Kentucky Mutual Insurance v. Jenks

5 Ind. 96
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 5 Ind. 96 (Kentucky Mutual Insurance v. Jenks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Mutual Insurance v. Jenks, 5 Ind. 96 (Ind. 1854).

Opinion

Stuart, J.

Emeline Jenks filed her bill in chancery against the company to enforce an insurance contract; praying discovery of the entries on the insurance company’s books, &e.; that the original application for such insurance, and the original policy issued thereon, be produced and filed; that an account be taken, &c.; with general prayer for such other relief as the case made might require.

The contract sought to be enforced was an insurance for 1,500 dollars on the life of James P. Jenks, the husband of complainant, and for her benefit, alleged to have been effected with the appellant.

The cause came to hearing on the bill, answer, exhibits, &c. Decree in accordance with the prayer of the bill. The. insurance company appeals.

A printed copy of the record and proceedings in the cause, together with several elaborate briefs, all printed, have greatly facilitated our labors.

The principal facts, without reference to the order in which they occur in the pleadings and evidence, are briefly these.

In August, 1850, Jenks applied to the company’s agent [98]*98at Lafayette to insure 1,000 dollars on his life, for five years, for the benefit of his wife, tie proposed that the first year’s premium should be paid in advertising their agency in Jenks’s paper, the “ Lafayette Cornier.” Wilstack, the agent, not feeling at liberty to act on such a proposition, referred it directly to the company, strongly recommending its acceptance. On the 12th of August, 1850, the insurance company replied that “the board had concluded to issue a policy to Mr. Jenks on the terms proposed (first year’s premium to be taken in advertising) and that the agent could forward the application as soon as ready.” About the middle of August, 1850, Wilstach accordingly handed Jenks for publication an advertisement of the insurance company. It was published continuously in the “ Courier” six months.

It is not disputed but that this advertisement was to go as payment on the premium of the first year; nor but that the publication was of the value of 12 dollars.

Wilstach testifies that the 1,000 dollars was at first mentioned only generally; but that on subsequently looldng over the insurance company’s tables, they (Jenks and Wilstach) found that the premium on 1,500 dollars would about amount in his case to the value of the printing.

The application for insurance on 1,500 dollars was therefore prepared, and signed by Jenks. It was not, however, complete; as to one of the questions there was a blank, which he was not then ready to answer without further inquiry. Thus the matter stood till the 27th of September, 1850, Wilstach frequently urging Jenks to fill the blank and complete the application, that he, Wilstach, might have it off his hands. On that day the papers were fully made out, and Wilstach mailed them to the insurance company. Jenks was then in good health.

It does not very clearly appear when this communication was received by the insurance company. But the company’s books show that Jenks’s application was duly approved, and that the policy was issued thereon October 2, 1850.

The substance of the policy was, insuring “the life of [99]*99James P. Jenks in the sum of one thousand five hundred dollars,” for the term of five years from the 2d day of October, 1850, until the 2d day of October, 1855, at 12 o’clock, noon, &c., for the benefit of Emetine Jenks. On the same day, October 2, 1850, the insurance company mailed the policy,' duly executed, to Wilstach, their agent. It was received by him on the 5th of October, 1850.

Meanwhile, on the 29th of September, 1850, Jenks was taken sick, and lingering until the 4th of October following, died. Upon the receipt of. the policy by the agent after the death of Jenks, it was immediately returned by mail to the insurance company.

On this state of facts the insurance company insists that the contract to insure was not complete. And though the argument takes an unnecessarily wide range, this is, in fact, the only material question in the case. For if the contract was complete — if the minds of the contracting parties met upon a distinct proposition, made by the one and accepted by the other — chancery will decree its execution. Or regarding that as done which in equity and good conscience should have been done, chancery will take an account, and make such decree as is just and proper from the case made in the bill.

Jenks’s application was forwarded, it seems, September 27, 1850. That was a proposition to the company to insure his life to the amount of 1,500 dollars, for five years; the first year’s premium to be paid in advertising. It is to be inferred from the course of the mail, as disclosed in the other parts of the case, that the application reached the company on the 1st of October, 1850. Its approval and acceptance on that or the next day, as shown by the books of the company, closed the contract.

It is true there is considerable conflict among the authorities on this point; some holding that the contract thus made by mail is not complete, until the party making the proposition is advised of its acceptance. Thus Parker, C. J., held that the contract was open till the knowledge of its acceptance, that is, the letter announcing its acceptance, was received, or the regular time for its arrival by mail had [100]*100elapsed. McCulloch v. The Eagle Insurance Company, 1 Pick. 278. There are also several later cases in the Massachussetts reports to the same effect. Walworth, chancellor, lays down the doctrine quite as broadly, viz., “the minds of the contracting parties must not only meet, but the fact of such concurrence must be communicated to each other, in order to consummate the contract.” Frith v. Lawrence, 1 Paige 434. But the English cases on the authority of which these decisions were made, namely, Payne v. Cave, 3 T. R. 148, and Cook v. Oxley, id. 653, have been frequently questioned, and may be regarded as overruled. 2 Kent 477.—1 Duer 118, note. —16 East 45. Even the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in the subsequent case of Thayer v. The Middlesex Insurance Company, is generally conceded to have very materially modified the doctrine laid down in 1 Pick., supra. 10 Pick. 332.

The case of Frith v. Lawrence, supra, came before the Court of Errors in New-York under the title of Mactier’s Administrators v. Frith; and the decision of the chancellor on this point was reversed. 6 Wend. 103. In accordance with the case of Adams v. Lindsell, 1 Barn, and Aid. 681, Mr. Justice Marcy, delivering the principal opinion given, held that the contract was perfected when the proposition made by letter was accepted, even though the letter of acceptance could not have reached the residence of the other party till after his death. A similar doctrine had been long since held in the Circuit Court of the United States. Kohne v. The Insurance Company of North America, 1 Wash. 93.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ind. 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-mutual-insurance-v-jenks-ind-1854.