Horton v. New York Life Insurance

52 S.W. 356, 151 Mo. 604, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 339
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 52 S.W. 356 (Horton v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton v. New York Life Insurance, 52 S.W. 356, 151 Mo. 604, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 339 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

This is a suit on a life insurance policy issued by defendant on the life of T. Lisle Standish, deceased, in his lifetime, payable at his death to his administrator. ’ ' /

The petition states that the contract of insurance was entered into November 30, 1892, under the terms of'which plaintiff’s intestate paid defendant $304, and defendant delivered to him the policy on his life for $10,000, payable to his [614]*614administrator, and specifying on its face that for the consideration paid it was in full force for two years to November 30, 3 894; that Standish died February 14th, 1895, having prior to his death paid two full annual premiums on the policy whereby under the statute law of this State, section 5856, E. S. 1889, the policy was in full force at the time of his death.

The answer admits the issuing of the policy, the consideration for which, it avers, was the agreement contained in the written application therefor and the consideration of $304 paid in advance, “being the premium for two years’ term insurance, being less than the aggregate of two full annual premiums, and said policy was conditioned upon the payment thereafter, to wit, on the thirtieth day of November, 1894, and annually thereafter, of the annual premium of one hundred and ninety-eight dollars.” The answer further avers that the policy was delivered to the insured and the first premium of $304 was paid, but the premium due November 30th, 1894, was not paid then, nor within the days of grace stipulated, nor ever, and thereby the policy lapsed and became of no force.

Defendant also pleads that it is a corporation domiciled in New York, doing the business of insuring lives on the mutual plan only, “administering the assets derived from the premiums of its policy holders solely for the benefit of said policy holders, by and in whose behalf such premiums are paid;” that “among the plans of insurance adopted by defendant insaid mutual business, was that known as thedistributionpolicy plan with twenty year distribution period, whereunder all the policies issued on said plan in any one year to policy holders in the different parts of the world constitute a class, and all profits and surplus derived from premiums on all said policies during said period of twenty years were accumulated until the end of said period, and then distributed for the benefit of such policies as should be in force at the end of such period; and thereby each of the said policy holders of said class acquired a contingent interest, in the event of survivorship of said period in the [615]*615profits and surplus which might be realized from the premiums on their policies in said class;” that this was the plan of insurance for which plaintiff’s intestate applied, and the plan' on which the policy in suit issued; this plan of insurance included as an essential feature the provisions of the statute law of New York, in reference to the non-forfeiture or extended paid up insurance; that the calculations on which the character of insurance is based are made on the New York statute, and it is a part of the contract of insurance between every policy holder in that class, and the company for all, that the New York statute shall govern and be a part of the contract, and the policy holders in that class are entitled among themselves and as against the company to the shares an'd profits that would accrue by enforcing the provisions of the New York statute; that plaintiff’s intestate expressly agreed in his application that the contract should be governed by the New York statute and having so agreed and on the faith thereof, having been admitted to that class the plaintiff is now estopped to say the contrary; that by the terms of the New York statute premiums for foil three years were required to be paid before the holder of the policy would be entitled to have the reserve or net value applied to extend the insurance, that to hold that the Missouri statute governs the policy in spite of the agreement to the contrary would be to deny the parties the right to make a contract and violate their rights under the Bill of Eights in the Constitution of Missouri and the XIV amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

The reply denied all the allegations in the answer not admitted in the petition.

Upon the trial a jury was waived, and the cause was submitted to the court, upon the pleadings, the policy with conditional receipt thereto attached, the depositions of A. F. Harvey on behalf of plaintiff and C. O. Whitney on behalf of defendant, and the following agreed statement of facts:

[616]*616“First. Plaintiff is the administrator of T. Lisle Standish the insured named in the policy, duly appointed and qualified as such.
“Second. T. Lisle Standisb, the insured named in tbe policy, died on tbe 14th day of February, 1895, and within ninety days thereafter proofs of bis death in due form were furnished to tbe defendant at its home office in tbe city of New York.
“Third. At tbe date of tbe issuance of this policy tbe only statute of tbe State of New York regulating, or in any manner relating to tbe forfeiture of life insurance policies, is contained in section 88, article II, of chapter 690, of Laws of 1892, of State of New York, and is correctly set out in tbe answer herein.
“Fourth. Said T. Lisle Standisb, tbe insured named in tbe policy, was at tbe time of bis application therefor and continually till bis death a resident of Hume, in Bates county, Missouri, bis application for tbe policy was there made to tbe local agent of tbe defendant, and forwarded by said agent to the home office of tbe defendant in tbe city of New York. Upon tbe issuance of said policy it was forwarded by tbe defendant through its St. Louis office to said local agent at Hume and delivered by him to said Standisb at Hume, tbe first premium having been theretofore paid to the said agent for tbe defendant.
“Fifth. Default was made by said Standisb in payment of tbe premium due on November 30, 1894, due notice of said premium having been given to said Standisb and said premium then defaulted and has not since been paid, ,nor has any subsequent premium been paid upon said policy.
“Sixth. If plaintiff is entitled to recover at all in this action be is entitled to recover tbe amount of tbe face of bis policy, tbe ten thousand dollars ($10,000) less tbe amount of ordinary life premium on said policy unpaid, to wit, one hundred and eighty-eight dollars with interest thereon to April tbe [617]*61719th, 1895, to wit, five and twenty-nine hundredths dollars, making the total amount deducted of one hundred and ninety-three and twenty-nine hundredths dollars, leaving the value of the claim at $9,806.71, with interest thereon at six per cent from April 19, 1895.”

The policy which was in evidence is thus described by the expert witness: “It-is a policy for the whole life, for ten ' thousand dollars, payable by premiums running during twenty years, of which the first two are made by one reduced payment, issued on the 30th day of November, 1892, in favor of T. Lisle Standish. . . . It is a combination of term insurance and life insurance. -It is not strictly a term policy for two years, because it has a reserve at the end of two years applicable to continuance of the premium payment in part.

“Q. What is the difference between this form of policy ■ and the ordinary twenty year payment policy issued by this company? A.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.W. 356, 151 Mo. 604, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-new-york-life-insurance-mo-1899.