline to take the premium. Now according to the plaintiff’s claim they could not do this, if unsuccessful, without forfeiting all their advantages in the contract; yea more, they not only lose all profits, but they have actually carried the risk during all the time the policy was in force. It is in the nature of a penalty for making a legal claim in good faith in a court of justice. It cannot be presumed that the parties intended this. Penalties and forfeitures are odious to the law, and where they are necessarily involved in the consequences of an implied contract, no contract will be implied. But if there is no forfeiture in respect to just profits, the rule of damages being, instead of the premiums paid with interest, the plaintiff’s proportion of the reserve, even then the contract would seem to be terminated with a loss to the company of all future profits. The law will not presume that that was the intention of the parties. If the contract was not terminated then a more serious objection to an implied contract arises — a possible liability on both an implied and an express promise; in other words a liability to refund the premiums or pay the value of the reserve on an implied promise, and ultimately to pay the sum named in the policy on the express promise.

We think therefore upon principle that the law raises no' such contract as the plaintiff contends for.

We are also of the opinion that the authorities cited in support of the plaintiff’s claim aré not exactly in point, and do not support the conclusion arrived at. The leading cases are Hochster v. De la Tour, 20 E. L. & E., 157, and Frost v. Knight, Law Reports, 7 Exch., 111. The first was an action on a contract to employ the plaintiff as a courier, to commence at a certain day. Before the time arrived the defendant [493]

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Bluebook (online)
45 Conn. 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-connecticut-general-life-insurance-conn-1878.