North-western Mut. Life Ins. v. Fort's Adm'r

82 Ky. 269, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 82 Ky. 269 (North-western Mut. Life Ins. v. Fort's Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North-western Mut. Life Ins. v. Fort's Adm'r, 82 Ky. 269, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 75 (Ky. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

JUDGE LEWIS

DELIVERED THE OPINION OF THE COURT.

On the seventeenth of January, 1868, in consideration of the annual premium in advance, consisting of an annual premium note of $194, the interest on which was to be paid annually in cash at the date of the maturity of the annual premium, and of the quarterly cash premium of $72.10 to be paid at or before the seventeenth of January, April, July and October in every year, during the first ten years of the continuance of the policy then issued, the North-western Mutual Life Insurance Company insured the life of Sugg Port, for the use and benefit of Virginia 0. Port, his wife, in the amount of $10,000 for the term of his natural life.

The annual premium notes were executed according to the contract, ih January of the years 1868, 1869,1870 and 1871, and the interest on each of them, except the •last mentioned, was paid up to the date of the maturity [271]*271of the third annual premium, and the quarterly cash premiums were also paid up to April 17, 1871. But no other notes were given, nor interest or cash premiums paid thereafter.

Sugg Fort died in 1882, and this action was instituted in February, 1883, by the administrator of Virginia 0. Fort, wdio died after her husband, to recover the sum of $3,500, being three and one-half tenths of the amount of the policy. And in an amended petition judgment was also asked for a due proportion of the surplus dividends accruing after the assured ceased to keep, up the policy.

The Chancellor rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, for the sum of $3,000 and interest thereon from the time the action was commenced, subject to a credit of $698.50 and interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, from January 17, 1871, to the date of the judgment, being the amount of the four premium notes left after deducting $77.40, the proportion of the “surplus” on the business of the company for the years 1868, 1869 and 1870, to which the assured was adjudged to be entitled, according to the terms of the policy.

From that judgment the defendant has appealed, and the plaintiff prosecutes a cross-appeal,'The former contending the court erred in rendering judgment for any amount, and the latter that the judgment should have been for $3,500 ; that he should have been charged with only three of the premium notes, and that the defendant should have been charged with a due proportion of the surplus on the business of each year since January, 1871.

[272]*272The following are the provisions contained in the policy that have a bearing on the questions presented:

“The said company doth hereby promise and agree-to pay said sum assured * * in sixty days after due-notice and proof of the death of the said person, whose life is hereby assured, the balance of' the gross premium and all notes given for premiums, if any, being; first deducted therefrom. At each distribution of the-surplus, after three years from the date hereof, a due proportion of such surplus on each and every year’s-business, during the continuance of this policy, will be-returned to the said assured; and the said company further promises and agrees that if default shall be made in the payment of any premium, it will pay, as-above agreed, as many tenth parts of the original sum assured a,s there shall have been complete annual premiums paid at the time of such default. But in order to-secure such proportion of the policy, all premium notes must be taken up, or the interest thereon be paid annually in cash on the date of the annual maturity of the premium until the notes are cancelled by returns 'of the surplus or the whole policy will be forfeited.
“This policy is issued and accepted by the parties in interest, on the following express conditions : * *
Third. If the said premiums, or the interest upon any note given for premiums, shall not be paid on or before the days above mentioned for the payment thereof, * * then, and in every such case, the company shall not be liable for the payment of the whole sum assured, but only for such part thereof as is expressly stipulated above, and the remainder shall cease and determine. *
[273]*273“ Fourth. In every case, when this policy shall cease or become null and void, all payments thereon shall be forfeited to the company. * *
“Seventh. This policy shall not take effect and become binding on the company until the premium shall be actually paid, during the lifetime of the person whose life is assured, to the company or to some person authorized to receive it, who shall countersign the policy on receipt of the premium.”

The defendant filed with its answer, as an exhibit, the four premium notes, which were retained by it, from the dates they were respectively given. The first one of them, the others differing from it only as to date, is as follows :

“Milwaukee, January 17, 1868. .
“For value received I promise to pay the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company one hundred and ninety-four dollars, with interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, which interest shall be paid annually or the policy be forfeited; this note being given for part of the premium on policy No. 30,330, is to remain a lien upon said policy until it becomes due by limitation, or by the death of Sugg Fort, when the note shall be deducted from said policy, unless sooner paid. The dividends on the policy are to be applied to the payment of the notes.
Y. C. FORT,
By Sugg Fort.”

Neither in the policy, nor in the premium notes, is it stipulated that they are to be paid at any fixed time,' or, at all events, before the death of the person whose life is assured. On the contrary, it is provided that [274]*274whatever amount of the.notes may be due after his death is to be deducted from' the sum assured, the only provision for the payment. of them, or any part of ■them, during Ms life, being contained in the notes where.it is agreed that the dividends on the policy are to be so applied, which it is manifest are insufficient to liquidate them during an ordinary lifetime. It is, therefore, clear that the failure to pay off the notes during his life was not intended to work a forfeiture of the policy.

Nor is the failure to pay any cash premium made a cause of forfeiture, it being expressly provided otherwise.

The only ground upon which it can be contended that the contract in terms, or by implication, provides for a forfeiture of the whole policy, is the failure to pay annually the interest on the premium notes, and whether such failure has worked a forfeiture in this case is the principal question.

The law does not favor forfeitures, and in order to justify the court in enforcing it in this case, it should be clearly and unambiguously so expressed in the contract, and the payment of the interest annually should be of the substance of the contract, and not then, if the company has waived the forfeiture.

We are not prepared to say that by the terms of this contract, construed and enforced according to the principles applicable to contracts generally, a forfeiture has occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Ky. 269, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-western-mut-life-ins-v-forts-admr-kyctapp-1884.