Montgomery's Estate

149 A. 705, 299 Pa. 452, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 629
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 1930
DocketAppeals, 122 and 123
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 149 A. 705 (Montgomery's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery's Estate, 149 A. 705, 299 Pa. 452, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 629 (Pa. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Frazer,

These two appeals involve the same questions, were argued together and will be disposed of in one opinion.

In 1912, two brothers, Marshall Montgomery and Henry S. Montgomery, procured from a life insurance company a joint life policy for an insurance of $20,000, payable to the survivor of either. The yearly premium was $1,540.80, less earned dividends. From 1912 to 1919 the premiums were regularly met by each of the co-insured paying one-half of the amount. Upon the premium for 1919 falling due, Henry refused to pay his one-half, and thereafter paid no portion of the assessments. From that year until his death in 1927 the entire premiums were paid by Marshall, to whom, as the survivor, the company paid the whole of the $20,000 insurance money. ' At the audit of the estate of Henry the survivor claimed repayment of one-half of the entire amount paid by him as premiums from 1919 to 1926, *455 inclusive, with interest on these payments, on the ground that the policy, being a joint contract with the insurance company, the coinsured were jointly bound to keep it alive, that they had a joint interest in the proceeds of the insurance so long as both lived, that by an implied contract between the insured themselves they were mutually obligated to each pay one-half of the premium cost, that neither could withdraw from that special agreement without the consent of the other except to the injury of his coinsured, and that Marshall, upon refusal of his brother to pay his portion of subsequent accruing premiums, paid the entire annual amounts, himself under compulsion to keep the policy alive and thereby protect and preserve his interest in the insurance. In the adjudication the claim was allowed, exceptions to the audit filed by appellants were, after argument, dismissed by the court below and the adjudication confirmed. These appeals here followed.

The claim for repayment is contested by appellants on the ground that Marshall Montgomery was under no legal obligation to pay either his own or his brother’s share of the premiums, his action in so doing being purely a voluntary act on his part, that no implied special contract existed between the insured, and that consequently the survivor was not entitled to contribution.

Neither the auditing judge nor the court in bane below sustained this contention, but on the contrary found the evidence supported the position taken by appellee.

Our reports are notably bare of cases exactly of this character; we do not see, however, after careful review of the record, that any complex or new questions arise under the facts and circumstances disclosed that have not hitherto been in litigation over life insurance, considered and determined in this and other jurisdictions on principles of equity and fair dealing, strictly applicable to the case at hand.

The policy in question is a joint insurance contract with the insurer whereby the two insured, by its terms, *456 are “hereinafter designated jointly as the insured,” the insurance to be paid “to the survivor” of either, “with the right on the part of the insured jointly to change the beneficiary,” the plan of participation in the annual dividends to be chosen “at the option of the insured jointly,” the policy to be “surrendered by the insured jointly (or by the assignee if any),” and the proceeds of the insurance to be paid “to the survivor.” Here certainly was established an indivisibility of joint interest and rights as between the insured. It was not, however, an agreement between themselves, but a contract between them and the insurer, and so long as the main obligation imposed by the contract upon the coinsured, — the regular and full payments of the premiums, — was fulfilled, the insurance company could have no concern. It required no more than payment of the premiums within the stipulated time; as to which of the insured paid the premiums, or in what proportion each paid, was not its affair. That was a matter for the brothers to settle between themselves. If they at any time failed to meet the premiums, and the day of grace passed and no waiver by the insurer was forthcoming, the contract of insurance ended. Under the terms of the usual life policy there is no promise to pay premiums, and it rests with the insured to say for what length of time he will continue such payments: 2 Cooley’s Briefs on the Law of Insurance 1625. This is a litigation however, not between the insurer and the insured, but between the two insured, and, according to the reasoning of appellants no contractual relations exist between them which can be sustained. We shall leave aside any suggestion of a moral obligation, either as weighing upon the deceased brother while he lived or upon his estate after his death, for unquestionably, so far as the insurance contract obligated him, it was optional with him, or with his brother as well, to keep up the insurance or discontinue it, by paying or not paying premiums. But it is claimed by *457 appellee, and so found by the court below, that the evidence shows there was an implied special agreement between the insured themselves by which they mutually settled upon a definite plan whereby each was to share his equal proportion of the premium cost. Claimant asserts that both had, under this special contract, a joint and identical obligation to pay as so agreed upon, and that neither, without the consent of the other, could nullify the agreement without doing positive injury to the other. We need not specify authorities or decisions to hold so common a principle that contractual relations under such special agreement, expressed or rightly implied, are binding upon the parties thereto, and that the bearing of the mutual burden and performance of the mutual duty imposed are not to be arbitrarily refused by either party without incurring liability. The principle is clearly expressed in 1 Williston on Contracts, 666 as follows: “The obligors before entering into the obligation [in this case, the insurance contract] may have made a special contract with one another as to the shares in which the liability should ultimately be borne by them. If they have made no such contract, it will be inferred that their shares are in proportion to their interest in the matter....... As between obligors who are equally interested......the duty to bear the burden is equal and contribution will be enforced in favor of one who has paid more than his proportion against the others who have paid less.”

Of course, in this case, the mere fact that the insured, for a time, each paid one-half of the premium charges, would not of itself allow the inference that they had a special agreement between them. We are however of opinion that evidence here, wholly uncontradicted, fully supports such inference. A contract implied in fact, or an implied contract in the proper sense, arises when the intention of the parties is not expressed, but an agreement in fact creating an obligation, is implied or pre *458 sumed from their acts; or, as it has been otherwise stated, where there are circumstances which, according to the ordinary course of dealing and the common understanding of men, show a mutual interest to contract: 13 C. J. 241.

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Bluebook (online)
149 A. 705, 299 Pa. 452, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomerys-estate-pa-1930.