Kaufman v. New York L. Ins. Co.

169 A. 447, 111 Pa. Super. 273, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 18, 1933
DocketAppeal 283
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 169 A. 447 (Kaufman v. New York L. Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaufman v. New York L. Ins. Co., 169 A. 447, 111 Pa. Super. 273, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397 (Pa. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

This appeal is by the plaintiff below from a judgment entered “upon the whole record” in favor of the defendant life insurance company in an action by which appellant, as the insured, sought to recover the sum of $420. For thei purpose of this appeal, that amount may be treated as a balance of the “cash surrender 'value” which appellant averred was still due him under the provisions of his policy. At the conclusion of the trial, counsel agreed there were no issues of fact for the jury.

The substantial question here involved does not seem to have been definitely ruled by our appellate courts. It arises out of these circumstances.

On July 21,1910, defendant issued to appellant, then twenty-one years of age, a “Twenty Payment Life Policy” in the amount of $2,000, in consideration of the payment by him of an annual premium of $60.04. In a printed “Table of .Loan and Surrender Values” upon the third page it was stated, inter alia, that the cash surrender value, “after policy has been in force” twenty years, would be $678 for each $1,000 of insurance.

Appellant paid the stipulated premium regularly for twenty years and then elected to take the cash sur *276 render value of Ms policy and demanded $1,356 — the amount indicated upon the face of the contract.

It was then discovered by defendant for the first time that, by mistake, it had utilized a printed form of policy intended for applicants aged forty-one, and that if it had used the proper form the cash surrender value, as set out in its rate book for 1910, would have appeared thereon as only $468, per thousand of insurance, or $936 for a two thousand dollar policy at the end of the twenty year period. The difference of $420 is attributable to the fact that an insured forty-one years of .age would pay a higher annual premium, thereby creating a greater equity.

Two grounds of defense were asserted: First, that a mutual mistake had been made by the parties, which entitled defendant to- a reformation of the contract; and second, that the statutes of this state, in force at the time the policy was issued, forbade such a discrimination between appellant and others of like age as would exist if he were allowed to recover the higher cash surrender value. The court below adopted both of these contentions in its memorandum opinion. For the reasons presently stated, we are unable to agree (with either conclusion.

As was said in Boyce v. Fire Insurance Co., 24 Pa. Superior Ct. 589: “It is a settled rule in equity that where the court is asked to reform the written evidence of a contract, the mistake must be mutual...... A court of equity has not power to reform an agreement; it can only correct the written evidence of the agreement to make it correspond to the understanding of the parties.”

The court below found such a mutual mistake existed because, to quote from its opinion, “both parties hereto contracted with reference to the existing published rates, and both intended that the policy as issued and delivered should conform to such rates; neither in *277 tended that the plaintiff should receive a benefit from his policy that every other policy-holder of the same class could not receive.” The difficulty we have with this conclusion is that it is not supported by the facts. These indicate merely that appellant made written application for a twenty payment policy in the amount of $2,000; that a policy was delivered to him showing the cash surrender value which he now claims; and that he continued to pay the premium for a period of twenty years, in the belief that he would receive the benefits set forth in that policy. There is no evidence that appellant, before taking out the insurance, was informed as to what the cash surrender value at the end of any given year would be.

In several instances the court below uses the expression, “published rates,” and, “existing published rates,” of the defendant company. Under the evidence, the rates of defendant in 1910 were not “published” in any correct sense of that term. They were merely printed in a “rate book,” furnished agents and employes of defendant, and were filed with the Insurance Commissioners of the states in which it was doing business. Appellant testified positively, and without contradiction, that the agent of defendant who obtained his application for the policy did not show him “any rate book,” and that knowledge of its contents was never communicated to him. The presumptions attendant upon a contract by a patron with a public utility which has filed, posted and published, its rates do not arise in this case. Under all the circumstances, we think it cannot properly be said that appellant consciously “intended” to contract with reference to any of defendant’s then existing rates, except the annual premium rate, or that he had any knowledge concerning the “relation between premiums paid, surrender values and reserves,” stressed by the court below. His intent, to be significant, must have been a par *278 tieular intent; and the only evidence of an intent of that character was his request for a $2,000 twenty-payment policy. Indeed, if any inference is to be drawn, the normal one would be that he intended to keep in force a policy which guaranteed the exact payments shown therein.

The facts do not disclose an antecedent agreement to fix the cash surrender value at the figure now put forward by. the defendant and an inadvertent substitution of other figures, contrary to the intention of both parties. We therefore conclude that no such mutual mistake existed as would justify a reformation under the settled principles of equity jurisprudence.

Defendant has cited several decisions from other jurisdictions, in which reformation was decreed to permit the correction of clerical or actuarial mistakes. ,The ostensible reason given in support of reformation in certain of these cases is in harmony with defendant’s argument that a mutual mistake existed because the insured, in each instance, must have intended to contract in accordance with the company’s published rates; and defendant urges that this line of reasoning is equally applicable to the present case. As above stated, we are not convinced that the theory is correct in the normal situation. Moreover, a careful examination of the cases referred to will show that most of them are distinguishable upon their actual facts, which were such as to make recovery for the face amount of the policy clearly inequitable in those cases.

A brief reference to certain of them will make the distinction apparent. Thus, in Columbian National Life Insurance Co. v. Black, 35 Fed. (2nd) 571, (cited by the court below) application was made by the insured for a $10,000 policy. By mistake, the printer had used the form for an ordinary life policy for the first page, but on the reverse side had erroneously used the form for an endowment policy. Each of these had a *279 table of values setting out the options given to the insured at tbe end of each year. Under the table on the first page, the assured was correctly given an option of receiving $3,040 in cash at the end of twenty years, ,while under the provisions applicable to the endowment policy, he was given $10,000 in cash at the end of the same period.

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Bluebook (online)
169 A. 447, 111 Pa. Super. 273, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaufman-v-new-york-l-ins-co-pasuperct-1933.