Provident Savings Life Assurance Society v. Shearer

151 S.W. 938, 151 Ky. 298, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 813
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 20, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 938 (Provident Savings Life Assurance Society v. Shearer) 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
Provident Savings Life Assurance Society v. Shearer, 151 S.W. 938, 151 Ky. 298, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 813 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court bt

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

In March, 1896, the appellee, Shearer, procured from the appellant company a ten year term policy for $5,000, in which the company obligated itself to pay the amount of the insurance only in the event the insured died before the expiration of the ten years. In October, 1905, a few months before this policy expired, the appellant company proposed to issue to Shearer a new form of insurance for $5,000 under the twenty payment life plan, the policy to be dated back to March, 1896, in order that Shearer might have the benefit of the premium rate based on his age in 1896, in place of the higher rate he would be required to pay if his policy was dated in 1905. As a result of conferences between Sprout, the agent of appellant, and Shearer, the latter, on October 26, 1905, made a written application to surrender his old policy and take out the new twenty payment life, which was to be dated March 27, 1896, to correspond with the date of the old policy. Soon after this the application was accepted and the new policy issued. As a part of the plan by which the old policy was surrendered and the new one issued, Shearer executed his note to the company for $1,826, this amount representing the reserve against the policy, which under the law the company was required to have either in money or in a secured note.

The application made by Shearer for the new policy contained among others this clause: “The Provident Savings Life Assurance Society of New York agrees to loan to the assured the sum of $1,826 upon the security of said policy, and the said amount shall be a-lien upon said policy when issued until the same is paid, and it is also understood and agreed that the said assured is hereby authorized to sign a collateral loan note to secure the repayment of said sum in the form in use by said society.”

[300]*300The note Shearer signed was dated October 26, 1905, and reads in.part: “For value received, I promise to pay to the Provident Saving Life Assurance Society of New York, or order, $1,826, with interest at the rate of 5 per cent per annum, payable on the 27th day of March in each year. * * * The policy and all amounts payable thereon are hereby assigned, pledged and hypothecated to said society. * * * The assured has the privilege of paying this loan at any time prior to the termination of the policy. Should the policy become payable while this note is outstanding, the amount of the note, with any additional loans, and all interest due thereon, shall be deducted by said society from the amount due on this policy. ’ ’

The new policy issued to Shearer obligated him to pay on the 27th day of March in each year an annual premium of $287.60, and Shearer paid these premiums for four years, which carried this policy up until March 27, 1910, at which time the fifth premium became due. On March 7, 1910, Shearer wrote to the company a letter in which he said in substance that he understood the value of the policy at the expiration of the twenty years would be $5,000 less the amount of the note he had executed for $1,826, and requested the company to advise him what the total amount of the indebtedness against the policy at that time was and what it would be on each succeeding year until the expiration of the twenty years. In answer to this the company, on March 16, wrote him and gave him the information he inquired for.

On March 22nd Shearer paid to the company $71.90 in cash and executed his note for $215.70, the remainder of the premium due on March 27, 1910. This note was due on June 27, 1910, and on June 25th Shearer advised the company that he had concluded not to carry the insurance any longer, and did not pay the note. In January, 1911, he brought this suit against the company to recover from it $1,222.30, the full amount of the premiums he had paid each year from 1906 to 1910 inclusive, with interest thereon from the date of each payment and in addition thereto, $750 which he alleged was the value to him of the old policy which he surrendered to the company. His action was based on the ground that the company, by false and fraudulent representations induced him to surrender his old policy and accept in place of it the new one. He averred that it was represented to [301]*301him that the note he executed would not be a lien again'st the policy or an indebtedness against him, and that it was only required that he execute it to go through the form of complying with certain laws of the State of New York. He further averred that it was represented to him that the new policy in twenty years from its date, or in March, 1916, would become a paid-up policy for the face value of $5,000, with a cash surrender value of $3,-620, and that he was induced by these representations to surrender his old policy and accept the new one, and did not learn of the deception and fraud that had been practiced on him until Í910 when he received the letter before mentioned from the company, advising him that the note he executed was a lien against the policy and would be deducted from it. To this suit the company made a number of defenses, and upon a trial before a jury a verdict was returned in favor of Shearer for the premiums paid by him in 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909 and 1910, with interest on each from the date of its payment. A reversal is asked on several grounds but we will only notice two: one, that the request of appellant for a peremptory instruction should have been granted, and the other, that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence.

In support of the proposition that a verdict should have been directed in its favor, the argument is made by counsel for appellant that it was not competent to contradict, by parol evidence, the stipulations in the note of $1,826, or the conditions of the application made by Shearer, because it is said the terms of a written contract cannot be impeached by parol evidence.

The rule is elementary that the terms or conditions of a written contract, in the absence of fraud or mutual mistake in its execution, cannot be varied, or contradicted, or added to, or subtracted from, by prior or contemporaneous, parol agreements or arrangements between the parties to the written memorial: Farmers Bank of Wickliffe v. Wickliffe, 131 Ky., 787; Anthony v. Hudson, 131 Ky., 185; Sayler v. Sayler, 141 Ky., 648; Sackett v. Maggard, 142 Ky., 500.

But the broadest application of this rule does not deny to a party the right to attack, in its entirety, with parol evidence, a contract for fraud or want of consideration. Any written contract, without reference to what form it may be put in, and without regard to the circumstances attending its execution, can be assailed, as a whole with parol [302]*302evidence for fraud or for want of consideration. If this were not true, a written contract, however fraudulent or destitute of consideration, could be enforced, and the party who signed a written obligation would be helpless to protect or defend himself against its enforcement, although he might be able to show, by the most convincing parol evidence, that it was procured by fraud or that there was no consideration for its execution. The exception that we have stated to the general rule rejecting parol evidence to vary a written contract, is too well settled to need more than the mere citation of authorities. Stone v. Ramsey, 4 T. B. Mon., 236; Tribble v. Oldham, 5 J. J. Marshall, 137; Doyle v. Offutt, 135 Ky., 296; Cummings v. Cass, 52 N. J. L., 77; Page on Contracts, section 1207; Greenleaf on Evidence, section 284; Lavalleur v. Hahn, 152 Ia., 649.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 938, 151 Ky. 298, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-savings-life-assurance-society-v-shearer-kyctapp-1912.