Rawls v. . American Mutual Life Insurance Company

27 N.Y. 282
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 27 N.Y. 282 (Rawls v. . American Mutual Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rawls v. . American Mutual Life Insurance Company, 27 N.Y. 282 (N.Y. 1863).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 284

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 285

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 286

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 287 The defendants, in form, contracted with Fish for an insurance upon his life. In consideration of certain statements and representations made, and a premium of $117, to be paid annually, in advance, the defendants promised and agreed with Fish, his heirs or other legal representatives, to pay the sum of $5,000 to the plaintiff, within twenty days after the proof of the death of Fish, provided the policy should then be in force. If this is to be regarded and treated as a contract with Fish to insure his own life, then the question attempted to be raised on the motion for a nonsuit, viz., that the plaintiff had no insurable interest in the life of Fish, and, hence, that it was a gaming or wagering policy, cannot arise. If the contract is with the party whose life is insured, he may have the loss payable to his own representatives, or to his assignee or appointee; and whichever be the form, his own interest is the same. It can only be by holding the policy in substance and legal effect, that of a creditor upon the life of his debtor, that an interest was necessary on the part of the plaintiff to support it.

I am inclined to regard the insurance as effected by the plaintiff on the life of Fish, although the policy, in form, purports to have been procured by the latter. The plaintiff applied for and obtained it as the creditor of Fish, to protect his interest as such creditor, in Fish's life. He took the initiatory steps for procuring the policy; the application stated it to be for his benefit; he paid the original and all subsequent premiums; it was delivered to him, and he sues upon it as the party in interest, and as the only party connected with the *Page 288 policy who could maintain an action upon it. So far as the question of its validity is involved, it will, therefore, be treated as a contract, in substance, between the plaintiff and the defendants.

It is not at all necessary to discuss the question whether a policy obtained by a party having no interest in the life insured, would be void, either at common law or under our statute against betting and gaming. It may be conceded that at common law it would be a wager policy, and void, although it was distinctly held in the Exchequer Chamber, on error, in Dalby v. The Indiaand London Life Assurance Company (80 Eng. Com. Law, 365;S.C., 28 Eng. Law Eq., 312), that such an assurance was legal at common law. But the case is not embarrassed by any such question. It was distinctly shown and the proof in no way controverted, that the plaintiff was a creditor of Fish, when the insurance was effected, in an amount far exceeding the sum named in the policy, and that at the time of the trial the debt was still wholly unpaid. He had, therefore, within all the cases, an insurable interest in the life of Fish, sufficient to support the policy. It was in no legal sense a wager contract.

Nor is it necessary to consider the question whether a life policy is in its nature a contract of indemnity, as marine and fire policies undoubtedly are. Regarding the policy in this case as substantially a contract of indemnity against the loss of the plaintiff's debt, and that, as an interest was required to support its inception, a continuance of that interest is essential to its perpetuity, there was no pretense that the debt, or any part of it, had been paid. All that the case showed was that the statute of limitations had apparently run against the demand of the plaintiff at the death of Fish. But suppose the statute had attached, the interest of the plaintiff, as a creditor, in the continuance of the life of his debtor had not ceased entirely. The debt was not extinguished as in the case of payment. It might be renewed by a new promise, and, indeed, without such promise be enforced by action, unless the defence of the statute was directly interposed. It is not a legal presumption that *Page 289 when the statute of limitations has once run, the debtor will refuse to revive the debt, by a new promise, or interpose the defence of the statute in an action to recover it.

But in the contract of life insurance it is enough that the party effecting the policy had an insurable interest, at its inception; and it is not required that that interest should continue and exist at the time of the death of the person whose life is insured, to entitle the holder of the policy to recover. Policies of insurance against fire and marine risks are properly contracts of indemnity, they are so in terms; but it is otherwise with life policies. The contract, says, PARKE, B., in Dalby v.The India London Life Assurance Company (28 Eng. Law Eq., 312), commonly called "life assurance, when properly considered, is a mere contract to pay a certain sum of money on the death of a person, in consideration of the due payment of a certain annuity for his life; the amount of the annuity being calculated in the first instance according to the probable duration of the life. * * * This species of assurance in no way resembles a contract of indemnity." Indemnity being the general principle which gave rise to fire and marine insurance, by a mistaken analogy such a principle was at one time recognized in life insurance. This recognition grew out of the decision in Godsall v. Boldero (9 East, 72), decided in the King's Bench, in 1807, which was followed and adopted by text writers on assurance, both in England and in this country, but which was overruled, on error, to the Exchequer Chamber, in 1854, in the case of Dalby v. The India London Life Assurance Company, supra. In the latter case it was held that a life policy was not in its nature a contract of indemnity, but was what it purports to be on its face, a contract to pay a certain sum in the event of death; and if made by a person having an interest in the duration of the life, it was sufficient to make it valid in point of law that that interest existed at the time of making the policy. It seems remarkable to me that any other view should be taken of the question. The contract is not to make any loss good, or to make compensation. The debt is not insured. It is an absolute contract *Page 290 to pay, not the amount of a loss or damage arising from a death, but a specified sum of money upon the termination of the life insured.

The objection to the proof as to Fish's health, prior to the application for the policy in suit, was properly overruled. Such proof was not so far immaterial as to make it error not to exclude it. The written statements and representations made to the defendants, at the time the policy was effected, were, that Fish's health was good; and that he had not been afflicted since childhood with liver complaint or general debility. The defendants, in their answer, assert the falsity of these representations, and on the trial attempted, at least indirectly, to prove them to be so.

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27 N.Y. 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawls-v-american-mutual-life-insurance-company-ny-1863.