Heusser v. Continental Life Ins.

20 F. 222, 22 Blatchf. 161, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2188
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedMay 12, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 F. 222 (Heusser v. Continental Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heusser v. Continental Life Ins., 20 F. 222, 22 Blatchf. 161, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2188 (circtdct 1884).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

This is an action at law, which was tried by the court, the parties having, by a duly-signed written stipulation, waived a trial by jury. The facts which are found to have been proved, and to be true, are the following:

On April 4, 1867, in consideration, among other things, of the annual premium of $386.90 in hand paid and to be paid to the defendant by Susan Heusser, the wife of the plaintiff, on or before the fourth'day of April in each •and every year during the term of 15 years, the defendant, a life-insurance company duly incorporated and located in Hartford, Connecticut, made i,ts policy of insurance in writing, and thereby assured the life of the plaintiff, now of Syracuse, New York, in the amount of $5,000. In and by said policy of insurance, it was agreed that if, after the receipt by said company of not less than two annual premiums, default should be made in the payment •of any subsequent premium, said policy should then be binding on said company for as many fifteenth parts of the sum originally insured as there should have been complete annual premiums paid, without subjecting the assured to any subsequent charge, and that if the plaintiff should survive until April 4, 1882, the amount insured should be paid to him, deducting therefrom all his indebtedness to the company, if any, then existing, Five consecutive annual premiums were paid by Susan Heusser to the defendant upon said policy. Said payments of premium ceased on April 4, 1871. On April 4, 1882, Henry Heusser was and still is living. One-half of each annual premium was paid in cash, and one-half was paid by note of Henry Heusser, the interest being paid in advance. On April 4, 1882, the defendant held and still holds four of said notes, each for $193.45, and dated on April 4th, in the years 1867, 1868, 1869, and 1870, respectively, each payable 12 months after date to the order of the defendant, with interest, and each having been given for one-half of the premiums which were payable at the respective dates of said notes. On the first note the following indorsement had been made, dated April 4, 1872: “Received on the within note one hundred and thirty-five 75-100 dollars, dividend.” On the second note the same indorsement had been made, dated April 4, 1873. On the third note the following indorsement had been made, dated April 4, 1874: “Received on the within note thirty 20-100 dol[223]*223lars, dividend.” Eacli one of said indorsements was, in 1880, erased by lines drawn through them, respectively, by the secretary of the company, who also added the words, “Error — no dividend.” This was done with the knowledge and approval of the directors. These indorsements were made by the direction or under the instructions of the president or secretary of the company, in the usual course of business, and, as was supposed, by authority of the following votes of the directors of said company, the first having been passed February 6, 1871, the second on February 19,1872, and the third on Decom-ber 2, 1873:
“Yoted, that a dividend from the surplus of the company of 50 per cent, upon life policies entitled to participate in the profits which were issued prior to January 1,1869, and of 40 per cent, upon endowment policies of the same year, be declared and made payable, in accordance with the rules of the company, upon premiums paid in 1868, when renewed previous to January 1, 1873.”
“Yoted, that a dividend from the surplus of the company of 50 per cent, upon life policies entitled to participate in the profits which were issued prior to January 1,1870, and of 40 per cent, upon endowment policies of the same year, bo declared and made payable, in accordance with the rules of the company, upon premiums paid in 1869, when renewed previous to January 1, 1874.”
“Yoted, that a dividend be, and hereby is, declared to those policy-holders entitled to participate in the profits of the company, payable January 1st next,, and thereafter during the year ending December 31, 1874, as the several policies may be renewed, in accordance with the contribution of each to the surplus, using the following assumption. * * *”
Indorsements like those made upon the notes in question were made, when the interest was paid, and not otherwise, upon all premium notes upon this class of endowment, non-forfeilable, participating policies, which had lapsed in part, but which were existing policies at the time the indorsements were made, and which in other respects were included within the provisions of said respective votes. If the interest was not paid upon a note, no indorsement was made. About 40 per cent, of such notes received the indorsement in 1872 and in 1873, and a much less proportion in 1874. There was no difference in the policies pertaining to the notes which received and which did not receive the indorsement, except that in the former case the interest had been paid upon the notes, and in the latter it had not been paid. Similar erasures were made by the secretary, after the year 1880, upon all similarly indorsed premium notes belonging to this class of policies, when the policies upon which the notes were given matured and became payable.
The following statement was contained in the prospectus of the defendant, which was prepared by the secretary of the company in 1868, and was circulated among the agents and polipy-holders:
“On all participating policies dividends will be paid annually, commencing four years after the payment of the first premium, although when credit is given for part of the premium they are practically available in advance, lessening each annual payment. They will be paid in cash when the full premium is paid in cash, or applied to cancel the notes of those who elect to have credit for one-half; and, in the settlement of a policy, a dividend will be allowed on each premium which has been in possession of the company for a full year, and on which no dividend has been paid.
“Dividends based upon the rate paid will cease when they equal the payments in number; if based upon the ordinary life rate, they will continue during life; and if on the endowment rate, during the existence of the policy. If the annual premiums on limited-payment policies are discontinued before the [224]*224specified number have been paid, the dividends thereafter will be based on the continued rate for the same kind of insurance, and will continue until the number of dividends equals the number of annual premiums paid.”
The first of said paragraphs was repeated in another circular, which was prepared by the company for distribution and was circulated. The dividends of 1872 and 1878 were computed according to the rule stated in the first-part of the third paragraph. These three paragraphs contained the company’s regulations or rules prescribed for the management of dividends, and the practice of the company continued to be in accordance therewith, at least until 1876. The amount of dividends -which were paid during the years 1872, 1878, and 1874, and which included the indorsements in question, was annually reported to the stockholders of the company. It is admitted that one other and subsequent dividend of $31.21 was properly indorsed upon the fourth note. The interest upon the amount of the notes, as-they were diminished by all said indorsements, was demanded by the secretary after said erasure, the circular stating the amount of the notes to be $440.86, and was paid to April 4, 1882.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brown v. Luce Manufacturing Co.
96 S.W.2d 1098 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. 222, 22 Blatchf. 161, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heusser-v-continental-life-ins-circtdct-1884.