Herman v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York

108 F.2d 678, 127 A.L.R. 1458, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2626
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 21, 1939
Docket7211
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 108 F.2d 678 (Herman v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herman v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York, 108 F.2d 678, 127 A.L.R. 1458, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2626 (3d Cir. 1939).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

The layman’s sense of grievance is not (and this is axiomatic) coterminous with an invasion of his legal rights. By unfortunate hypothesis then, the aggrieved one must seek enlightenment from specialists skilled in the ascertainment of redressable as opposed to felt wrongs. Their advice, fortunately, is correct more often than not. In the case at bar, however, we feel that they have far exceeded the usual margin of error. The learned district judge was so strongly of our opinion that he granted defendant-appellee’s motion to dismiss the complaint.

The plaintiff purchased some insurance from the defendant company in May 1932 for a single premium of $60,745.71. That insurance was in the form of a policy technically known as “Annuity Certain followed by Deferred Life Annuity”, Record p. 9. The sale was made by a “duly authorized agent” who, in what might almost be called the duly authorized manner, presented his prospect with a rather complicated table of figures in five columns and an accompanying textual explanation. This table showed the insured how he could withdraw $300 a year for 19.years (duration of the annuity certain) to augment his guaranteed income of $3,300 and still be able to include in his coverage a five year retirement income contract to begin at the age of sixty-four. These withdrawals were to be made from the dividends which are a usual feature in mutual insurance contracts. Huebner, Life Insurance, p. 379. The dividend amounts are set forth in column one and in the following explanation their total appears under the caption “income from dividends per 1932 scale”.

The plaintiff paid his premium, accepted his policy, and enjoyed its benefits for six years. At the end of that time, no doubt in a moment of depression, he compared the dividends he had received, $2,180.69, with the corresponding figures, $4,412.93, appearing in column one above referred to. He then seems to have emitted a figurative cry of distress at the discrepancy of $2,232.21 thus appearing. The cry was loud enough to arouse the sympathies of the defendant company and on September 16, 1938 they obliged their assured by entering into a new contract. This “arrangement”, as, for some reason, plaintiff prefers to call it, provided for cancellation of the policy, on the one hand, and issuance of a new deferred life annuity policy and payment of $32,892.23 to the plaintiff, on the other. The new policy differed from the old in that it dropped out of the annuity certain provisions. Why the plaintiff should have accepted this policy in September and in November have his attorney (now of record in the case) write to the company and refer to it as “what purports to be a nonparticipating deferred annuity policy” is not clear. At any rate, the company clings to the belief that what they have issued is a policy and still holds that view in spite of plaintiff’s present assertion by way of complaint.

The pleadings seem inadequate and confused. In fact, they amount to little more than their concluding phrase, “hence this suit”. However that may be, we must so construe them “as to do substantial justice”, Rules of Civil Procedure for District Courts, rule 8(f), 28 U.S.C.A. following § 723c, and do so in plaintiff-appellant’s favor. He launches a double attack. That attack is, first, an assertion of misrepresentation and breach of promise as to the first policy, and, second, an allegation that the later policy is void for technical failure to comply with the insurance law of Pennsylvania.

The plaintiff had expectations and they did not transpire into facts. That may have been due to mistake on his part, on his and the insurance company’s part, *680 or it may have been because of representations innocent or otherwise flowing from the insurance company to him. In any of these hypotheses (except perhaps, unilateral mistake, not known to the other party, 2 Restatement of Contracts, §§ 472, 476, 503), he is entitled to equitable rescission if he complies with the essential qualification that he proceed with reasonable promptness.

Let us inquire, first, with respect to existence or non-existence of facts necessary to support the hypotheses. We can dismiss, at once, mistake, whether mutual or unilateral. The mistakes relieved against do not lie in the field of prediction. They must be as to present and existing facts. Parker-Washington Co. v. Kansas City, Mo., 8 Cir., 40 F.2d 232; Denver & S. L. Ry. Co. v. Moffat Tunnel Improvement Dist., D.C., 35 F.2d 365, affirmed with immaterial modification, 10 Cir., 45 F.2d 715, 732, certiorari denied, 283 U.S. 837, 51 S.Ct. 485, 75 L.Ed. 1448; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Humphrey, 167 Tenn. 421, 70 S.W.2d 361; Fix v. Craighill, 160 Va. 742, 169 S.E. 598. We can also dismiss any idea of fraud and so of fraudulent representations. There is no assertion whatever that the agent acted in anything but the best of faith in submitting his columnar analysis. It will be noticed that the one phase where particularity of pleading is required under the new rules is “in all averments of fraud or mistake”. Rules of Civil Procedure for District Courts, rule 9(b), 28 U.S.C.A. following § 723c.

Do these innocent (and here even non-negligent) but, in the eyent, mistaken figures furnish ground for rescission ? The weight of authority does not stress the moral angle in granting rescission in equity at least. 5 Williston on Contracts, § 1500, p. 4189, 23 Am.Jur. § 134, p. 931, 17 C.J.S.; Contracts, § 147, page 502, and cases cited therein. There are, however, two reasons which on both principle and authority, fortunately, preclude recovery here. They each go to the character of the representation and in truth each one in substance makes the representation less than that. In other words, and in the terminology of the American Law Institute, the “misrepresentation” is rendered “immaterial”. 2 Restatement of Contracts § 476(1).

Plainly all statements must be considered against their background. If that background precludes reliance by the recipient no wrong to him follows from their eventual unreliability. The preclusion here is not single but double. It arises, first, from the character of the insurance business and, second, from the difference between present fact and future prophecy. The cases hold, and sensibly, we think, that statements as to accumulations, dividends, surplus, etc., made in the sale of life insurance are mere illustrations or estimates and their subsequent inaccuracy is no ground for redress. Cf. 2 Restatement of Contracts § 470(2). They are collected in an excellent note in 22 A.L.R. 1284. As a Pennsylvania case there cited puts it:

“ * * * He [the assistant secretary] said that, on a 15-year policy for $25,000, the insured beginning at the age of 41 would receive at the end of the term a paid-up policy for the same amount and an estimated sum of $7,800 in cash, and that, while they always put the word ‘estimated’ in, witness could rely on getting the amount named; that it was the rule of the company to be always on the safe side, and never to put out an inflated estimate. * * *

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108 F.2d 678, 127 A.L.R. 1458, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herman-v-mutual-life-ins-co-of-new-york-ca3-1939.