La Marche v. New York Life Ins. Co.

58 P. 1053, 126 Cal. 498, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 748
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1899
DocketSac. No. 489.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 58 P. 1053 (La Marche v. New York Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Marche v. New York Life Ins. Co., 58 P. 1053, 126 Cal. 498, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 748 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

BRITT, C.

—Action for damages sustained by plaintiff because of fraud alleged to have been practiced on him by defendant, a life insurance company, through the instrumentality of one Eaton, its agent, whereby defendant obtained from plaintiff his negotiable promissory note for the sum óf four hundred and thirty dollars and fifty cents, ostensibly in payment of the first annual premium on a policy of insurance to be issued on his life, which note plaintiff was subsequently compelled to pay to a third person holding the same. At the trial defendant moved for judgment of nonsuit on the evidence produced by plaintiff, and the court granted the motion.

It is not contended in this court by the defendant that, the evidence was insufficient to show fraud in the representations by which Eaton, the agent, obtained plaintiff’s note, but it is urged that for certain reasons, to be presently noticed, the plaintiff is in no position to hold defendant responsible on that account. Among the facts which the evidence tended to establish were the following: Plaintiff is a farmer by occupation, a foreigner by birth, unacquainted with the technical terms of life insurance, and accustomed to rely on other persons for the *501 conduct of transactions of moment requiring some proficiency in the English language. Eaton visited him at his farm and represented to him in substance that in consideration of his note aforesaid, and his agreement to pay an annual premium of the same amount for the term of fifteen years, the defendant would issue to him its policy on his life in the sum of ten thousand dollars, payable to the beneficiary to be named therein in case of plaintiffs death during said term, and, if he survived said period, then the policy would be paid up, and, if he chose, he “would draw ten thousand dollars.” Plaintiff agreed to the terms'proposed, and executed the note aforesaid. Eaton produced a blank form of application to the defendant for a policy, and requested plaintiff to sign his name thereto, saying that he, Eaton, would fill the same afterward. Plaintiff complied without reading the paper. Eaton departed with the form thus ■signed, and subsequently completed it and forwarded it to the ■company. Among the provisions of such application was one to the effect that the insured reserved the right to change the beneficiary of the insurance at any time; and another was that “no statements, promises, or information made or given by or to the person soliciting this application shall be binding on the company or in any manner affect its rights, unless such statements, promises, or information be reduced to writing and presented to the officers of the company at the home office in this application.” As completed by Eaton it called for a policy materially different from that he had described to the plaintiff. The company issued a policy accordingly, whereby it engaged to pay the sum of ten thousand dollárs to the wife of plaintiff in case of his death within fifteen years; but the cash surrender value of the policy at the end of that time was therein stated to be three thousand and seventy dollars (together with a “dividend” of undefined amount), instead of ten thousand dollars as orally promised by Eaton, and instead of becoming then a paid-up policy its further continuance was conditioned upon the payment of premium at the rate of three hundred and sixty-seven dollars per year. The policy was sent to plaintiff by mail; he returned it to defendant, accompanied by a letter which he caused to be written stating the particulars wherein the policy differed from the representations of Eaton, and demanding the *502 return of the note he had given for the first premium; such demand was refused; and plaintiff, after payment of the note, brought this sxxit.

1. Defendant contends that by signing the blank application and delivering it to Eaton plaintiff made Eaton his agent to-complete the same, and thus assented to the terms which Eaton saw fit to insert. We do not understand this to be the law in-cases such as the present; the blank form was such as could be intelligently filled only by one possessing some skill in the technology of life insxxrance; for example, it required an answer to the question whether the insured desired "an accumulation policy with guaranteed cash values as set forth in the policy-form of the company”; plaintiff neither knew nor assumed to know the meaning of these terms; presumptively, Eaton possessed the requisite knowledge, and there is no doubt that the preparing of the application was within the scope of his authority as agent for the company (Continental Ins. Co. v. Chamberlain, 132 U. S. 304, 311; Aetna Ins. Co. v. Olmstead, 21 Mich. 246; 4 Am. Rep. 483; Donnelly v. Cedar Rapids Ins. Co., 70 Iowa, 693); his act in filling the instrument over the signature of plaintiff was therefore the act of the company, and fraud by him in the performance of that act, to the injury of plaintiff, must be treated as the fraud of the company. This conclusion, which, as will appear, is virtually decisive of the case, is fully supported by the decisions on the subject. (Wheaton v. North British etc. Ins. Co., 76 Cal. 415; 9 Am. St. Rep. 216; Hingston v. Insurance Co., 42 Iowa, 46; Fitchner v. Fire Assn., 103 Iowa, 276, 279; Swan v. Insurance Co., 96 Pa. St. 37; Dowling v. Insurance Co., 168 Pa. St. 234; Rowley v. Insurance Co., 36 N. Y. 550; O’Brien v. Home Benefit Soc., 117 N. Y. 310; Massachusetts etc. Ins. Co. Eshelman, 30 Ohio St. 647; Farmers’ Ins. Co. v. Williams, 39 Ohio St. 584; 48 Am. Rep. 474; Kausal v. Insruromce Assn., 31 Minn. 17; 47 Am. Rep. 776; Bowlus v. Insurance Co., 133 Ind. 106.)

2. The provision of the application that the company should not be affected b3r statements or promises made 'by or to the-agent unless the same were redxxced to writing and presented in the application can be of no avail to defendant on the facts *503 which the evidence for plaintiff tended to show. Lor present, purposes it is sufficient to say of such provision that plaintiff' had no knowledge of it and did not assent to it; although such knowledge might be imputed to him if his signature to the application had been honestly obtained, yet since the instrument, as completed by the agent was fraudulent as to plaintiff, it must follow that defendant can derive no advantage from any stipulation thus fraudulently procured. (McKay v. New York Life Ins. Co., 124 Cal. 270, and cases cited; Lycoming Ins. Co. v. Woodworth, 83 Pa. St. 223; 1 Joyce on Insurance, secs. 508, 509.)

3. Defendant seems to place most reliance on the circumstance that the plaintiff’s wife, who was named as beneficiary of the insurance, did not join in his offer to surrender the policy. It is claimed that her failure to do so is fatal to plaintiff’s-action, and that Jurgens v. New York Life Ins. Co., 114 Cal. 161, settles the question in defendant’s favor. The ground taken in that case was that since the beneficiary—there, as here, the wife of the plaintiff in.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P. 1053, 126 Cal. 498, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-marche-v-new-york-life-ins-co-cal-1899.