Rosenfeld v. Boston Mutual Life Insurance

222 Mass. 284
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 222 Mass. 284 (Rosenfeld v. Boston Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosenfeld v. Boston Mutual Life Insurance, 222 Mass. 284 (Mass. 1915).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

This is a bill in equity to compel the defendant specifically to perform a contract of re-insurance issued by the defendant upon the life of the plaintiff.

The Greenfield Life Association of Greenfield, Massachusetts, a corporation chartered under St. 1890, c. 421, issued a policy of insurance for $2,000 upon the life of the plaintiff. This policy was dated April 21, 1897, and was a contract of insurance upon the assessment plan. The premiums upon the policy were to be paid semiannually, in conformity with a "Table of Rates” printed upon the back thereof.

[286]*286In the year 1899 the name of the Greenfield Association was changed to the Atlantic Mutual Life Insurance Company. In the year 1901 the business of the Atlantic Company was taken over by the defendant. On November 26, 1901, the last named company issued to the plaintiff what it termed a re-insurance policy “on the plan of yearly renewable term insurance.” This policy contains the following provision: “and it is hereby agreed that in no event shall the assured of said Atlantic Mutual Life Insurance Company of Greenfield, Massachusetts, be required to pay the Boston Mutual Life Insurance Company under this contract of re-insurance any amount exceeding the rates contained in the table upon the back of said policy.”

The table of rates upon the back of the original policy, referred to in the policy issued by the defendant, established the annual, semiannual and quarterly premium rates to accrue when due from policyholders between the ages of twenty-five and fifty-five years, both inclusive.

The plaintiff, who was forty-seven years of age when the original policy was taken out by him in 1897, paid the premiums due, in accordance with this table, each year up to the time when he became fifty-five years of age, in 1905. Since 1905, the defendant company has increased the premium rates and has established a new table of rates, which is in excess of the semiannual premium as fixed by the table upon the back of the original policy for a policyholder who has reached the age of fifty-five years.

The plaintiff contends that the maximum semiannual premium of $16.70 on each $1,000, or $66.80 annually on his policy of $2,000, is the full amount which the contract obligates him to pay.

On the other hand the defendant contends that the table of rates printed on the back of the original policy and which does not fix the amount of premiums to be paid after the assured arrived at the age of fifty-five years, is printed only for the purpose of illustrating the principle of the contract of insurance involved in what is known as the assessment plan, and is not intended as a complete schedule of rates for all ages of persons insured, and that the defendant is not prevented thereby from making new premium rates applicable to policyholders after they have become fifty-five years old.

Since the year 1905, when the plaintiff became fifty-five years [287]*287of age, the defendant, in accordance with the schedules adopted by it, has demanded each year sums as premiums considerably in excess of $16.70 semiannually on each $1,000 of insurance.

It is not disputed that the plaintiff has paid, under protest each year from 1906 to 1914, both inclusive, premiums in excess of $16.70 semiannually on each $1,000 of insurance.

This bill is brought to determine the maximum limit of premiums which lawfully may be demanded under the policy. The plaintiff also prays for an accounting and that he may recover back the excess of premiums so paid, with interest.

The original policy issued by the Greenfield Life Association provided for the payment by the assured of mortuary premiums in accordance with its terms, and plainly was a contract of insurance upon the assessment plan. There is no provision in the policy of re-insurance providing for assessments to be made by reason of the death of other policyholders, but it is recited that it is issued in consideration in part upon “the payment to the Boston Mutual Life Insurance Company at its Home Office in Boston of the premiums in the table of rates found on the back of said policy for the age corresponding to the age of the assured at each anniversary of said policy, such premiums to be due and payable at the time and times stated in said policy.”

These premiums become due and payable at fixed periods without reference to the decease of other policyholders, and such payments are not dependent upon any contingency whatever.

It is apparent that the policy of re-insurance is not such a contract as is usually entered into by members of fraternal or beneficiary associations, but is more nearly of the character of an ordinary, straight life insurance policy, with fixed premiums to be paid by the assured at stated periods.

The parties must be bound by the contract which they have entered into, and if it is ambiguous in its terms all doubts are to be decided against the insurer who prepared the contract. Hatch v. United States Casualty Co. 197 Mass. 101, 104.

The policy in express terms provides that “in no event shall the assured of said Atlantic Mutual Life Insurance Company of Greenfield, Massachusetts, be required to pay the Boston Mutual Life Insurance Company under this contract of re-insurance any amount exceeding the rates contained in the table [288]*288upon the back of said policy.” This language by reference makes the table of rates a part of the contract and cannot be disregarded. The maximum rates as fixed by the table are for policyholders fifty-five years of age. No higher or other rate is provided for, and it must be held to be the maximum rate which the plaintiff lawfully was bound to pay after he had arrived at the age of fifty-five, without reference to the length of time afterwards that the policy might continue in force.

As this table of rates constituted a part of the contract, and as the contract clearly and unequivocally provides that “in no event” shall the assured be required to pay any amount exceeding the rates contained in the table, and as the defendant has demanded and received premiums in excess of the maximum rates so fixed, it follows that the premiums collected by the defendant since 1905 have been in excess of what under the contract the plaintiff was legally bound to pay. Harrison v. Hartford Life Ins. Co. 63 Misc. Rep. (N. Y.) 93; S. C. 118 N. Y. Supp. 401; 201 N. Y. 545. Sauerbrunn v. Hartford Life Ins. Co. 159 App. Div. (N. Y.) 121; S. C. 165 App. Div. (N. Y.) 506.

While the premiums were increased beyond the amount as provided in the table of rates referred to in the policy, by vote of the directors of the defendant company, and afterwards, at a meeting of the policyholders, a vote was passed “adopting, ratifying and confirming” all acts of the directors at the meeting at which their vote was passed, the master finds that there was no evidence that this vote of the directors was called to the attention of the policyholders. Under these circumstances the plaintiff cannot be held to have ratified this increase in the premium rates, and consequently his rights under the policy are not affected by it. Attorney General v. American Legion of Honor, 206 Mass. 186.

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Bluebook (online)
222 Mass. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenfeld-v-boston-mutual-life-insurance-mass-1915.