New York Life Insurance v. Gilbert

256 S.W. 148, 215 Mo. App. 201, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 160
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 256 S.W. 148 (New York Life Insurance v. Gilbert) 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
New York Life Insurance v. Gilbert, 256 S.W. 148, 215 Mo. App. 201, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 160 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is a suit to reform or cancel on the ground of mutual mistake an endorsement upon a policy of insurance written upon the life of defendant, Charles E. Gilbert and in favor of his wife, Myra M. Gilbert, as beneficiary. The judgment was for the defendants. The policy is on the fifteen-year payment plan and was issued on April 3, 1899, in the sum of $2500. It provided for an annual premium of $117.08, the first premium being acknowledged. The other premiums were to be paid on the 2nd day of January in each year thereafter until fifteen full yearly premiums should have been paid, at which time the policy would be fully paid up. The application stated that the insured was born in the year 1862. After the policy had. been in force several years the insured notified the plaintiff that he had made a mistake in the date of his birth and that it occurred in 1861. The policy contained a provision that if the age of the insured be incorrectly stated, the amount payable should be the insurance which the actual premiums paid would have purchased at the true age of the insured. In view of this provision of the policy the premium that insured paid purchased $2450 of insurance instead. of $2500.

The policy contained a provision that cash loans might be obtained on it at any time after the policy had been in force for two full years if the premium had been duly paid to the anniversary of the insurance next succeeding the time when the loan was made. On April 11, 1913, defendant made a written application to plaintiff for a cash loan of $1412, representing the full loan value of the policy at that time according to its terms. The loan was made. The policy provided that:

*204 If any preminm or interest is not duly paid, and if there is any indebtedness to the Company, this Policy will be endorsed for such amount of Paid-up Insurance as any excess of the reserve held' by the Company over such indebtedness will purchase according to the Company’s present published table of single premiums, upon written request therefor within six months from the date to which premiums were duly paid. ’ ’

The reserve was based on the American experience tables and three percent interest.

On December 1, 1913, a few days before the end of the fifteen-year accumulation period of the policy, plaintiff sent to the insured a statement of settlements from which he might make a selection in accordance with the provisions of the policy. One of these options was that the insured might continue the policy in force and accept a cash dividend of $482.55. This choice of settlement was accepted by the insured, and resulted in the insurance continuing in force subject to the loan and in the withdrawal, of a cash dividend of $482.55. A new loan agreement similar in form to the original loan agreement was executed on January 2, 1914, and by its terms the policy pledged to plaintiff as security for the loan. Following this no further premium was ever paid on the policy.

Nothing further occurred material to this controversy until December 4, 1920, when the insured wrote the plaintiff as follows:

“I believe I have a loan with you on Policy 936346 which is paid up. I wish you would please let me know how much paid-up insurance I can get on this by your first cancelling the loan and giving me this paid up insurance on the residue.
“I hope you will kindly figure this as fully and clearly as you can so that I may be able to understand it thoroughly. ’ ’

On December 11, 1920, plaintiff’s actuary wrote the insured that if the interest on the loan due on January *205 2, 1921, should not be paid, the paid-tip insurance available after cancelling the loan would be $768. Thereupon insured wrote:

“Replying to yours of December 11th in regard to above policy will say that since I have a loan, the policy is in your possession and I accept your terms of $768 paid-up insurance and cancellation of the outstanding loan.”

The interest due on January 2, 1921, on the loan was not paid. Upon receipt of insured’s letter accepting the $768 paid-up insurance, plaintiff wrote the insured that the interest not having been paid on January 2, 1921; the indebtedness had been cancelled and the policy endorsed for paid-up insurance amounting to $768 as provided in the contract, and remitted to the insured the policy with an endorsement thereon to that effect. It is this endorsement that plaintiff attempts to correct by showing that the amount of paid-up insurance was incorrectly figured in plaintiff’s actuarial office and instead of the paid-up insurance being for $768 it should have been for $296.

The policy bearing the erroneous endorsement was sent to the insured on January 12, 1921. On February 2, 1921, plaintiff discovered that, a mistake had been made in the calculation and caused its agent at Kansas City, Missouri, to write the insured at Nevada, Missouri, of the mistake, offering to give the insured paid-up insurance in the sum of $308. The difference between $296, the actual paid-up value of the policy as the undisputed evidence shows, and the amount offered, to-wit, $308, was caused by plaintiff’s employee’s overlooking the fact that the insured was born in 1861 instead of in 1862. However, the insured refused to accept this amount of paid-up insurance “for the reason that the transaction is closed so far as I am , concerned; ” that he had accepted plaintiff’s offer ‘ ‘ and if you had written me then that you would only allow me $308 paid-up insurance, I would not have allowed you to cancel the loan and I would not have accepted the $308 paid up insurance.”

*206 Several letters were written to the insured attempting to get his consent to the correction in the endorsement so as to show the true amount of paid-up insurance and offering in lieu thereof to reinstate the policy as it was before the endorsement was made thereon, if the insured would make a new loan agreement and pay the interest on the loan to January 2, 1922, the interest according to the loan agreement was payable in advance. Finally, plaintiff offered to allow insured “to go back to the date when this endorsement was made and make any choice that you choose to make on what shall be done with the policy. The company insisting only that the choice shall consist of the use of the true value of the policy in giving you the benefit you are entitled to.” All of these proposition were refused by the'insured.

The mistake in calculating the paid-up' insurance that insured was entitled to was made in this way: In arriving at the amount of paid-up insurance to which insured was entitled under the terms of the policy, plaintiff used what is known as “the'method of proportion.” In this calculation the amount of the reserve on the policy is used as the first extreme of the proportion, the amount on the balance of the reserve over indebtedness is used as the first means of the proportion, the amount of the face of the policy as the second mean and the resulting extreme gives the amount of paid-up insurance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 S.W. 148, 215 Mo. App. 201, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-v-gilbert-moctapp-1923.