Floars v. Ætna Life Insurance

56 S.E. 915, 144 N.C. 232, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 3, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 56 S.E. 915 (Floars v. Ætna Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floars v. Ætna Life Insurance, 56 S.E. 915, 144 N.C. 232, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 134 (N.C. 1907).

Opinion

Hoke, J.,

after stating the case: It seems to be well established that, in the absence of some statutory inhibition, an oral contract of insurance, or to insure, will be upheld if otherwise binding, except, as suggested by one author, in the case of guaranty insurance. Yance on Insurance, 148; Beach on Insurance, vol. Y, sec. 438, note 2. And further, that the enactment of a statute which establishes a standard form for a policy, the statute being only affirmative in its terms, will not invalidate an oral contract. Hicks v. Ins. Co., 162 N. Y., 284.

This and other decisions also hold that, in making a valid oral contract of insurance, general in its terms, the law will read into the contract the standard policy as fixed by the statute, and that, in order to recover on such a policy, the claimant must comply with the necessary and material requirements of such a policy or establish a waiver thereof on the part of the company.

While these principles are very generally admitted, it is also accepted doctrine that when the parties have bargained together touching a contract of insurance, and reached an agreement, and in carrying out, or in the effort to carry out, the agreement a formal written policy is delivered and accepted, the written policy, while it remains unaltered, will constitute the contract between the parties, and all prior parol agreements will be merged in the written instrument; nor will evidence be received of prior parol inducements and assurances to contradict or vary the written policy while it so stands as embodying the contract between the parties.

*236 Like other written contracts, it may be set aside or corrected for franc! or for mutual mistake; but, until,this is done, the written policy is conclusively presumed to express the contract it purports to contain. Vanee on Insurance, pp. 163, 348; Beach’s Laws of Insurance, vol. 1, secs. 495, 496; Insurance Co. v. Mowry, 96 U. S., 547.

In the citations from Vance, just made, at page 163, the author says: “When the contract of insurance is finally complete, it is customarily embodied in a formal written instrument termed a policy. This instrument merges all prior or cotemporaneous parol agreements touching the transactions; and, upon accepting it, the insured is conclusively presumed, in the absence of fraud, etc., to have given his assent to all of its terms.” And on page 348 he says: “The rule that all prior parol agreements are merged in a subsequent written contract touching the same subject-matter is now too well established to need the support of cited authority. Therefore, when a policy of insurance, properly executed, is offered by the insurer and accepted by the insured as the evidence of their contract, it must be conclusively presumed to contain all the terms of the agreement for insurance by which the parties intend to be bound. If any previous agreement of the parties shall be omitted from the policy, or any term not theretofore considered added to it, the parties are necessarily presumed to have adopted the contract as written as the final form of their binding agreement.”

The same author, referring to a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in McMaster v. New York Life Insurance Co., 183 U. S., 25, which might be construed as militating to some extent against the position maintained by the author, says: “It is true, as has been heretofore explained, that there is a tendency on the part of some courts, *237 in effect, to enforce the equitable remedy of reformation in actions at law upon insurance contracts, when the equitable position of the insured is unusually strong, as when the Supreme Court of. the United States held in McMaster v. New York Life Insurance Co. that the insured, by accepting a policy, was not conclusively bound by a stipulation inserted therein without his knowledge or consent. But with, the exception of such cases, in which the insurer is clearly estopped to insist upon this rule of law, it must be universally held that a writing, accepted as a contract, contains all the terms to which the parties have given their consent and no others.”

As a matter of fact, this decision was made, in part, to depend on the correct date when the policies of insurance became effective; and the Court held, that on the face of the policies as they stood they bore date át a time which would enable plaintiff to recover, and no correction was required. The application, made a part of the policy, required a different date — the one contended for by defendant; and in the conflict the Court gave the construction more favorable to the insured, to-wit, the date on the face of the policy, and sustained a recovery at law.

In Insurance Co. v. Mowry, Mr. Justice Field states the doctrine we are discussing as follows: “The entire engagement of the parties, with all the conditions upon which its fulfillment could be obtained, must be conclusively presumed to be there stated. If, by inadvertence or mistake, provisions were omitted the parties could have had recourse, for a correction of the agreement, to a court of equity, which is competent to give all needful relief in such cases. But until thus corrected the policy must be taken as expressing the final understanding of the assured and of the insurance company.”

*238 In the case before ns, then, the written policy having been delivered, and accepted, this instrument, as it uoav stands, expresses the contract of the parties; and as it contains no assurance of indemnity of the kind required to sustain the plaintiff's demand, no recovery can be had unless the policy can be corrected or reformed. And, there being - no allegation ,or suggestion of fraud, such correction can be obtained, if at all, only on the ground of mistake.

In courts like ours, possessing both legal and equitable jurisdiction, there is no reason why this relief should not be given and damages recovered in the same action. And in some jurisdictions this double relief has been awarded in either courts of law or equity. May on Insurance, sec. 566; Kerr on Insurance, sec. 12. There is no difficulty, therefore, as to the jurisdiction of the Court. But, on the facts presented, is plaintiff entitled to the relief demanded ? And here it may be well to note that plaintiff is not seeking to be relieved of his contract relations and recover premiums paid. The relief sought is to correct and reform the instrument and hold the defendant to the contract as corrected.

In the first class of cases, and under certain circumstances, a contract' will be set aside for mistake of one of the parties, on the ground that the minds of the parties had never agreed on the same thing at one and the same time. But in the second, in order to reform a contract and enforce it as reformed, it is familiar learning that the mistake must be that of both! the parties. To hold otherwise would be not to reform but to make the contract.

As said in Kerr on Insurance, sec. 12, p. 146: “If reformation be sought solely on the ground of mistake, it must appear that the mistake was mutual and common to both parties. A court cannot create for the parties a contract *239 wbicb they did not both intend to make.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E. 915, 144 N.C. 232, 1907 N.C. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floars-v-tna-life-insurance-nc-1907.