Roehner v. . Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co.

63 N.Y. 160, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 24
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 63 N.Y. 160 (Roehner v. . Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co.) 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
Roehner v. . Knickerbocker Life Ins. Co., 63 N.Y. 160, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 24 (N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

Folg-eb, J.

The note which the insured gave, was due and payable on the 11th day of April, 1870. In computing the time when a note, payable at a certain number of months after date, will become due, the rule is to exclude the day of the date from the calculation and include the day of payment, when no days of grace are allowed; (Bellasis v. Hester, 1 Ld. Raym., 280; Campbell v. French, 6 T. R., 212). When a promissory note is dated on a day of any month, and made payable at a specified number of months after that date, without days of grace, it accrues due and payable on the same day in the stipulated number of months afterward, with the day of the date of the note; (Hartford Bank v. Barry, 17 Mass., 94; Ripley v. Greenleaf 2 Vt., 129). The months after date are then fully complete.

And so it falls out, that the offer by the insured to pay the note on the 12th day of April, 1870, was made on a day, after the note was, by the terms of it, due and payable.

The argument of the appellant seemed to reach to the extent, that there could be no forfeiture of the policy, by the defendant, unless the intention so to do was, after the failure to pay the premium, made known by it to the holder of the policy. It is however, well settled, that on the failure of the insured to pay the premium on a policy like this, at the time therein stipulated therefor, it becomes lapsed and void. It is then no longer a contract enforceable against the insurer. In the case in hand, it was the agreement between the contracting parties, that the consideration for the undertaking of the defendant was, that the assured had paid it in hand a certain sum at the making of the contract, and should, on a certain day in each year thereafter, on or before a certain hour of that day, pay them the same sum. And it was expressly *164 agreed, that the omission to pay that sum on the day named, by the hour named, should then and thereafter cause the policy to be void. Considering the nature of the contract of life insurance, and how it binds the insurer to a continuance of it on the payment of premium at the recurring times of payment, while the insured is not, by the terms of the policy, bound to pay, but has a privilege to do so or not, this was not an unwise condition for the defendant to insert in-the contract, it was not illegal, nor can we say that it was against public policy. When the contract was accepted upon those terms, the condition was an important part of it, and the insured was bound to a strict performance, before there could be a claim set up for a benefit under it; unless such performance was legally waived or modified. If the premium was not paid when the day for payment came, the policy was void, for the parties to it have said that so it should be. The forfeiture results from the non-payment alone, and from no other act. The payment is a condition precedent, which must be kept, or the policy falls. It is a rule of the common law, that if the terms of the contract violate no law or public policy, are sustained by sufficient consideration, and have been fairly entered into, a strict and exact compliance with them may be insisted upon; (Beadle v. Chenango Co. Mut. Ins. Co., 3 Hill, 161).

Nor did the fact that the defendant took from the insured the note, alter this rule in this case. The defendant was not required to'make demand for payment of the note, and on refusal to pay to declare the policy void. It lapsed per se, upon the failure to pay the note at maturity; for the same agreement and intention of the parties are expressed in the note as are expressed in the policy. By the latter, the omission to pay the annual premium shall cause the policy to be void; by the policy too, the same effect follows from a failure to pay at maturity, any note given for premium; by the note itself, the policy is to be void in case the note is not paid at maturity according to the contract in the policy. To be sure, the note is made payable to the order of the defendant, and in *165 so much, is negotiable, and might be found in the hands of a holder other than the defendant, at its maturity. It would be so, however, with full notice of the consideration and purpose of it, and of the conditions which attached to it, and which would become operative on the failure to pay it at maturity. It is impossible to take the policy and note save together, and as part, of one continuing transaction, and as plainly manifesting the intention of the parties to adhere to the condition of the primary contract, to wit, that the omission of payment of premium, on any day stipulated therefor either in the policy or the note, should cause the policy to become void. We will not now say what would be the effect, had the defendant taken from the insured, a promissory note in no other than the form and terms strictly adapted to that instrument. It would then have an obligation of the insured which it might enforce against him or his estate, and it might be that there would then be room for the exercise of an option by the defendant, whether to surrender the note and to avoid the policy, or to continue the policy and to enforce and collect the note ; and it might have been that it would need have signified its election to the insured by a demand of payment of the note, or by some other notice, of its determination. But in this casé it is plain, that the policy provides for a lapse of it, upon mere non-payment of the annual premium, and for a like lapse upon the mere failure to pay at the maturity, any note given like this for an accrued premium; and it is plain that the parties intended that these provisions of the policy, should apply to and control that part of the transaction between them, represented by the giving and taking of the note, and the extension thereby of the time for the payment of the premium. It was just as much the case with the contract embodied in the note, as the contract embodied in the policy, that one of its conditions was, that a mere omission to pay at maturity did cause the policy to be void. The taking of such a note, as a means for providing for the premium, was. contemplated by the policy, and hence by the parties, at the inception of their rela *166 tion of insurer and insured; and therefore the payment of it at maturity was a consideration precedent to the continuance-of the policy; for so are the terms of the policy in reference to it, and so are the terms of the note itself.

The appellant seeks to liken the case to that of a breach of a condition in leases, or other similar instruments. And she claims that the courts have invariably held, that therein the-like condition means, that the lease shall be void if the party for whose benefit the clause was inserted shall elect to avail himself of it. But the contract of life insurance and the contract of leasing are not alike. If we were to undertake to compare the parties to them, we should say that the insured was to be likened most unto the lessee. But the lessee may not cause a lease to become void by omitting to pay the rent, though the lease have in it a condition that the lease shall become void on the failure of the lessee to pay it. It is on the principle that he is bound to pay the rent, and to omit to do so is his wrong; and thus to bring about an avoidance of the lease at his-option would be to take advantage of his own wrong, which is what the law will not permit.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.Y. 160, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roehner-v-knickerbocker-life-ins-co-ny-1875.