McGeehan v. Mutual Life Insurance

111 S.W. 604, 131 Mo. App. 417, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 458
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 604 (McGeehan v. Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGeehan v. Mutual Life Insurance, 111 S.W. 604, 131 Mo. App. 417, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 458 (Mo. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

This action is founded on a life insurance policy called a semi-endowment. The petition was in three counts. There was a demurrer on the ground of no cause of action being stated in either count. The demurrer was sustained and plaintiff refusing to plead further judgment was given for the defendant and plaintiff in due time appealed.

Plaintiff seems not to place much faith in the first count of his petition and properly so as we think it does not state a cause of action, and we therefore take up, in their order, the second and third counts. The second count alleges that on the 3rd of February, 1883, defendant issued to plaintiff its policy of insurance whereby it agreed that in consideration of semiannual premiums of fifteen dollars each to be paid at defendant’s office in New York for twenty years, ending in February, 1903, it would pay plaintiff, if living at that time, five hundred dollars at defendant’s office in New York, less any indebtedness owing by plaintiff to defendant. It is then alleged to have been the agreement that the contract of insurance should be governed by the laws of New York and that such laws should be considered a part of the contract. That at that time there was a statute of New York prohibiting a life insurance company from forfeiting a policy or non-payment of premium except after giving written or printed notice, duly addressed and mailed, to the person whose life was insured, at his last known postoffice address— the notice stating that unless the defaulted premium be paid within thirty days after mailing the notice, the policy would be forfeited. It was further alleged that [420]*420such, law disallowed a forfeiture until thirty days had elapsed from the mailing of the notice.

It is then further alleged that plaintiff regularly paid his semiannual premiums up to and including the one due the 3rd of February, 1895, covering a period of twelve years. That no notice of forfeiture was ever given him. It is then, averred “that except as aforesaid he has fully performed said contract, on his part, and is now willing and does credit the said unpaid premiums, with interest thereon from the dates they became due, respectively, amounting to the sum of $282.60, upon the amount promised by defendant to be paid him as aforesaid. Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment for two hundred and seventeen hundred and forty cents with interest from the 3rd of February, 1903.”

Leaving out of view the great length of time which the face of the petition shows plaintiff to have failed to perform his obligation by paying premiums, the second count states a cause of action. It alleges the contract was made in New York and that it was a part of the contract that the laws of that State were to become a part of the policy and to govern its terms. It then sets out the statute of that State which disallows a forfeiture without first giving the written notice and avers that no such notice was given. If the contract is a New York contract (and so we must regard it, since matters are alleged, as facts, which make it a contract of that State) then the laws of New York must govern its interpretation. [Cravens v. Insurance Co., 148 Mo. 583; Insurance Co. v. Hill, 193 U. S. 551; Equitable Life v. Clements, 140 U. S. 226.]

But it appears from the petition that plaintiff, though paying premiums up to 1895, failed to pay after that time up to the expiration of the time for the payment of the endowment in February, 1903, a period of eight years, embracing a failure, to pay sixteen semiannual premiums. The further question therefore is [421]*421presented whether that shows an abandonment of the contract on the part of the plaintiff regardless of non-action on the part of defendant concerning a right to declare a forfeiture. It must be conceded that so far as plaintiff’s rights are concerned he was at liberty to abandon and rescind the contract. He did not merely neglect a single payment of premium, nor several, but he abandoned all pretense of recognition of the contract for a long series of years. There is no law nor policy to prevent him, defendant consenting thereto, from giving up his contract. The statute of New York as to forfeitures, while controlling or regulating defendant’s rights, does not aid the plaintiff who has elected to abandon the contract. [Insurance Co. v. Hill, 193 U. S. 551; Lone v. Insurance Co., 33 Wash. 577, 74 Pac. Rep. 689.] The cases just cited hold that the New York statute, rightly interpreted, was only intended to cover cases of casual neglect or slip of memory and was designed to prevent such instances from depriving a party of the benefit of his policy until after notice; and that the statute was not intended to protect one in a voluntary abandonment of his obligations. We therefore conclude that the demurrer was properly sustained to the second count.

Proceeding to a consideration of the third, count, we find it alleges the issuance of the policy as stated in second count. It then alleges that at the date the policy was issued in 1883, he was not a resident of the State of Missouri, but prior to the 3rd day of August, 1894, he had become a resident of this State and has been a resident ever since, and that on that date he failed to pay the semiannual premium then due. That when soon thereafter he offered to pay it defendant claimed that the policy had lapsed and was void and refused to accept the premium unless plaintiff would submit to another physical examination in this State which should be satisfactory to defendant; and further requir[422]*422ed plaintiff to execute “an application for establishing the policy.” That plaintiff submitted to the examination and made the application while so residing in this State, as defendant knew. That the application was in the following words: “The undersigned, Robert P. Mc-Geehan, the person upon whose application The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, has issued policy No. 288020, dated Feb. 3, 1883, for $1,000 on the S. E. plan — year distribution hereby requests the said company to accept the premium of $15.00 on said policy, due Aug. 3, 1894, with interest thereon to date of payment at six per cent per annum) thereby establishing said policy in full force and effect. And the undersigned hereby ratifies and confirms all the statements made in the application upon which said policy was issued and hereby makes the said application and this request alike parts of the said contract of insurance, and further guarantees that his health is and has been good, and has remained unimpaired at all times since the date when the above described premium fell due.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 604, 131 Mo. App. 417, 1908 Mo. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgeehan-v-mutual-life-insurance-moctapp-1908.