Life Cas. Ins. Co. of Tenn. v. Baber

79 S.W.2d 36, 168 Tenn. 347, 107 A.L.R. 1228, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 63
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 79 S.W.2d 36 (Life Cas. Ins. Co. of Tenn. v. Baber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Life Cas. Ins. Co. of Tenn. v. Baber, 79 S.W.2d 36, 168 Tenn. 347, 107 A.L.R. 1228, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 63 (Tenn. 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case was tried upon the following stipulation of facts:

“In this cause it is agreed that the Life & Casualty-Insurance Company of Tenessee issued in 1916 to Virginia Baber on her life its policy No. 123707. The said Virginia Baber continued to pay the premiums on said policy up to and including 1930 when the defendant company refused to accept further premiums from her on it at a time when she was not in default and when she was legally entitled to pay said premiums and when it was legally required to accept them. The amount of premiums paid by her on the policy during the above time was $169.00.”

The contest is limited to the single question as to the measure of damages for the admitted breach of the contract here involved.

For the insured counsel insist that she is entitled to recover the premiums paid, with interest on each premium from the date of payment, and the suit is predicated upon this theory.

Counsel for the company contends that the recovery should be limited to the “value of the policy” at the date the contract was breached. Upon this question the authorities are in irreconcilable conflict. 48 A. L. it., 110.

The trial court entered judgment in favor of defendant in error for premiums paid in the sum of $169, together with interest from the date of breach in the sum of $20. The question of interest is not involved upon this appeal.

*349 In Conch on Insurance, sec. 1870, it is said: “Under the rule, which is sometimes spoken of as the majority rule, the insured may recover as, damages the amount of premiums paid, or premiums and interest, where there has been a wrongful repudiation of the contract by the insurer, and the insured has' elected to rescind the contract rather than to have it enforced.”

In 19 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law (2 Ed.), 98, 99, the rule is thus stated:

“One holding a policy in a company which wrongfully revokes the policy, may elect whether to enforce the contract or treat it as rescinded and recover for the breach, and if he takes the latter course it has been held that he may recover hack the full amount of the premiums paid thereon, with interest.”

In 32 C. J., 1265, it is- said:

“On wrongful cancellation or repudiation of the policy by the company, insured or his beneficiary, as the case may be, may in many jurisdictions recover as damages for the breach of contract all the premiums paid with interest thereon from the time or times of payment, subject to a deduction for cash benefits received from the company before the breach. This rule as to measure of damages is not, however, of uniform application and it has been denied.”

As to the basis of the rule, the Supreme Court of Georgia, in Alabama Gold Life Insurance Co. v. Garmany, 74 Ga., 51, 58, 59, said: “It rests upon the well established principle that a party to an entire contract, who has partly performed it, and thereupon subsequently abandons its further performance according to its stipulations, voluntarily and without fault upon the part of the other party, or his consent thereto, can recover nothing for such part performance.”

*350 In the absence of qualifying provisions, a policy of life insurance is an entire contract. 37 C. J., 411; Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co. v. Heidel, 8 Lea (76 Tenn.) 488.

In 13 C. J., 693, it is said:

“In accordance with the rules already stated concerning strict and substantial performance, by the great weight of authority there can be no recovery on an entire contract for a part performance thereof, and the courts will not attempt to split up such contracts and apportion the consideration to the part performed. Likewise a partial or defective performance of a condition precedent is generally not sufficient. However, in such cases, where the part performance has been beneficial to the other party and he has accepted and retained the benefits thereof, the party partially performing is entitled to recover either the reasonable value of such performance or the contract price pro tanto, subject to the reciprocal right of the other party to recoup such damages as he has suffered from failure of plaintiff to fully perform, or to recover such damages in a separate action. ’ ’

It is in the application of the rule just stated that the courts differ; those supporting the rule invoked by the company taking the position that the company has partly performed its contract in protecting the insured during the period that the contract was in force, while the other authorities contend that the company has not performed it's contract in part and the insured has derived no benefit from it.

After duly considering these opposing views, we have decided to adopt the majority rule. The purpose of the contract was to insure to the beneficiary the pay- *351 ruent of the face value of the policy upon the death of the insured. That was the sole obligation assumed by the company. It was to do nothing until the death of insured, and, in fact, the insured had received no benefit when the company terminated the contract. The company, in effect, agreed that, upon the payment of specified premiums, it would upon the death of the insured pay to the named beneficiary the face value of the policy, but before the time of performance on its part had arrived it notified the insured that it would repudiate the contract and not comply' therewith. The insured responded by stating that she was willing to rescind the contract, but that the company must return the money which she had paid to it upon its sole promise to pay the face value of the policy at her death, which it now says it will not do. The cases approving the majority rule are too numerous to be incorporated in this opinion, but we will quote from two or three decisions, in order that the reasons given by the courts for their conclusions may be understood.

The case most often cited is that of American Life Insurance Co. v. McAden, 109 Pa., 399, 1 A., 256, 258 (approved by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania as late as 1918 in Gaskill v. Pittsburgh Life & Trust Co., 261 Pa., 546, 104 A., 775), in which it was said:

“In the case at bar the rights of the parties under the contract of insurance had attached, but the plaintiffs had never received any actual benefit from it. They may, in some sense, perhaps, be said to have enjoyed the protection which the policy afforded in the event of the husband’s death; but as that event did not occur, the policy had as yet been of no appreciable actual advantage to the plaintiff, and no real disadvantage to the defendant. The parties, for anything that appears, upon the plain *352 tiffs’ recovery are placed precisely in the same situation they were in before the contract was made; for, although the company carried the risk, and the plaintiff Mary F.

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79 S.W.2d 36, 168 Tenn. 347, 107 A.L.R. 1228, 1934 Tenn. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/life-cas-ins-co-of-tenn-v-baber-tenn-1935.