Manhattan Life Ins. v. Warwick

3 Am. Rep. 218, 20 Va. 614
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 18, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 3 Am. Rep. 218 (Manhattan Life Ins. v. Warwick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manhattan Life Ins. v. Warwick, 3 Am. Rep. 218, 20 Va. 614 (Va. 1871).

Opinion

Anderson, J.

In July, 1857, the defendant in error, for his sole use, effected a policy of insurance for ten thousand dollars with the Manhattan Life Insurance Company, the plaintiffs in error, upon the life of his brother, William Sidney Warwick, of Powhatan county, Virginia, who was largely indebted to him. The plaintiff in error was .a New York company, and the policy was effected through their agent in Virginia, J. B. Maemurdo. The premiums on the policy were punctually paid by the defendant in error to their agent in Richmond, up to July 23d, 1862: and the premium for that year, due on that day, he then offered to pay to said agent in New York funds; but he refused to receive payment, under alleged instructions from his principals not to renew or continue policies. Pour months after, on the 23d of November, 1862, Wm. Sidney Warwick died; of which the company had due notice.

After his death the company refused to pay the policy to Corbin Warwick, and he brought this suit to recover it in the Circuit court of Richmond city, which rendered judgment in his favor for the amount of the [620]*620policy, less the last premium. And the company have brought the case here upon a writ of error.

The case presented by the record, is this in brief: They refbsed to receive the last premium when it fell due and was tendered, and now refuse to pay the policy because the premium was not paid; and, moreover, claim of the defendant in error a forfeiture of the premiums which he had paid, amounting to §6,155, besides interest: and they invoke the intervention of this court to sustain them in these pretensions. If this was the contract, fairly interpreted according to its legal effect, however harsh in its operation upon the defendant in error, it must be carried out.

The first question, therefore, which we have to consider is, What was the contract between these parties ? Without incumbering this opinion with a minute and critical examination of the policy, I will simply state what, in my opinion, the contract is, according to the legal import and effect of the policy. It is a contract of the company by deed poll, to pay to Corbin Warwick, for his sole use, ninety days after due notice and satisfactory evidence of the death of Wm. Sidney Warwick, ten thousand dollars, for the consideration of $1,031 in hand, paid by the said Corbin, and a like •sum of $1,031, to be paid by him annually, on the 23d of July, “ for the term of the natural life of the said Wm. S. Warwick;” subject to defeasance upon the non-performance of various conditions minutely ■detailed; among others, the non-payment of the premiums, or either of them, on the day they fall due; in which case the company is not to be liable for the sum assured, or any part thereof; but the policy shall cease and determine. And it is further stipulated that, in •every case where the policy shall cease or become void, all previous payments thereon shall be forfeited to the •company.

The policy is one entire contract, not from year to [621]*621year as premiums shall he paid, hut for the whole term of the life of ¥m. S. Warwick, upon condition, that if the annual premium is not paid on the 23d of July the policy shall cease and he void: as was held in Ruse v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., 26 Barb. R. 556, upon the construction of the policy in that case; the terms of which are very much the same as in this. That case, and also the case of Hodsdon, adm’x v. Guardian Life Insurance Co., 1 Biggelow R. 219, 97 Mass. R. 144, fully sustain this construction. It is not a contract of indemnity, as a policy against fire, for a definite period; hut it is a contract to pay a certain sum of money, for the consideration mentioned, upon the happening of an event which is inevitable, and only uncertain as to the time it may transpire.

It is a corollary from the contract, thus understood, that the company, when they executed this deed, assumed an obligation to pay the sum assured to Corbin Warwick, from which they could not he relieved by anything they could do or leave undone; but only by the act or omission of the assured. Consequently, the company could not relieve itself from this obligation, or subject the other party to a forfeiture, by refusing to receive payment of a premium; or by hindering or preventing the other party from paying it; or by any disability on its part to receive it, and which prevented the payment, which was not provided for in the contract. If the assured was at the place on the day, where and when payment was to he made, and where he had a right to make payment, ready and prepared to make payment, hut was prevented by either of the causes mentioned, it would he unreasonable to say that he had incurred the forfeiture. And I think it is equally clear, upon reason and authority, that the company was not thereby released from its obligation to pay the sum assured. It would he a monstrous perversion of law, and repugnant to our every sense of [622]*622justice, to say that this company, after having received more than half the sum assured, could by this act determine the policy, hold on to the money they had received, and to say to their confiding victim, “ you may whistle to the winds for your merited reward, notwithstanding you relied upon our covenant and good faith to pay it.”

• And, although the case cannot be so strongly put, I think it is equally clear, that when the assured was involved in no default, but was at the place when and where payment was to be made, ready and willing to pay, but was prevented by the disability of the company to receive payment, from whatever cause, he having had no agency in producing it, the company is not entitled to claim the forfeiture, or to be relieved from its obligation to pay the sum assured.

The question upon this view qf the case is suggested:, was the assured, on the 23d of July, 1861 and 1862, at the place where the premiums were payable, ready and prepared and offering to pay them ? He was at the office of the agent, J. B. Macmurdo, in the city of Richmond, and then and there offered to pay the premiums which fell due on those days respectively, in the kind of funds which the company required. On the first of those days, Macmurdo received payment in New York funds, or its equivalent, in discharge of the obligation, and gave his receipt therefor, as agent of the company. On the last day mentioned, the assured offered to pay Macmurdo, the agent, but he refused to receive it, upon the ground, as he alleged, that he was instructéd by the company not to receive payment “ nor to renew or continue policies.” How, upon this contract the questions arise, first, was the city of Richmond or the city of New York the place of payment ? and, secondly, was Macmurdo the agent, or an officer in New York the agent, to whom payment was to be made?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Am. Rep. 218, 20 Va. 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manhattan-life-ins-v-warwick-va-1871.