Tait v. New York Life Ins.

23 F. Cas. 620, 1 Flip. 288, 19 Int. Rev. Rec. 14, 2 Ins. L.J. 863, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1397

This text of 23 F. Cas. 620 (Tait v. New York Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tait v. New York Life Ins., 23 F. Cas. 620, 1 Flip. 288, 19 Int. Rev. Rec. 14, 2 Ins. L.J. 863, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1397 (circtwdtn 1873).

Opinion

EMMONS, Circuit Judge.

This is an action upon a policy of life insurance. The policy was issued some years before the war, and the premiums paid to 1861, when the agency at Memphis ceased in consequence of the war. A tender was afterwards made -in due time to the former agent, of all sums due before the death, which was in that year. The contract contains the following clause: “It is the true intent and meaning hereof that if the insured shall not pay the said premiums on or before the said days, together,” etc., this policy “shall cease and determine.” Across the face of the first and all other receipts taken by the assured for the premiums paid, is printed conspicuously, in large type of italics and capitals and in red ink, the follow-: ing: “Premiums not paid when due according to the terms of the policy, annuls the same, but it may be renewed at the home office within a reasonable time, upon satisfac-. tory evidence of good health being furnished.” The acts by which alone the policy can be continued in life, involve not only the exercise of continuous active duties on the part of agents, [622]*622but constant intercommunion across the hostile lines. Every receipt, in unambiguous terms, tells the insured no payment is good unless the party who claims the right to accept it holds an authenticated form, signed by the president, vice-president or actuary, which necessarily must be transmitted from the home -office to the local agent from time to time as it is required. There is no general power to receive premiums without this special warrant, issued in each instance. The object of •this precaution is manifest: it is so necessary to the prosecution of the scheme, and is so dependent upon regular communications between the agent and the chief officers, that when the latter are interrupted it necessarily -follows that the payments, without an alterd-■of the contract, cannot be made. A life insurance agent who should • not make his periodical returns and remittances would be an anomaly. Should a corporation fraudulently or negligently omit to forward the annual receipt in violation of duty under the policy, or •by its wrong in any manner prevent perforffi-anee on the part of the insured, different principles would apply, and a recovery at law or' in equity according to circumstances be given.

The only argument submitted by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs consists in the citation of the following four cases: Manhattan Life Ins. Co. v. Warwick, 20 Grat. 614; Hamilton v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. [Case No. 5,986]; Sands v. New York Life Ins. Co., 59 Barb. 556; and New York Life Ins. Co. v. Clopton, 7 Bush, 179, and a dictum in Robinson v. International Life Assur. Soc., 42 N. Y. 54, which expresses a doubt as to the entire clearness of the position that war abrogated the agency. Since the rendition of our judgment, but before the preparation of this opinion, two other decisions, by an influential tribunal, have been added to the list of those which oppose our own. Cohen v. New York Mut. Life Ins. Co., 50 N. Y. 610, and Sands v. New York Life Ins. Co., Id. 626. These decisions, if acquiesced in, would, each for quite varying reasons, entitle the plaintiff to judgment. But for them we should have deemed the question whether an insurance company, created and* protected by the government, located in and drawing its funds from the loyal region, could continue a policy upon life for the benefit of an enemy as unworthy of argument. We should have confidently held that a state of belligerency dissolved the contract. >

That these judgments are at war with the universally received opinion before their pronunciation, we think clear. Another case, however, upon a kindred subject (Kershaw v. Kelsey, 100 Mass. 561), by a court of exceptional learning and repute, quite as much at variance with received opinions, shows there is a pretty common disposition to refuse the application of old and familiar doctrines to the exigencies of our late contest. But we find in our supreme court no indication of a disposition to relax that portion of the laws of war •which affects the contracts and business relations of belligerents. Believing there is no judicial authority anywhere, to so far modify the law as to preserve in force this contract, we hold it was abrogated the moment the insured and insurer became public enemies.

The counter-judgments vary greatly in the grounds on which they proceed. Without referring each reason to the decision which asserts it, the leading ones are generally as follows: They are here stated that the occasion for much of our own discussion, which might otherwise seem unnecessary, may he perceived. It is said that contracts and business relations between enemies are lawful so long as actual personal intercourse, between persons in the different territories, is not necessary; and consequently, a business already commenced under an agent, may be continued if he makes no remittances or communications to his principal. The continuance of a life policy and the agency is thus supported. Some of them, overlooking the palpable difference between the duties of an insurance agent and of one to receive a debt, and between the latter and this peculiar contract, requiring for its continued vitality so much affirmative action, continue both upon the same principle. It is said that all the cases and elementary books heretofore announcing the broad doctrine that an insurance of enemy’s property is void, and that war abrogates those entered into before it, refer solely to insurances upon maritime commerce, where the subject was not only liable to capture, but employed in unlawful trade and intercourse between the hostile countries, and the insurance void therefore, and not upon the ground that it was opposed to public policy to guaranty against the loss of enemy’s property generally, but only where it was so employed, and where it was, by the general laws of war, subject to confiscation. That houses, inland-stored goods, and the lives of non-combatants did not come within the reason of the rule, and might be lawfully insured through resident agents, and belligerency did not in such cases terminate existing policies. Some of them take the broad ground that the punctual payment of the premium is not a condition precedent Others, conceding that it is so, decide that payment is excused on account of the illegality or the impossibility of performance. Two of them maintain the extraordinary position that the revocation of an agent’s power after he becomes a public-enemy is a fraud by the loyal company, and estops it to deny the reception of the premiums. And finally, it is ruled that a court of equity will relieve the insured from the duty of performance, upon the ground that the accidents of the war constitute an excuse for nonperformance. These do not exhaust the grounds, but they are the more prominent ones.

The principle that contracts, the continued execution of which during belligerency is op[623]*623posed to national policy, are abrogated by war, is universally conceded. With tbe single exception of Kershaw v. Kelsey, all admit also, that such policy would be violated by the making or continued execution of any contract which directly increased the material prosperity and power of the enemy. Differences of opinion only exist in reference to the application of this rule to policies of insurance upon the life of a public enemy. Authors and eases which discuss the general rule will be referred to, therefore, only for the reasons by which they support it, and the circumstances to which they have applied it We think it will appear that the policy before us is abrogated by the rule; and that the distinctions relied upon • are wholly excluded by the reasons upon which it rests.

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23 F. Cas. 620, 1 Flip. 288, 19 Int. Rev. Rec. 14, 2 Ins. L.J. 863, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tait-v-new-york-life-ins-circtwdtn-1873.