Hayes v. Penn Mutual Life Insurance

222 Mass. 382
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 222 Mass. 382 (Hayes v. Penn Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Penn Mutual Life Insurance, 222 Mass. 382 (Mass. 1916).

Opinion

Rugg, C. J.

This is a suit in equity whereby the plaintiff seeks to reform an endowment policy of life insurance, issued by the defendant in 1886. The policy is upon the life of the plaintiff, payable to his wife and her executors, administrators and assigns at the expiration of thirty years, or upon his decease before that time. The wife has deceased. The plaintiff avers that by the mutual mistake both of himself and the defendant insurance company the policy was made in that form, and that both intended that the policy should be made payable to bim at the maturity of the endowment period, and payable to his wife only in the event of the insured’s death before that time.

[385]*385The cause was heard before a single justice, who entered a final decree dismissing the bill. It now comes before us on the plaintiff’s appeal with a report of all the evidence.

Both parties have treated the stenographic report of the oral statement of the single justice, made at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, of reasons for ordering the decree dismissing the bill, as a finding of facts under R. L. c. 159, § 23. But obviously it is not that. It is open to grave doubt whether the single justice intended it to be anything more than the somewhat informal announcement of conclusions often made at the end of a hearing when the judge feels so clear as to the decree which ought to be entered that he does not desire further time for consideration. But, treating this stenographic report as the parties have treated it, no error appears.

The single justice ruled rightly as matter of law that, in order that the plaintiff be entitled to relief, there must be a mutual mistake common to all the parties to the policy, and that the burden of proof on this point rested on the plaintiff. The mistake of one is insufficient. Page v. Higgins, 150 Mass. 27. Tourtillotte v. Tourtillotte, 205 Mass. 547, 552. Dzuris v. Pierce, 216 Mass. 132, 135.

The findings of fact were, in substance, that the plaintiff supposed the contract of insurance to be in accordance with his present contention, but that there was not sufficient evidence to show that the contract issued by the insurance company was not the policy which it understood was called for by the plaintiff’s application, and in form and substance such as it intended to issue; that the evidence relating to that point was vague and did not satisfy the requirements of the law; that' DeForest was not “the active, managing, corporate man to issue contracts; he was an agent of substantially limited powers;” and that he was unable to find that the “insurance company made a mistake and supposed they were issuing something else.” On the contrary, he found that the application of the plaintiff for the insurance was before the company, and the policy issued was exactly in accordance with its terms.

The testimony bearing upon the crucial point of the case came from witnesses who testified orally before the single justice. The familiar rule, upon an appeal in equity with a report of all the [386]*386evidence, is that the appeal brings before this “court questions of fact as well as questions of law, and it is the duty of the court to examine the evidence, and to decide the case according to its judgment, giving due weight to the finding of the judge. ... It is however true that upon an appeal from a decree of a judge in equity upon questions of fact, arising on oral testimony heard before him, his decision will not be reversed unless it is plainly wrong. Dickinson v. Todd, 172 Mass. 183, and cases cited.” Colbert v. Moore, 185 Mass. 227. Lindsey v. Bird, 193 Mass. 200. Harvey-Watts Co. v. Worcester Umbrella Co. 193 Mass. 138. Wright v. Shaw, 202 Mass. 541, 544. The question, then, is whether under this rule the finding of the single justice, to the effect that the plaintiff failed to prove mistake on the part of the defendant in issuing the policy, should stand.

The policy was issued in accordance with the terms of the application. No question is made on that point. The plaintiff testified to the effect that his entire negotiations respecting the issuance of the policy up to the filing of the final application was had with DeForest, mentioned above. In various forms of language he testified further that DeForest recommended an endowment policy in such form that the insured would be the beneficiary if he lived, and his wife would be the beneficiary if he died. His testimony was unequivocal and direct to this effect. DeForest testified that, in the negotiations with the plaintiff, “I distinctly said to him that in the event of his death the policy would be payable to his wife, and that in the event of his surviving the period of thirty years it would be payable to himself. ... If he survived the endowment period, the policy would mature as a claim collectible by himself.”

There is no evidence of any mistake on the part of the company in issuing the policy, for that was in conformity to the application. The plaintiff’s case rests, therefore, in its last analysis upon the proposition that the mistake occurred in making out the application, in that it did not conform to the terms orally agreed upon.

The application on which the policy was founded was signed by the plaintiff after having been written in his presence by the partner of DeForest, one Knox, who died several years ago. The mistake, according to the plaintiff’s theory, must have had its inception here. DeForest was not present when the applica[387]*387tian was made out and signed. Confessedly there was a modification at this interview of the negotiations previously had between the plaintiff and DeForest. There had been in contemplation a single policy for $5,000. But as a result of talk between the plaintiff and Iinox, application was made for two policies, each for $5,000, and the two policies subsequently were issued. One of them later lapsed or was cancelled.

The plaintiff’s narration of what occurred at the interview between him and Knox was in substance that he would be the beneficiary if he lived, and that his wife would benefit if he died; and that nothing was said with reference to the wife being the beneficiary in case both lived to the end of the endowment period; and that he told Knox that he wanted a policy payable to himself in every event except that of his death before the maturity of the endowment period. Notwithstanding this testimony the single justice well may have thought, that although the plaintiff was honest in his testimony as to this recollection, yet as it related to an interview which occurred more than a quarter of a century before, it was extremely unlikely that a general soliciting agent of a life insurance company for the metropolitan district with New York as its centre would have made so vital a mistake in writing an application for insurance, that there was no mistake on the part of Knox, and that he knew perfectly well the kind of application which he wrote and that he intended to write exactly that which was written. This seems a reasonable view of the evidence. If this view was entertained, then the conclusion follows that there was no evidence of mistake on the part of the insurance company and hence no mutual mistake.

The application was unmistakable in its terms. In answer to the question, “ Give the name and post office address of the party for whose benefit the insurance is proposed,” there was written, “Mrs. Fannie S.

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Bluebook (online)
222 Mass. 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-penn-mutual-life-insurance-mass-1916.